6533b834fe1ef96bd129cb0c
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Targeted rescue of synaptic plasticity improves cognitive decline after severe systemic inflammation
Klaus V. ToykaNina HempelJonathan WickelLena GrünewaldAnja UrbachRainer KönigLars SchmidlMarkus BlaessMichael BauerNina HahnBenedikt GrünewaldHolger HaselmannRalf A. ClausChristian GeisFranziska HörholdAnja S. StraussHanna RuppHa-yeun Chungsubject
Arc (protein)Synaptic scalingDendritic spinebusiness.industrySynaptic plasticityExcitatory postsynaptic potentialMedicineHippocampusLong-term potentiationSynaptic signalingbusinessNeurosciencedescription
AbstractSepsis-associated encephalopathy (SAE) is a frequent complication in patients with severe systemic infection resulting in acute brain dysfunction and incapacitating long-term sequelae. SAE includes delirium, premature death, post-traumatic stress disorder, and major long-term cognitive impairment. The underlying pathophysiology of SAE is largely unresolved and specific treatment options are missing. We induced the peritoneal contamination and infection (PCI) sepsis model in 769 mice and compared these with 259 control mice. We found that experimental sepsis causes synaptic pathology in the brain characterized by severely disordered synaptic plasticity with reduced long-term potentiation, changes in CA1 pyramidal neuron dendritic spines, and behavioral abnormalities indicating cognitive dysfunction. Using electrophysiology, we found reduced frequency of quantal and spontaneous excitatory postsynaptic currents whereas amplitudes of miniature, spontaneous, and evoked excitatory currents were increased, pointing towards a homeostatic synaptic scaling mechanism. Corresponding to dysfunctional excitatory synaptic function we discovered downregulation of genes related to neuronal and synaptic signaling in the brain, including the gene for activity-regulated cytoskeleton-associated protein (Arc/Arg3.1), members of the transcription-regulatory EGR gene family, and the gene for dual-specificity phosphatase 6 (Dusp6). At the protein level, ARC expression and MAP kinase signaling in the brain were affected. For targeted rescue of dysfunctional synaptic signaling and plasticity, we overexpressed ARC in the hippocampus by microinjection of an adeno-associated virus containing a neuron-specific plasmid of the ARC transgene. Hereby we achieved recovery of defective synaptic plasticity in the hippocampal Schaffer collateral-CA1 pathway and improvement of memory dysfunction. Using a different rescue paradigm, PCI mice were subjected to enriched environment providing multiple activating stimuli. Enriched environment led to restoration of disordered long-term potentiation and memory, thus demonstrating the potential for activity-induced improvement. Together, we identified synaptic pathomechanisms of SAE after severe systemic infection and provide a conceptual approach to treat SAE-related disease mechanisms which may be applicable to patients afflicted with SAE.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2021-03-06 |