The Periodontium Damage Induces Neuronal Cell Death in the Trigeminal Mesencephalic Nucleus and Neurodegeneration in the Trigeminal Motor Nucleus in C57BL/6J Mice.

Acta Histochem Cytochem

Department of Oral Anatomy and Cell Biology, Graduate School of Medical and Dental Sciences, Kagoshima University, 8-35-1 Sakuragaoka, Kagoshima 890-8544, Japan.

Published: February 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • Proprioception from the masticatory system and periodontal ligaments is processed through the trigeminal mesencephalic nucleus (Vmes), and tooth loss leads to significant neurodegeneration in this area and the trigeminal motor nucleus (Vmo).
  • Tooth extraction in young mice revealed a decrease in specific neurons (Piezo2-IR) in the Vmes one month post-extraction, as well as early signs of neuronal stress and cell death (ATF3-IR and cleaved caspase-3-IR) within the first two weeks following the procedure.
  • Additionally, by two months after tooth loss, there was an increase in TDP-43 pathology and neuronal inclusions in the Vmo, indicating that

Article Abstract

Proprioception from masticatory apparatus and periodontal ligaments comes through the trigeminal mesencephalic nucleus (Vmes). We evaluated the effects of tooth loss on neurodegeneration of the Vmes and trigeminal motor nucleus (Vmo). Bilateral maxillary molars of 2-month-old C57BL/6J mice were extracted under anesthesia. Neural projections of the Vmes to the periodontium were confirmed by injecting Fluoro-Gold (FG) retrogradely into the extraction sockets, and for the anterograde labeling adeno-associated virus encoding green fluorescent protein (AAV-GFP) was applied. For immunohistochemistry, Piezo2, ATF3, Caspase 3, ChAT and TDP-43 antibodies were used. At 1 month after tooth extraction, the number of Piezo2-immunoreactive (IR) Vmes neurons were decreased significantly. ATF3-IR neurons were detected on day 5 after tooth extraction. Dead cleaved caspase-3-IR neurons were found among Vmes neurons on days 7 and 12. In the Vmo, neuronal cytoplasmic inclusions (NCIs) formation type of TDP-43 increased at 1 and 2 months after extraction. These indicate the existence of neural projections from the Vmes to the periodontium in mice and that tooth loss induces the death of Vmes neurons followed by TDP-43 pathology in the Vmo. Therefore, tooth loss induces Vmes neuronal cell death, causing Vmo neurodegeneration and presumably affecting masticatory function.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7947638PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1267/ahc.20-00036DOI Listing

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