Delayed reduction in hippocampal postsynaptic density protein-95 expression temporally correlates with cognitive dysfunction following controlled cortical impact in mice

Laboratory investigation

Chandramohan WakadeDepartment of Neurosurgery, Medical College of Georgia, Augusta, Georgia

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Sangeetha Sukumari-RameshDepartment of Neurosurgery, Medical College of Georgia, Augusta, Georgia

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Melissa D. LairdDepartment of Neurosurgery, Medical College of Georgia, Augusta, Georgia

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Krishnan M. DhandapaniDepartment of Neurosurgery, Medical College of Georgia, Augusta, Georgia

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John R. VenderDepartment of Neurosurgery, Medical College of Georgia, Augusta, Georgia

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Object

Traumatic brain injury (TBI) induces significant neurological damage, including deficits in learning and memory, which contribute to a poor clinical prognosis. Treatment options to limit cognitive decline and promote neurological recovery are lacking, in part due to a poor understanding of the secondary or delayed processes that contribute to brain injury. In the present study, the authors characterized the temporal and spatial changes in the expression of postsynaptic density protein-95 (PSD-95), a key scaffolding protein implicated in excitatory synaptic signaling, after controlled cortical impacts in mice. Neurological injury, as assessed by the open-field activity test and the novel object recognition test, was compared with changes in PSD-95 expression.

Methods

Adult male CD-1 mice were subjected to controlled cortical impacts to simulate moderate TBI in humans. The spatial and temporal expression of PSD-95 was analyzed in the cerebral cortex and hippocampus at various time points following injury and sham operations. Neurological assessments were performed to compare changes in PSD-95 with cognitive deficits.

Results

A significant decrease in PSD-95 expression was observed in the ipsilateral hippocampus beginning on Day 7 postinjury. The loss of PSD-95 corresponded with a concomitant reduction in immunoreactivity for NeuN (neuronal nuclei), a neuron-specific marker. Aside from the contused cortex, a significant loss of PSD-95 immunoreactivity was not observed in the cerebral cortex. The delayed loss of hippocampal PSD-95 directly correlated with the onset of behavioral deficits, suggesting a possible causative role for PSD-95 in behavioral abnormalities following head trauma.

Conclusions

A delayed loss of hippocampal synapses was observed following head trauma in mice. These data may suggest a cellular mechanism to explain the delayed learning and memory deficits in humans after TBI and provide a potential framework for further testing to implicate PSD-95 as a clinically relevant therapeutic target.

Abbreviations used in this paper:

AMPA = α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid; LTP = long-term potentiation; NeuN = neuronal nuclei; NMDA = N-methyl-d-aspartate; PSD-95 = postsynaptic density protein-95; TBI = traumatic brain injury.
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