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Clostridium perfringens epsilon toxin induces permanent neuronal degeneration and behavioral changes

Abstract
Clostridium perfringens epsilon toxin (ETX), the most potent toxin produced by this bacteria, plays a key role in the pathogenesis of enterotoxaemia in ruminants, causing brain edema and encephalomalacia. Studies of animals suffering from ETX intoxication describe severe neurological disorders that are thought to be the result of vasogenic brain edemas and indirect neuronal toxicity, killing oligodendrocytes but not astrocytes, microglia, or neurons in [ver mas...]
Clostridium perfringens epsilon toxin (ETX), the most potent toxin produced by this bacteria, plays a key role in the pathogenesis of enterotoxaemia in ruminants, causing brain edema and encephalomalacia. Studies of animals suffering from ETX intoxication describe severe neurological disorders that are thought to be the result of vasogenic brain edemas and indirect neuronal toxicity, killing oligodendrocytes but not astrocytes, microglia, or neurons in vitro. In this study, by means of intravenous and intracerebroventricular delivery of sub-lethal concentrations of ETX, the histological and ultrastructural changes of the brain were studied in rats and mice. Histological analysis showed degenerative changes in neurons from the cortex, hippocampus, striatum and hypothalamus. Ultrastructurally, necrotic neurons and apoptotic cells were observed in these same areas, among axons with accumulation of neurofilaments and demyelination as well as synaptic stripping. Lesions observed in the brain after sub-lethal exposure to ETX, result in permanent behavioral changes in animals surviving ETX exposure, as observed individually in several animals and assessed in the Inclined Plane Test and the Wire Hang Test. Pharmacological studies showed that dexamethasone and reserpine but not ketamine or riluzole were able to reduce the brain lesions and the lethality of ETX. Cytotoxicity was not observed upon neuronal primary cultures in vitro. Therefore, we hypothesize that ETX can affect the brain of animals independently of death, producing changes on neurons or glia as the result of complex interactions, independently of ETX-BBB interactions. [Cerrar]
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Author
Morris, Winston Eduardo;   Goldstein, Jorge;   Redondo, Leandro Martí­n;   Cangelosi, Adriana;   Geoghegan, Patricia;   Brocco, Marcela Adriana;   Loidl, Fabián C.;   Fernandez Miyakawa, Mariano Enrique;  
Fuente
Toxicon 130 :19-28. (May 2017)
Date
2017-05
ISSN
0041-0101 (Print)
1879-3150 (Online)
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12123/1345
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S004101011730065X
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.toxicon.2017.02.019
Formato
pdf
Tipo de documento
artículo
Palabras Claves
Enfermedades de los Animales; Animal Diseases; Clostridium Perfringens; Toxinas; Toxins; Enterotoxemia; Enterotoxaemia; Trastornos del Sistema Nervioso; Nervous System Diseases;
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Excepto donde se diga explicitamente, este item se publica bajo la siguiente descripción: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 Unported (CC BY-NC-SA 2.5)
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