| Literature DB >> 32533970 |
Luis E F Almeida1, Li Wang2, Sayuri Kamimura1, Patricia M Zerfas3, Meghann L Smith1, Osorio L Abath Neto4, Ticiana Vale4, Martha M Quezado4, Iren Horkayne-Szakaly5, Paul Wakim6, Zenaide M N Quezado7.
Abstract
Patients with sickle cell disease (SCD) can develop strokes and as a result, present neurologic and neurocognitive deficits. However, recent studies show that even without detectable cerebral parenchymal abnormalities on imaging studies, SCD patients can have significant cognitive and motor dysfunction, which can present as early as during infancy. As the cerebellum plays a pivotal role in motor and non-motor functions including sensorimotor processing and learning, we examined cerebellar behavior in humanized SCD mice using the Erasmus ladder. Homozygous (sickling) mice had significant locomotor malperformance characterized by miscoordination and impaired locomotor gait/stepping pattern adaptability. Conversely, Townes homozygous mice had no overall deficits in motor learning, as they were able to associate a conditioning stimulus (high-pitch warning tone) with the presentation of an obstacle and learned to decrease steptimes thereby increasing speed to avoid it. While these animals had no cerebellar strokes, these locomotor and adaptive gait/stepping patterns deficits were associated with oxidative stress, as well as cerebellar vascular endothelial and white matter abnormalities and blood brain barrier disruption, suggestive of ischemic injury. Taken together, these observations suggest that motor and adaptive locomotor deficits in SCD mice mirror some of those described in SCD patients and that ischemic changes in white matter and vascular endothelium and oxidative stress are biologic correlates of those deficits. These findings point to the cerebellum as an area of the central nervous system that is vulnerable to vascular and white matter injury and support the use of SCD mice for studies of the underlying mechanisms of cerebellar dysfunction in SCD. Published by Elsevier B.V.Entities:
Keywords: Anemia; Balance; Behavior; Cerebellum; Erasmus ladder; Sickle
Year: 2020 PMID: 32533970 PMCID: PMC7483603 DOI: 10.1016/j.brainres.2020.146968
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Res ISSN: 0006-8993 Impact factor: 3.252