Vascular Defects and Spinal Cord Hypoxia in Spinal Muscular Atrophy

脊髓性肌萎缩症中的血管缺陷和脊髓缺氧

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作者:Eilidh Somers, Robert D Lees, Katie Hoban, James N Sleigh, Haiyan Zhou, Francesco Muntoni, Kevin Talbot, Thomas H Gillingwater, Simon H Parson

Methods

Development and integrity of the capillary bed was examined in skeletal muscle and spinal cord of SMA mice, and muscle biopsies from SMA patients and controls, using quantitative morphometric approaches on immunohistochemically labeled tissue. Pimonidazole hydrochloride-based assays were used to identify functional hypoxia.

Objective

Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is a major inherited cause of infant death worldwide. It

Results

The capillary bed in muscle and spinal cord was normal in presymptomatic SMA mice (postnatal day 1), but failed to match subsequent postnatal development in control littermates. At mid- and late-symptomatic time points, the extent of the vascular architecture observed in two distinct mouse models of SMA was ∼50% of that observed in control animals. Skeletal muscle biopsies from human patients confirmed the presence of developmentally similar, significant vascular depletion in severe SMA. Hypovascularity in SMA mouse spinal cord was accompanied by significant functional hypoxia and defects in the blood-spinal cord barrier. Interpretation: Our results indicate that vascular defects are a major feature of severe forms of SMA, present in both mouse models and patients, resulting in functional hypoxia of motor neurons. Thus, abnormal vascular development and resulting hypoxia may contribute to the pathogenesis of SMA.

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