4.4 Article

Detection of endogenous iron deposits in the injured mouse spinal cord through high-resolution ex vivo and in vivo MRI

Journal

NMR IN BIOMEDICINE
Volume 26, Issue 2, Pages 141-150

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1002/nbm.2829

Keywords

neurotrauma; secondary injury; astrogliosis; neural scar; neurodegeneration; haemorrhage; oxidative stress

Funding

  1. School of Biomedical Sciences (The University of Queensland)
  2. office of the DVC(R) of The University of Queensland
  3. International Postgraduate Research Scholarship of Australian Government
  4. Australian National Imaging Facility
  5. Queensland NMR network

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The main aim of this study was to employ high-resolution MRI to investigate the spatiotemporal development of pathological features associated with contusive spinal cord injury (SCI) in mice. Experimental mice were subjected to either sham surgery or moderate contusive SCI. A 16.4-T small-animal MR system was employed for nondestructive imaging of post-mortem, fixed spinal cord specimens at the subacute (7?days) and more chronic (2835 days) stages post-injury. Routine histological techniques were used for subsequent investigation of the observed neuropathology at the microscopic level. The central core of the lesion appeared as a dark hypo-intense area on MR images at all time points investigated. Small focal hypo-intense spots were also observed spreading through the dorsal funiculi proximal and distal to the site of impact, an area that is known to undergo gliosis and Wallerian degeneration in response to injury. Histological examination revealed these hypo-intense spots to be high in iron content as determined by Prussian blue staining. Quantitative image analysis confirmed the increased presence of iron deposits at all post-injury time points investigated (p < 0.05). Distant iron deposits were also detectable through live imaging without the use of contrast-enhancing agents, enabling the longitudinal investigation of this pathology in individual animals. Further immunohistochemical evaluation showed that intracellular iron deposits localised to macrophages/microglia, astrocytes and oligodendrocytes in the subacute phase of SCI, but predominantly to glial fibrillary acidic protein-positive, CC-1-positive astrocytes at later stages of recovery. Progressive, widespread intracellular iron accumulation is thus a normal feature of SCI in mice, and high-resolution MRI can be effectively used to detect and monitor these neuropathological changes with time. Copyright (c) 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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