Open Access
Open access
Scientific Reports, volume 6, issue 1, publication number 33249

Mitochondrial dysfunction is an important cause of neurological deficits in an inflammatory model of multiple sclerosis

Mona Sadeghian 1
Vincenzo Mastrolia 1
Ali Rezaei Haddad 1
Angelina Mosley 1
Gizem Mullali 1
Dimitra Schiza 1
Marija Sajic 1
Iain Hargreaves 2
Simon Heales 3
Michael R. Duchen 4
Kenneth J. Smith 1
Show full list: 11 authors
1
 
Department of Neuroinflammation, Queen Square Multiple Sclerosis Centre, UCL Institute of Neurology, UK
2
 
Neurometabolic Unit, National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery, London, UK
3
 
Chemical Pathology, Great Ormond Street Children’s Hospital, London, UK
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2016-09-14
scimago Q1
SJR0.900
CiteScore7.5
Impact factor3.8
ISSN20452322
Multidisciplinary
Abstract
Neuroinflammation can cause major neurological dysfunction, without demyelination, in both multiple sclerosis (MS) and a mouse model of the disease (experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis; EAE), but the mechanisms remain obscure. Confocal in vivo imaging of the mouse EAE spinal cord reveals that impaired neurological function correlates with the depolarisation of both the axonal mitochondria and the axons themselves. Indeed, the depolarisation parallels the expression of neurological deficit at the onset of disease, and during relapse, improving during remission in conjunction with the deficit. Mitochondrial dysfunction, fragmentation and impaired trafficking were most severe in regions of extravasated perivascular inflammatory cells. The dysfunction at disease onset was accompanied by increased expression of the rate-limiting glycolytic enzyme phosphofructokinase-2 in activated astrocytes, and by selective reduction in spinal mitochondrial complex I activity. The metabolic changes preceded any demyelination or axonal degeneration. We conclude that mitochondrial dysfunction is a major cause of reversible neurological deficits in neuroinflammatory disease, such as MS.
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