Abstract

Spinal cord injury (SCI) induces a cascade of processes that may further expand the damage (secondary injury) or, alternatively, may be part of a safeguard response. Here we show that after a moderate-severe contusive SCI in rats there is a significant and very early increase in the spinal cord content of the endocannabinoids 2-arachidonoylglycerol (2-AG) and arachidonoyl ethanolamide (anandamide, AEA). Since 2-AG and AEA act through CB1 and CB2 cannabinoid receptors, we administered at 20 minutes after lesion a single injection of their respective antagonists AM281 and AM630 alone or in combination to block the effects of this early endocannabinoid accumulation. We observed that AM281, AM630 or AM281 plus AM630 administration impairs the spontaneous motor recovery of rats according to the Basso-Beattie-Bresnahan (BBB) locomotor scale. However, blockade of CB1, CB2 or both receptors produced different effects at the histopathological level. Thus, AM630 administration results at 90 days after lesion in increased MHC-II expression by spinal cord microglia/monocytes and reduced number of serotoninergic fibres in lumbar spinal cord (below the lesion). AM281 exerted the same effects but also increased oedema volume estimated by MRI. Co-administration of AM281 and AM630 produced the effects observed with the administration of either AM281 or AM630 and also reduced white matter and myelin preservation and enhanced microgliosis in the epicentre. Overall, our results suggest that the endocannabinoids acting through CB1 and CB2 receptors are part of an early neuroprotective response triggered after SCI that is involved in the spontaneous recovery after an incomplete lesion.

Highlights

  • Spinal cord injuries (SCI) result from contusion, compression, stretch or laceration of the spine, being the most frequent contusive/compressive injuries by fractured or dislocated spinal column

  • We administered at 20 minutes after spinal cord injury either a single injection of vehicle (n = 10), the CB1 antagonists/ inverse agonists AM281 (n = 6), the CB2 antagonists/inverse agonists AM630 (n = 5) or the combination of AM281and AM630 (n = 10)

  • Our results show that the rapid activation of the cannabinoid receptors by endogenous ligands after SCI is an endogenous protective response

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Summary

Introduction

Spinal cord injuries (SCI) result from contusion, compression, stretch or laceration of the spine, being the most frequent contusive/compressive injuries by fractured or dislocated spinal column. Damage to the cord is the result of the initial trauma, and a consequence of the cascade of cellular and molecular events occurring during the first minutes to days after the injury [1]. This complex secondary injury is a major determinant of final lesion extension and may be the first target for a therapeutic intervention after SCI. Several experimental therapeutic strategies are directed to interfere with all the events related with hypoxia/ ischemia and the subsequent ATP depletion, ion pumps malfunction, intracellular calcium accumulation and, excitotoxicity. Some endogenous responses might counteract the detrimental events and fostering them could be useful to reduce secondary injury

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