1. Detection of brain specific cardiolipins in plasma after experimental pediatric head injury.
- Author
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Anthonymuthu TS, Kenny EM, Hier ZE, Clark RSB, Kochanek PM, Kagan VE, and Bayır H
- Subjects
- Animals, Brain Injuries, Traumatic, Cardiolipins blood, Cerebral Cortex injuries, Cerebral Cortex metabolism, Lipidomics, Male, Mass Spectrometry, Mitochondria metabolism, Phospholipids metabolism, Rats, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, Brain Chemistry, Cardiolipins analysis, Cardiolipins metabolism, Craniocerebral Trauma metabolism
- Abstract
Cardiolipin (CL) is a mitochondria-specific phospholipid that is central to maintenance and regulation of mitochondrial bioenergetic and metabolic functions. CL molecular species display great tissue variation with brain exhibiting a distinct, highly diverse CL population. We recently showed that the appearance of unique brain-type CLs in plasma could serve as a brain-specific marker of mitochondrial/tissue injury in patients after cardiac arrest. Mitochondrial dysfunction has been increasingly implicated as a critical mechanism underlying the pathogenesis of traumatic brain injury (TBI). Therefore, we hypothesized that unique, brain-specific CL species from the injured brain are released to the peripheral circulation after TBI. To test this hypothesis, we performed a high-resolution mass spectrometry based phospholipidomics analysis of post-natal day (PND)17 rat brain and plasma after controlled cortical impact. We found a time-dependent increase in plasma CLs after TBI including the aforementioned brain-specific CL species early after injury, whereas CLs were significantly decreased in the injured brain. Compositional and quantitative correlational analysis suggested a possible release of CL into the systemic circulation following TBI. The identification of brain-type CLs in systemic circulation may indicate underlying mitochondrial dysfunction/loss after TBI. They may have potential as pharmacodynamics response biomarkers for targeted therapies., (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
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