Actin redistribution underlies the sparing effect of mild hypothermia on dendritic spine morphology after in vitro ischemia

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Abstract

Brain hypothermia is at present the most effective neuroprotective treatment against brain ischemia in man. Ischemia induces a redistribution of proteins involved in synaptic functions, which is markedly diminished by therapeutic hypothermia (33°C). Dendritic spines at excitatory synapses are motile and show both shape changes and rearrangement of synaptic proteins as a consequence of neuronal activity. We investigated the effect of reduced temperature (33°C and 27°C compared with 37°C), on spine motility, length and morphology by studying the distribution of GFP-actin before, during and after induction of in vitro ischemia. Because high-concentration actin filaments are located inside spines, dissociated hippocampal neurons (7-11DIV) from transgenic mice expressing GFP-actin were used in this study. The movement of the spines and the distribution of GFP-actin were recorded using time-lapse fluorescence microscopy. Under normal conditions rapid rearrangement of GFP-actin was seen in dendritic spines, indicating highly motile spines at 37°C. Decreasing the incubation temperature to 33°C or 27°C, dramatically reduces actin dynamics (spine motility) by approximately 50% and 70%, respectively. In addition, the length of the spine shaft was reduced by 20%. We propose that decreasing the temperature from 37°C to 33°C during ischemia decreases the neuronal actin polymerization rate, which reduces spine calcium kinetics, disrupts detrimental cell signaling and protects neurons against damage. © 2005 ISCBFM All rights reserved.

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Gisselsson, L. L., Matus, A., & Wieloch, T. (2005). Actin redistribution underlies the sparing effect of mild hypothermia on dendritic spine morphology after in vitro ischemia. Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism, 25(10), 1346–1355. https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.jcbfm.9600131

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