Systemic bisperoxovanadium activates Akt/mTOR, reduces autophagy, and enhances recovery following cervical spinal cord injury.

Secondary damage following primary spinal cord injury extends pathology beyond the site of initial trauma, and effective management is imperative for maximizing anatomical and functional recovery. Bisperoxovanadium compounds have proven neuroprotective effects in several central nervous system injur...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Chandler L Walker, Melissa J Walker, Nai-Kui Liu, Emelie C Risberg, Xiang Gao, Jinhui Chen, Xiao-Ming Xu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3254642?pdf=render
id doaj-60a8c087a4a247f692a7c3d4b3325539
record_format Article
spelling doaj-60a8c087a4a247f692a7c3d4b33255392020-11-25T01:56:04ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032012-01-0171e3001210.1371/journal.pone.0030012Systemic bisperoxovanadium activates Akt/mTOR, reduces autophagy, and enhances recovery following cervical spinal cord injury.Chandler L WalkerMelissa J WalkerNai-Kui LiuEmelie C RisbergXiang GaoJinhui ChenXiao-Ming XuSecondary damage following primary spinal cord injury extends pathology beyond the site of initial trauma, and effective management is imperative for maximizing anatomical and functional recovery. Bisperoxovanadium compounds have proven neuroprotective effects in several central nervous system injury/disease models, however, no mechanism has been linked to such neuroprotection from bisperoxovanadium treatment following spinal trauma. The goal of this study was to assess acute bisperoxovanadium treatment effects on neuroprotection and functional recovery following cervical unilateral contusive spinal cord injury, and investigate a potential mechanism of the compound's action. Two experimental groups of rats were established to 1) assess twice-daily 7 day treatment of the compound, potassium bisperoxo (picolinato) vanadium, on long-term recovery of skilled forelimb activity using a novel food manipulation test, and neuroprotection 6 weeks following injury and 2) elucidate an acute mechanistic link for the action of the drug post-injury. Immunofluorescence and Western blotting were performed to assess cellular signaling 1 day following SCI, and histochemistry and forelimb functional analysis were utilized to assess neuroprotection and recovery 6 weeks after injury. Bisperoxovanadium promoted significant neuroprotection through reduced motorneuron death, increased tissue sparing, and minimized cavity formation in rats. Enhanced forelimb functional ability during a treat-eating assessment was also observed. Additionally, bisperoxovanadium significantly enhanced downstream Akt and mammalian target of rapamycin signaling and reduced autophagic activity, suggesting inhibition of the phosphatase and tensin homologue deleted on chromosome ten as a potential mechanism of bisperoxovanadium action following traumatic spinal cord injury. Overall, this study demonstrates the efficacy of a clinically applicable pharmacological therapy for rapid initiation of neuroprotection post-spinal cord injury, and sheds light on the signaling involved in its action.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3254642?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Chandler L Walker
Melissa J Walker
Nai-Kui Liu
Emelie C Risberg
Xiang Gao
Jinhui Chen
Xiao-Ming Xu
spellingShingle Chandler L Walker
Melissa J Walker
Nai-Kui Liu
Emelie C Risberg
Xiang Gao
Jinhui Chen
Xiao-Ming Xu
Systemic bisperoxovanadium activates Akt/mTOR, reduces autophagy, and enhances recovery following cervical spinal cord injury.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Chandler L Walker
Melissa J Walker
Nai-Kui Liu
Emelie C Risberg
Xiang Gao
Jinhui Chen
Xiao-Ming Xu
author_sort Chandler L Walker
title Systemic bisperoxovanadium activates Akt/mTOR, reduces autophagy, and enhances recovery following cervical spinal cord injury.
title_short Systemic bisperoxovanadium activates Akt/mTOR, reduces autophagy, and enhances recovery following cervical spinal cord injury.
title_full Systemic bisperoxovanadium activates Akt/mTOR, reduces autophagy, and enhances recovery following cervical spinal cord injury.
title_fullStr Systemic bisperoxovanadium activates Akt/mTOR, reduces autophagy, and enhances recovery following cervical spinal cord injury.
title_full_unstemmed Systemic bisperoxovanadium activates Akt/mTOR, reduces autophagy, and enhances recovery following cervical spinal cord injury.
title_sort systemic bisperoxovanadium activates akt/mtor, reduces autophagy, and enhances recovery following cervical spinal cord injury.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2012-01-01
description Secondary damage following primary spinal cord injury extends pathology beyond the site of initial trauma, and effective management is imperative for maximizing anatomical and functional recovery. Bisperoxovanadium compounds have proven neuroprotective effects in several central nervous system injury/disease models, however, no mechanism has been linked to such neuroprotection from bisperoxovanadium treatment following spinal trauma. The goal of this study was to assess acute bisperoxovanadium treatment effects on neuroprotection and functional recovery following cervical unilateral contusive spinal cord injury, and investigate a potential mechanism of the compound's action. Two experimental groups of rats were established to 1) assess twice-daily 7 day treatment of the compound, potassium bisperoxo (picolinato) vanadium, on long-term recovery of skilled forelimb activity using a novel food manipulation test, and neuroprotection 6 weeks following injury and 2) elucidate an acute mechanistic link for the action of the drug post-injury. Immunofluorescence and Western blotting were performed to assess cellular signaling 1 day following SCI, and histochemistry and forelimb functional analysis were utilized to assess neuroprotection and recovery 6 weeks after injury. Bisperoxovanadium promoted significant neuroprotection through reduced motorneuron death, increased tissue sparing, and minimized cavity formation in rats. Enhanced forelimb functional ability during a treat-eating assessment was also observed. Additionally, bisperoxovanadium significantly enhanced downstream Akt and mammalian target of rapamycin signaling and reduced autophagic activity, suggesting inhibition of the phosphatase and tensin homologue deleted on chromosome ten as a potential mechanism of bisperoxovanadium action following traumatic spinal cord injury. Overall, this study demonstrates the efficacy of a clinically applicable pharmacological therapy for rapid initiation of neuroprotection post-spinal cord injury, and sheds light on the signaling involved in its action.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3254642?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT chandlerlwalker systemicbisperoxovanadiumactivatesaktmtorreducesautophagyandenhancesrecoveryfollowingcervicalspinalcordinjury
AT melissajwalker systemicbisperoxovanadiumactivatesaktmtorreducesautophagyandenhancesrecoveryfollowingcervicalspinalcordinjury
AT naikuiliu systemicbisperoxovanadiumactivatesaktmtorreducesautophagyandenhancesrecoveryfollowingcervicalspinalcordinjury
AT emeliecrisberg systemicbisperoxovanadiumactivatesaktmtorreducesautophagyandenhancesrecoveryfollowingcervicalspinalcordinjury
AT xianggao systemicbisperoxovanadiumactivatesaktmtorreducesautophagyandenhancesrecoveryfollowingcervicalspinalcordinjury
AT jinhuichen systemicbisperoxovanadiumactivatesaktmtorreducesautophagyandenhancesrecoveryfollowingcervicalspinalcordinjury
AT xiaomingxu systemicbisperoxovanadiumactivatesaktmtorreducesautophagyandenhancesrecoveryfollowingcervicalspinalcordinjury
_version_ 1724981841307369472