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Nerve injury & Motoneurons. Core concepts : Loss of trophic support Excitotoxicity. Causes of motoneuron death. NOCD. Early postnatal injury. Disease SMA ALS PMN. ~5000 affected in UK 1-2/100,000 new cases p.a. Affects men > women Onset >40 years of age
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Nerve injury &Motoneurons Core concepts: Loss of trophic support Excitotoxicity
Causes of motoneuron death NOCD Early postnatal injury Disease SMA ALS PMN
~5000 affected in UK 1-2/100,000 new cases p.a. Affects men > women Onset >40 years of age 55-65 yrs old most commonly affected Genetic Not possible to prevent onset Symptoms Progressive muscle weakness & wasting Hands, arms & legs usually affected first May get spasticity, painful cramps & loss of balance Affects vocal & respiratory muscles Motoneuron disease
Clinical syndromes: Spinal Muscular Atrophy • Hereditary condition defect in SMN gene (Chromosome 5q12.2-q13) • Insufficient peripheral motor sprouting • Increased motoneuron activity – excitotoxicity?
Clinical syndromes:Age related motoneuron loss Senile Muscular Atrophy • Affects 15% of elderly population • 10-20% motoneuron loss • Motoneurons show signs of damage • CGRP, GAP43, p75 • trkB, trkC;
ALS • Affects UMN/LMNs • Mechanisms • 10% Hereditary (SOD1) • Oxidative stress • EAA toxicity • Glial EAAT2 abnormal • Glutamate in CNS • Glutamate in CSF • NOS, Cox 2 induced • Defect in RA pathway
Goals of neuromuscular disease research • Prevent death • Maintain phenotype • Repair neuronal damage
Trophic factors and motoneuron survival BDNF, NT3, NT4 GDNF, NTN, PSN LIF, CNTF, CT1 FGFs RA HGF IGF1 BDNF, NT3, NT4 GDNF LIF, CNTF FGF5, bFGF IGF1, IGF2
NOCD & trophic factor knockout NGF- trk A No motoneuron loss BDNF/NT4 - trk B No motoneuron loss NT3 - trk C No motoneuron loss p75 No motoneuron loss BDNF-NT4 double KO No motoneuron loss trk B/C double KO No motoneuron loss CNTF No motoneuron loss CNTFR 40-50% LOSS LIFR LOSS gp130 40% LOSS GDNF- GFR1 20-40% LOSS GFR2 No motoneuron loss c-RET Significant loss
Motoneuron survival depends on age P0 90% P3 80% P4 30% P5 0% and post-operative survival time
Neonatal motoneuron death depends on lesion site • Motoneuron loss also depends on duration of deprivation • P0 axotomy: 1% survival • P0 crush: 10-30% survival • Delayed reinnervation P5 & P10 crush 60% survival YES YES Yes
Is motoneuron death due to axon damage per se or target deprivation? • Motoneuron loss is regulated by target deprivation • can be induced by NMJ blockade at birth (maintains MN immaturity) injury induced release of glutamate (kills immature MNs) Can be mimicked by NMDA injection
Motoneuron death is regulated by target contact Growing mode Transmitting mode Muscle induced neuro-transmitter release Ach
Motoneuron death is regulated by target contact Growing mode Preserved immature state Death by glutamate excito- toxicity Prevention of neuromuscular interaction No induced neuro-transmitter release
Motoneuron maturation Growing neurone transmitting neurone
Biochemical expression, Reg2, HSP27, GFR1, p75, CGRP, CB, gp130, trkC, CNTFR expression GAP43, c-Jun, NOS, NR1, NR2B, GAL, mRNAs for LIF, trkB, c-RET Physiological neuronal activity abnormal reflex patterns dendrite number, altered morphology Neonatal axotomy: effects on surviving neurons
Neurotrophic support Preventing excitotoxicity Important Outcomes Permanent survival Rescued motoneurons must reinnervate muscles Muscles must develop adequate force on reinnervation Spinal circuits must be re-established Pharmacological manipulations that rescue dying motoneurons
Neurotrophic support 1 week 2 weeks combination nerve + s.c P3 sciatic cut + single dose NTF treatment to injury site
Transient rescue BDNF < 3 weeks NT3 < 2 weeks NT4 < 1week CNTF < 2 weeks LIF < 2 weeks GDNF combinations Restore ChAT levels Permanent rescue GDNF (AAV) Deleterious NGF (activity dependent) High dose BDNF receptor desensitisation or activity dependent Neonatal neurotrophic support
Adult motoneuron death YES NO/ YES -delayed NO
Loss of normal function Loss of reflex function Soma atrophy Motor c.v. ChAT transmitter receptors No cell death* VRA Repeated nerve injury Regeneration GAP43, c-Jun CGRP, GAL, REG2 HSP27 c-Ret, GFR1, LIFR, p75, CNTFR, trkB gp130, trkC Adult nerve injury
Exogenous NTFs reverse effects of injury & aid regeneration NGF, BDNF, GDNF, NT4 * ** trkB GFR1 p75 Regeneration GAP43, CGRP Tubulin CNTF, NT3 p75 apoptosis in Schwann cells regeneration
Adult injuries that kill:Repeated nerve injury SA EAA toxicity BDNF, GDNF, NT4 * ** trkB GAP43 p75 or Schwann cell derived trophic factors • Immature state Regeneration mode
Adult injuries that kill: Avulsion Exogenous BDNF, GDNF prevents death No transport of Schwann cell derived NTFs EAA toxicity * ** trkB GFR1 p75 NOS No access to Schwann cells Regeneration possible GAP43, CGRP, Tubulin Activation of p75 death pathway?
Rescuing dying motoneurons Preventing excitotoxicity • Riluzole • NOS inhibitors • Glutamate inhibitors MK801
Clinical trials in ALS • CNTFsevere side effects: fever, chest pains, muscle weakness, herpes virus activation • BDNF– Major side effects. Pain. • IGF1– data not conclusive; drug well tolerated • GDNF, NTN – not tested • TCH346 (anti apoptotic) – failed phase 2 trial • Riluzole– activity blocker • Retinoic acid– RALD2 & RAR
References • Lowrie MB & Vrbova G 1992 TINS 15: 80-84 • Greensmith L & Vrbova G 1995 Neuro-muscular Disord 5: 359-69 • Vejsada R et al 1995: EJN 7:108-115 • Ma J et al. 2001 139: 216-223