Cargando…

Congenital Anophthalmia and Binocular Neonatal Enucleation Differently Affect the Proteome of Primary and Secondary Visual Cortices in Mice

In blind individuals, visually deprived occipital areas are activated by non-visual stimuli. The extent of this cross-modal activation depends on the age at onset of blindness. Cross-modal inputs have access to several anatomical pathways to reactivate deprived visual areas. Ectopic cross-modal subc...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Laramée, Marie-Eve, Smolders, Katrien, Hu, Tjing-Tjing, Bronchti, Gilles, Boire, Denis, Arckens, Lutgarde
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4943598/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27410964
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0159320
_version_ 1782442622656184320
author Laramée, Marie-Eve
Smolders, Katrien
Hu, Tjing-Tjing
Bronchti, Gilles
Boire, Denis
Arckens, Lutgarde
author_facet Laramée, Marie-Eve
Smolders, Katrien
Hu, Tjing-Tjing
Bronchti, Gilles
Boire, Denis
Arckens, Lutgarde
author_sort Laramée, Marie-Eve
collection PubMed
description In blind individuals, visually deprived occipital areas are activated by non-visual stimuli. The extent of this cross-modal activation depends on the age at onset of blindness. Cross-modal inputs have access to several anatomical pathways to reactivate deprived visual areas. Ectopic cross-modal subcortical connections have been shown in anophthalmic animals but not in animals deprived of sight at a later age. Direct and indirect cross-modal cortical connections toward visual areas could also be involved, yet the number of neurons implicated is similar between blind mice and sighted controls. Changes at the axon terminal, dendritic spine or synaptic level are therefore expected upon loss of visual inputs. Here, the proteome of V1, V2M and V2L from P0-enucleated, anophthalmic and sighted mice, sharing a common genetic background (C57BL/6J x ZRDCT/An), was investigated by 2-D DIGE and Western analyses to identify molecular adaptations to enucleation and/or anophthalmia. Few proteins were differentially expressed in enucleated or anophthalmic mice in comparison to sighted mice. The loss of sight affected three pathways: metabolism, synaptic transmission and morphogenesis. Most changes were detected in V1, followed by V2M. Overall, cross-modal adaptations could be promoted in both models of early blindness but not through the exact same molecular strategy. A lower metabolic activity observed in visual areas of blind mice suggests that even if cross-modal inputs reactivate visual areas, they could remain suboptimally processed.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-4943598
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2016
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-49435982016-08-01 Congenital Anophthalmia and Binocular Neonatal Enucleation Differently Affect the Proteome of Primary and Secondary Visual Cortices in Mice Laramée, Marie-Eve Smolders, Katrien Hu, Tjing-Tjing Bronchti, Gilles Boire, Denis Arckens, Lutgarde PLoS One Research Article In blind individuals, visually deprived occipital areas are activated by non-visual stimuli. The extent of this cross-modal activation depends on the age at onset of blindness. Cross-modal inputs have access to several anatomical pathways to reactivate deprived visual areas. Ectopic cross-modal subcortical connections have been shown in anophthalmic animals but not in animals deprived of sight at a later age. Direct and indirect cross-modal cortical connections toward visual areas could also be involved, yet the number of neurons implicated is similar between blind mice and sighted controls. Changes at the axon terminal, dendritic spine or synaptic level are therefore expected upon loss of visual inputs. Here, the proteome of V1, V2M and V2L from P0-enucleated, anophthalmic and sighted mice, sharing a common genetic background (C57BL/6J x ZRDCT/An), was investigated by 2-D DIGE and Western analyses to identify molecular adaptations to enucleation and/or anophthalmia. Few proteins were differentially expressed in enucleated or anophthalmic mice in comparison to sighted mice. The loss of sight affected three pathways: metabolism, synaptic transmission and morphogenesis. Most changes were detected in V1, followed by V2M. Overall, cross-modal adaptations could be promoted in both models of early blindness but not through the exact same molecular strategy. A lower metabolic activity observed in visual areas of blind mice suggests that even if cross-modal inputs reactivate visual areas, they could remain suboptimally processed. Public Library of Science 2016-07-13 /pmc/articles/PMC4943598/ /pubmed/27410964 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0159320 Text en © 2016 Laramée et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Laramée, Marie-Eve
Smolders, Katrien
Hu, Tjing-Tjing
Bronchti, Gilles
Boire, Denis
Arckens, Lutgarde
Congenital Anophthalmia and Binocular Neonatal Enucleation Differently Affect the Proteome of Primary and Secondary Visual Cortices in Mice
title Congenital Anophthalmia and Binocular Neonatal Enucleation Differently Affect the Proteome of Primary and Secondary Visual Cortices in Mice
title_full Congenital Anophthalmia and Binocular Neonatal Enucleation Differently Affect the Proteome of Primary and Secondary Visual Cortices in Mice
title_fullStr Congenital Anophthalmia and Binocular Neonatal Enucleation Differently Affect the Proteome of Primary and Secondary Visual Cortices in Mice
title_full_unstemmed Congenital Anophthalmia and Binocular Neonatal Enucleation Differently Affect the Proteome of Primary and Secondary Visual Cortices in Mice
title_short Congenital Anophthalmia and Binocular Neonatal Enucleation Differently Affect the Proteome of Primary and Secondary Visual Cortices in Mice
title_sort congenital anophthalmia and binocular neonatal enucleation differently affect the proteome of primary and secondary visual cortices in mice
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4943598/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27410964
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0159320
work_keys_str_mv AT larameemarieeve congenitalanophthalmiaandbinocularneonatalenucleationdifferentlyaffecttheproteomeofprimaryandsecondaryvisualcorticesinmice
AT smolderskatrien congenitalanophthalmiaandbinocularneonatalenucleationdifferentlyaffecttheproteomeofprimaryandsecondaryvisualcorticesinmice
AT hutjingtjing congenitalanophthalmiaandbinocularneonatalenucleationdifferentlyaffecttheproteomeofprimaryandsecondaryvisualcorticesinmice
AT bronchtigilles congenitalanophthalmiaandbinocularneonatalenucleationdifferentlyaffecttheproteomeofprimaryandsecondaryvisualcorticesinmice
AT boiredenis congenitalanophthalmiaandbinocularneonatalenucleationdifferentlyaffecttheproteomeofprimaryandsecondaryvisualcorticesinmice
AT arckenslutgarde congenitalanophthalmiaandbinocularneonatalenucleationdifferentlyaffecttheproteomeofprimaryandsecondaryvisualcorticesinmice