4.5 Article

Glial coverage in the optic nerve expands in proportion to optic axon loss in chronic mouse glaucoma

Journal

EXPERIMENTAL EYE RESEARCH
Volume 150, Issue -, Pages 34-43

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.exer.2016.01.014

Keywords

Glaucoma; Neurodegeneration; Optic nerve; Axon loss; Remodeling; Gliosis; Microglia; Segmentation

Categories

Funding

  1. Glaucoma Research Foundation
  2. Melza M. and Frank Theodore Barr Foundation
  3. University of Utah Vision Core [5P30EY014800]
  4. US National Institute of Healthy [R01 EY020878, R01 EY023621]

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Within the white matter, axonal loss by neurodegeneration is coupled to glial cell changes in gene expression, structure and function commonly termed gliosis. Recently, we described the highly variable expansion of gliosis alebosco@neuro.utah.edu in degenerative optic nerves from the DBA/2J mouse model of chronic, age-related glaucoma. Here, to estimate and compare the levels of axonal loss with the expansion of glial coverage and axonal degeneration in DBA/2J nerves, we combined semiautomatic axon counts with threshold-based segmentation of total glial/scar areas and degenerative axonal profiles in plastic cross-sections. In nerves ranging from mild to severe degeneration, we found that the progression of axonal dropout is coupled to an increase of gliotic area. We detected a strong correlation between axon loss and the aggregate coverage by glial cells and scar, whereas axon loss did not correlate with the small fraction of degenerating profiles. Nerves with low to medium levels of axon loss displayed moderate glial reactivity, consisting of hypertrophic astrocytes, activated microglia and normal distribution of oligodendrocytes, with minimal reorganization of the tissue architecture. In contrast, nerves with extensive axonal loss showed prevalent rearrangement of the nerve, with loss of axon fascicle territories and enlarged or almost continuous gliotic and scar domains, containing reactive astrocytes, oligodendrocytes and activated microglia. These findings support the value of optic nerve gliotic expansion as a quantitative estimate of optic neuropathy that correlates with axon loss, applicable to grade the severity of optic nerve damage in mouse chronic glaucoma. (C) 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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