4.7 Article

Experimental Traumatic Brain Injury Identifies Distinct Early and Late Phase Axonal Conduction Deficits of White Matter Pathophysiology, and Reveals Intervening Recovery

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 38, Issue 41, Pages 8723-8736

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0819-18.2018

Keywords

axon damage; CLARITY; myelin; nerve conduction; node of Ranvier; paranode

Categories

Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Defense in the Center for Neuroscience and Regenerative Medicine [CNRM703386, CNRM702720, CNRM702577]
  2. Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences Program [308430]
  3. Congressionally Directed Medical Research Program [SC160213]
  4. Center for Neuroscience and Regenerative Medicine Preclinical Models Core and Microscopy Core
  5. CDMRP [917968, SC160213] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER

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Traumatic brain injury (TBI) patients often exhibit slowed information processing speed that can underlie diverse symptoms. Processing speed depends on neural circuit function at synapses, in the soma, and along axons. Long axons in white matter (WM) tracts are particularly vulnerable to TBI. We hypothesized that disrupted axon-myelin interactions that slow or block action potential conduction in WM tracts may contribute to slowed processing speed after TBI. Concussive TBI in male/female mice was used to produce traumatic axonal injury in the corpus callosum (CC), similar to WM pathology in human TBI cases. Compound action potential velocity was slowed along myelinated axons at 3 d after TBI with partial recovery by 2 weeks, suggesting early demyelination followed by remyelination. Ultrastructurally, dispersed demyelinated axons and disorganized myelin attachment to axons at paranodes were apparent within CC regions exhibiting traumatic axonal injury. Action potential conduction is exquisitely sensitive to paranode abnormalities. Molecular identification of paranodes and nodes of Ranvier detected asymmetrical paranode pairs and abnormal heminodes after TBI. Fluorescent labeling of oligodendrocyte progenitors in NG2CreER;mTmG mice showed increased synthesis of new membranes extended along axons to paranodes, indicating remyelination after TBI. At later times after TBI, an overall loss of conducting axons was observed at 6 weeks followed by CC atrophy at 8 weeks. These studies identify a progression of both myelinated axon conduction deficits and axon-myelin pathology in the CC, implicating WM injury in impaired information processing at early and late phases after TBI. Furthermore, the intervening recovery reveals a potential therapeutic window.

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