Rehabilitation enhances epothilone-induced locomotor recovery after spinal cord injury

Author:

Griffin Jarred M1,Hingorani Jai Prakash Sonia2,Bockemühl Till3,Benner Jessica M1,Schaffran Barbara1,Moreno-Manzano Victoria2ORCID,Büschges Ansgar3,Bradke Frank1

Affiliation:

1. Laboratory for Axonal Growth and Regeneration, German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases (DZNE) , Bonn 53127 , Germany

2. Neuronal and Tissue Regeneration Laboratory, Centro de Investigación Príncipe Felipe (CIPF) , Valencia 46012 , Spain

3. Department of Animal Physiology, Institute of Zoology, University of Cologne , Cologne 50674 , Germany

Abstract

AbstractMicrotubule stabilization through epothilones is a promising preclinical therapy for functional recovery following spinal cord injury that stimulates axon regeneration, reduces growth-inhibitory molecule deposition and promotes functional improvements. Rehabilitation therapy is the only clinically validated approach to promote functional improvements following spinal cord injury. However, whether microtubule stabilization can augment the beneficial effects of rehabilitation therapy or act in concert with it to further promote repair remains unknown. Here, we investigated the pharmacokinetic, histological and functional efficacies of epothilone D, epothilone B and ixabepilone alone or in combination with rehabilitation following a moderate contusive spinal cord injury. Pharmacokinetic analysis revealed that ixabepilone only weakly crossed the blood–brain barrier and was subsequently excluded from further investigations. In contrast, epothilones B and D rapidly distributed to CNS compartments displaying similar profiles after either subcutaneous or intraperitoneal injections. Following injury and subcutaneous administration of epothilone B or D, rats were subjected to 7 weeks of sequential bipedal and quadrupedal training. For all outcome measures, epothilone B was efficacious compared with epothilone D. Specifically, epothilone B decreased fibrotic scaring which was associated with a retention of fibronectin localized to perivascular cells in sections distal to the lesion. This corresponded to a decreased number of cells present within the intralesional space, resulting in less axons within the lesion. Instead, epothilone B increased serotonergic fibre regeneration and vesicular glutamate transporter 1 expression caudal to the lesion, which was not affected by rehabilitation. Multiparametric behavioural analyses consisting of open-field locomotor scoring, horizontal ladder, catwalk gait analysis and hindlimb kinematics revealed that rehabilitation and epothilone B both improved several aspects of locomotion. Specifically, rehabilitation improved open-field locomotor and ladder scores, as well as improving the gait parameters of limb coupling, limb support, stride length and limb speed; epothilone B improved these same gait parameters but also hindlimb kinematic profiles. Functional improvements by epothilone B and rehabilitation acted complementarily on gait parameters leading to an enhanced recovery in the combination group. As a result, principal component analysis of gait showed the greatest improvement in the epothilone B plus rehabilitation group. Thus, these results support the combination of epothilone B with rehabilitation in a clinical setting.

Funder

The International Foundation for Research in Paraplegia

The German Research Foundation

ERANET AXON REPAIR, ERANET RATER SCI

Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation

Spanish State Research Agency

European Regional Development Fund

Nordrhein-Westfalen

ImmunoSensation2

DFG Collaborative Research Centers

Research Training Group 1960

DFG/National Science Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Neurology,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Biological Psychiatry,Psychiatry and Mental health

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