Abstract

Traumatic brain injury (TBI) can cause persistent pathological alteration of neurons. This may lead to cognitive dysfunction, depression and increased susceptibility to life threatening diseases, such as epilepsy and Alzheimer's disease. To investigate the underlying genetic and molecular basis of TBI, we subjected w1118 Drosophila melanogaster to mild closed head trauma and found that mitochondrial activity is reduced in the brains of these flies 24 h after inflicting trauma. To determine the transcriptomic changes after mild TBI, we collected fly heads 24 h after inflicting trauma, and performed RNA-seq analyses. Classification of alternative splicing changes showed selective retention (RI) of long introns (>81 bps), with a mean size of ~3,000 nucleotides. Some of the genes containing RI showed a significant reduction in transcript abundance and are involved in mitochondrial metabolism such as Isocitrate dehydrogenase (Idh), which makes α-KG, a co-factor needed for both DNA and histone demethylase enzymes. The long introns are enriched in CA-rich motifs known to bind to Smooth (Sm), a heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein L (hnRNP-L) class of splicing factor, which has been shown to interact with the H3K36 histone methyltransferase, SET2, and to be involved in intron retention in human cells. H3K36me3 is a histone mark that demarcates exons in genes by interacting with the mRNA splicing machinery. Mutating sm (sm4/Df) resulted in loss of both basal and induced levels of RI in many of the same long-intron containing genes. Reducing the levels of Kdm4A, the H3K36me3 histone demethylase, also resulted in loss of basal levels of RI in many of the same long-intron containing genes. Chromatin immunoprecipitation followed by deep sequencing (ChIP-seq) for H3K36me3 revealed increased levels of this histone modification in retained introns post-trauma at CA-rich motifs. Based on these results, we propose a model in which TBI temporarily decreases mitochondrial activity in the brain 24 h after inflicting trauma, which decreases α-KG levels, and increases H3K36me3 levels and intron retention of long introns by decreasing Kdm4A activity. The consequent reduction in mature mRNA levels in metabolism genes, such as Idh, further reduces α-KG levels in a negative feedback loop. We further propose that decreasing metabolism after TBI in such a manner is a protective mechanism that gives the brain time to repair cellular damage induced by TBI.

Highlights

  • Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a complex pathological condition associated with high mortality rates (Unterharnscheidt, 1995; Ling et al, 2015)

  • Using the Drosophila model of TBI with the high impact trauma (HIT) device (Katzenberger et al, 2013), we investigated the impact of subconcussive injury on alternative splicing and found widespread alternative splicing changes 24 h post-trauma

  • We found that alternative splicing changes are dominated by intron retention and might be regulated by the heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein L class of splicing factors, which is uniquely represented by Smooth (Sm) in Drosophila

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Summary

Introduction

Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a complex pathological condition associated with high mortality rates (Unterharnscheidt, 1995; Ling et al, 2015). Sub-concussive injury is subtler and reported to cause multifocal microscopic axonal damage and micro-hemorrhages (McKee and Robinson, 2014; Daneshvar et al, 2015), which may lead to progressive neurodegeneration and increased susceptibility to Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s or motor neuron diseases in later life (Ling et al, 2015). Drosophila inflicted with TBI with a high-impact trauma (HIT) device showed temporary incapacitation, ataxia and reduction in lifespan post-TBI. These flies developed vacuolar lesions in central regions of the brain in adult life (>14 days), indicative of progressive neurodegeneration (Katzenberger et al, 2013). Barekat and colleagues have recently shown similar results by inflicting trauma on Drosophila using a vortex mixer (Barekat et al, 2016)

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