Trauma in Neonatal Acute Brain Slices Alters Calcium and Network Dynamics and Causes Calpain-Mediated Cell Death

Author:

Suryavanshi PratyushORCID,Baule Samuel,Glykys JosephORCID

Abstract

Preparing acute brain slices produces trauma that mimics severe penetrating brain injury. In neonatal acute brain slices, the spatiotemporal characteristics of trauma-induced calcium dynamics in neurons and its effect on network activity are relatively unknown. Using multiphoton laser scanning microscopy of the somatosensory neocortex in acute neonatal mouse brain slices (P8–12), we simultaneously imaged neuronal Ca2+dynamics (GCaMP6s) and cytotoxicity (propidium iodide or PI) to determine the relationship between cytotoxic Ca2+loaded neurons (GCaMP-filled) and cell viability at different depths and incubation times. PI+cells and GCaMP-filled neurons were abundant at the surface of the slices, with an exponential decrease with depth. Regions with high PI+cells correlated with elevated neuronal and neuropil Ca2+. The number of PI+cells and GCaMP-filled neurons increased with prolonged incubation. GCaMP-filled neurons did not participate in stimulus-evoked or seizure-evoked network activity. Significantly, the superficial tissue, with a higher degree of trauma-induced injury, showed attenuated seizure-related neuronal Ca2+responses. Calpain inhibition prevented the increase in PI+cells and GCaMP-filled neurons in the deep tissue and during prolonged incubation times. Isoform-specific pharmacological inhibition implicated calpain-2 as a significant contributor to trauma-induced injury in acute slices. Our results show a calpain-mediated spatiotemporal relationship between cell death and aberrant neuronal Ca2+load in acute neonatal brain slices. Also, we demonstrate that neurons in acute brain slices exhibit altered physiology depending on the degree of trauma-induced injury. Blocking calpains may be a therapeutic option to prevent acute neuronal death during traumatic brain injury in the young brain.

Funder

NIH/NINDS

HAWK-IDDRC

Iowa Neuroscience Institute

AES postdoctoral fellowship

Publisher

Society for Neuroscience

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