4.6 Review

Iron Metabolism Disorders for Cognitive Dysfunction After Mild Traumatic Brain Injury

Journal

FRONTIERS IN NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 15, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2021.587197

Keywords

traumatic brain injury; cognitive dysfunction; cerebrospinal-fluid contacting neuron; autophagy; iron metabolism

Categories

Funding

  1. State Key Laboratory of Trauma, Burn and Combined Injury [SKLYQ202002]
  2. Southwest Hospital [SWH2018BJKJ-05]
  3. National Natural Science Foundation of China [82030036]
  4. Chongqing Talent Program [4139Z2391]

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Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a severe form of acute brain injury predicted to become one of the top three neurological diseases causing disabilities by 2030. Mild TBI (mTBI), often overlooked, accounts for 80% of all TBIs and can lead to long-term cognitive dysfunction due to iron deposition and its effects on neural pathways. Iron overload and dysfunction in metabolism play a crucial role in the pathophysiology of mTBI.
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is one of the most harmful forms of acute brain injury and predicted to be one of the three major neurological diseases that cause neurological disabilities by 2030. A series of secondary injury cascades often cause cognitive dysfunction of TBI patients leading to poor prognosis. However, there are still no effective intervention measures, which drive us to explore new therapeutic targets. In this process, the most part of mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) is ignored because its initial symptoms seemed not serious. Unfortunately, the ignored mTBI accounts for 80% of the total TBI, and a large part of the patients have long-term cognitive dysfunction. Iron deposition has been observed in mTBI patients and accompanies the whole pathological process. Iron accumulation may affect long-term cognitive dysfunction from three pathways: local injury, iron deposition induces tau phosphorylation, the formation of neurofibrillary tangles; neural cells death; and neural network damage, iron deposition leads to axonal injury by utilizing the iron sensibility of oligodendrocytes. Thus, iron overload and metabolism dysfunction was thought to play a pivotal role in mTBI pathophysiology. Cerebrospinal fluid-contacting neurons (CSF-cNs) located in the ependyma have bidirectional communication function between cerebral-spinal fluid and brain parenchyma, and may participate in the pathway of iron-induced cognitive dysfunction through projected nerve fibers and transmitted factor, such as 5-hydroxytryptamine, etc. The present review provides an overview of the metabolism and function of iron in mTBI, and to seek a potential new treatment target for mTBI with a novel perspective through combined iron and CSF-cNs.

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