| Literature DB >> 32869318 |
Allysa Warling1, Riri Uchida1, Hyunsoo Shin1, Coby Dodelson1, Madeleine E Garcia1, N Beckett Shea-Shumsky1, Sarah Svirsky2, Morgan Pothast2, Hunter Kelley2, Cynthia M Schumann3, Christine Brzezinski4, Melissa D Bauman3, Allyson Alexander4, Ann C McKee2,5,6,7,8, Thor D Stein5,6,7,8, Matthew Schall1, Bob Jacobs1.
Abstract
Chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) is a neurodegenerative disorder that is associated with repetitive head impacts. Neuropathologically, it is defined by the presence of perivascular hyperphosphorylated tau aggregates in cortical tissue (McKee et al., 2016, Acta Neuropathologica, 131, 75-86). Although many pathological and assumed clinical correlates of CTE have been well characterized, its effects on cortical dendritic arbors are still unknown. Here, we quantified dendrites and dendritic spines of supragranular pyramidal neurons in tissue from human frontal and occipital lobes, in 11 cases with (Mage = 79 ± 7 years) and 5 cases without (Mage = 76 ± 11 years) CTE. Tissue was stained with a modified rapid Golgi technique. Dendritic systems of 20 neurons per region in each brain (N = 640 neurons) were quantified using computer-assisted morphometry. One key finding was that CTE neurons exhibited increased variability and distributional changes across six of the eight dendritic system measures, presumably due to ongoing degeneration and compensatory reorganization of dendritic systems. However, despite heightened variation among CTE neurons, CTE cases exhibited lower mean values than Control cases in seven of the eight dendritic system measures. These dendritic alterations may represent a new pathological marker of CTE, and further examination of dendritic changes could contribute to both mechanistic and functional understandings of the disease.Entities:
Keywords: RRID:SCR_001775; chronic traumatic encephalopathy; degeneration; dendrites; dysfunction; repetitive head impacts
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32869318 PMCID: PMC8554981 DOI: 10.1002/cne.25022
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Comp Neurol ISSN: 0021-9967 Impact factor: 3.215