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Changes to Astrocyte-associated Protein Expression at Different Timepoints of Cuprizone Treatment

Glial cells, including astrocytes, microglia, and oligodendrocytes, are brain cells that support and dynamically interact with neurons and each other. These intercellular dynamics undergo changes during stress and disease states. In response to most forms of stress, astrocytes will undergo some vari...

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Autores principales: Frankle, Lana, Riley, Amanda, Tomor, Riely, Lee, Hannah, Jarzembak, Kole, Benedict, Olesia, Sternbach, Sarah, Shelestak, John, McDonough, Jennifer, Clements, Robert
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10153238/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37131767
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2023.04.20.537627
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author Frankle, Lana
Riley, Amanda
Tomor, Riely
Lee, Hannah
Jarzembak, Kole
Benedict, Olesia
Sternbach, Sarah
Shelestak, John
McDonough, Jennifer
Clements, Robert
author_facet Frankle, Lana
Riley, Amanda
Tomor, Riely
Lee, Hannah
Jarzembak, Kole
Benedict, Olesia
Sternbach, Sarah
Shelestak, John
McDonough, Jennifer
Clements, Robert
author_sort Frankle, Lana
collection PubMed
description Glial cells, including astrocytes, microglia, and oligodendrocytes, are brain cells that support and dynamically interact with neurons and each other. These intercellular dynamics undergo changes during stress and disease states. In response to most forms of stress, astrocytes will undergo some variation of activation, meaning upregulation in certain proteins expressed and secreted and either upregulations or downregulations to various constitutive and normal functions. While types of activation are many and contingent on the particular disturbance that triggers these changes, there are two main overarching categories that have been delineated thus far: A1 and A2. Named in the convention of microglial activation subtypes, and with the acknowledgement that the types are not completely distinct or completely comprehensive, the A1 subtype is generically associated with toxic and pro-inflammatory factors, and the A2 phenotype is broadly associated with anti-inflammatory and neurogenic factors. The present study served to measure and document dynamic changes in these subtypes at multiple timepoints using an established experimental model of cuprizone toxic demyelination. The authors found increases in proteins associated with both cell types at different timepoints, with protein increases in the A1 marker C3d and the A2 marker Emp1 in the cortex at one week and protein increases in Emp1 in the corpus callosum at three days and four weeks. There were also increases in Emp1 staining specifically colocalized with astrocyte staining in the corpus callosum at the same timepoints as the protein increases, and in the cortex weeks later at four weeks. C3d colocalization with astrocytes also increased most at four weeks. This indicates simultaneous increases of both types of activation as well as the likely existence of astrocytes expressing both markers. The authors also found the increase in two A1 associated proteins (TNF alpha and C3d) did not show a linear relationship in line with findings from other research and indicating a more complex relationship between cuprizone toxicity and astrocyte activation. The increases in TNF alpha and IFN gamma did not occur at timepoints preceding increases in C3d and Emp1, showing that other factors also precipitate the subtypes associated (A1 for C3d and A2 for Emp1). These findings add to the body of research showing the specific early timepoints at which A1 and A2 markers are most increased during the course of cuprizone treatment, including the fact that these increases can be non-linear in the case of Emp1. This provides additional information on optimal times for targeted interventions during the cuprizone model.
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spelling pubmed-101532382023-05-03 Changes to Astrocyte-associated Protein Expression at Different Timepoints of Cuprizone Treatment Frankle, Lana Riley, Amanda Tomor, Riely Lee, Hannah Jarzembak, Kole Benedict, Olesia Sternbach, Sarah Shelestak, John McDonough, Jennifer Clements, Robert bioRxiv Article Glial cells, including astrocytes, microglia, and oligodendrocytes, are brain cells that support and dynamically interact with neurons and each other. These intercellular dynamics undergo changes during stress and disease states. In response to most forms of stress, astrocytes will undergo some variation of activation, meaning upregulation in certain proteins expressed and secreted and either upregulations or downregulations to various constitutive and normal functions. While types of activation are many and contingent on the particular disturbance that triggers these changes, there are two main overarching categories that have been delineated thus far: A1 and A2. Named in the convention of microglial activation subtypes, and with the acknowledgement that the types are not completely distinct or completely comprehensive, the A1 subtype is generically associated with toxic and pro-inflammatory factors, and the A2 phenotype is broadly associated with anti-inflammatory and neurogenic factors. The present study served to measure and document dynamic changes in these subtypes at multiple timepoints using an established experimental model of cuprizone toxic demyelination. The authors found increases in proteins associated with both cell types at different timepoints, with protein increases in the A1 marker C3d and the A2 marker Emp1 in the cortex at one week and protein increases in Emp1 in the corpus callosum at three days and four weeks. There were also increases in Emp1 staining specifically colocalized with astrocyte staining in the corpus callosum at the same timepoints as the protein increases, and in the cortex weeks later at four weeks. C3d colocalization with astrocytes also increased most at four weeks. This indicates simultaneous increases of both types of activation as well as the likely existence of astrocytes expressing both markers. The authors also found the increase in two A1 associated proteins (TNF alpha and C3d) did not show a linear relationship in line with findings from other research and indicating a more complex relationship between cuprizone toxicity and astrocyte activation. The increases in TNF alpha and IFN gamma did not occur at timepoints preceding increases in C3d and Emp1, showing that other factors also precipitate the subtypes associated (A1 for C3d and A2 for Emp1). These findings add to the body of research showing the specific early timepoints at which A1 and A2 markers are most increased during the course of cuprizone treatment, including the fact that these increases can be non-linear in the case of Emp1. This provides additional information on optimal times for targeted interventions during the cuprizone model. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory 2023-04-20 /pmc/articles/PMC10153238/ /pubmed/37131767 http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2023.04.20.537627 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which allows reusers to distribute, remix, adapt, and build upon the material in any medium or format, so long as attribution is given to the creator. The license allows for commercial use.
spellingShingle Article
Frankle, Lana
Riley, Amanda
Tomor, Riely
Lee, Hannah
Jarzembak, Kole
Benedict, Olesia
Sternbach, Sarah
Shelestak, John
McDonough, Jennifer
Clements, Robert
Changes to Astrocyte-associated Protein Expression at Different Timepoints of Cuprizone Treatment
title Changes to Astrocyte-associated Protein Expression at Different Timepoints of Cuprizone Treatment
title_full Changes to Astrocyte-associated Protein Expression at Different Timepoints of Cuprizone Treatment
title_fullStr Changes to Astrocyte-associated Protein Expression at Different Timepoints of Cuprizone Treatment
title_full_unstemmed Changes to Astrocyte-associated Protein Expression at Different Timepoints of Cuprizone Treatment
title_short Changes to Astrocyte-associated Protein Expression at Different Timepoints of Cuprizone Treatment
title_sort changes to astrocyte-associated protein expression at different timepoints of cuprizone treatment
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10153238/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37131767
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2023.04.20.537627
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