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

eNeuro. 2024 Jul 8;11(7):ENEURO.0007-24.2024. doi: 10.1523/ENEURO.0007-24.2024. Print 2024 Jul.

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.

Keywords: GCaMP; calcium overload; neuronal death; somatosensory; trauma.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Animals, Newborn*
  • Calcium* / metabolism
  • Calpain* / metabolism
  • Cell Death* / physiology
  • Female
  • Male
  • Mice
  • Mice, Inbred C57BL
  • Neocortex / metabolism
  • Neurons* / metabolism

Substances

  • Calpain
  • Calcium