Neurobiol Dis. 2025 Oct 30. pii: S0969-9961(25)00385-7. [Epub ahead of print]217
107168
Katharina Kersting,
Emily J von Bronewski,
Laurens T Roolfs,
Lea Meyer,
Lilly Waldmann,
Melina Nieminen-Kelhä,
Irina Kremenetskaia,
Anja Nitzsche,
Andre Rex,
Harald Prüß,
Ralf Adams,
Frank L Heppner,
Michael G Fehlings,
Peter Vajkoczy,
Vanessa Hubertus.
OBJECTIVES: Traumatic Spinal Cord Injury (SCI) disrupts the Blood-Spinal Cord Barrier (BSCB), amplifying injury processes. Targeted therapies require deeper insight into underlying mechanisms. Endothelial Ephrin-B2, a guidance molecule regulating cell adhesion and repulsion, might influence the BSCB, but its role after SCI remains unknown. This study investigates Ephrin-B2 in endothelial cells (ECs) and its influence on BSCB integrity in a mouse SCI model up to 28 days.
METHODS: Transgenic mice with tamoxifen-inducible EC-specific Ephrin-B2 knockdown (efnb2iΔEC, n = 79) and Cre-negative littermates (efnb2lox/lox, n = 71) received serial tamoxifen injections. Animals underwent thoracic clip-compression injury (Th6/7, 60s, 5 g, n = 128) or Sham injury (laminectomy, n = 22). At postoperative days 1, 3, 7, 14 and 28 in vivo analysis included neurological assessment (Basso Mouse Scale, Tally Subscore, CatWalkTM automated gait analysis) and 7 T MRI (T2 Turbo Rare). Ex vivo analysis included Evans Blue assay (n = 5 per group/timepoint), vessel perfusion, and immunohistochemistry (n = 4 per group/timepoint) examining vessel density (CD31, FITC-Lectin), pericyte coverage (CD31, Desmin, PDGFR-beta), and junction proteins (Claudin-5, VE-Cadherin).
RESULTS: efnb2iΔEC mice showed increased BSCB disruption during the acute phase (1d: p = 0.0117; 3d: p = 0.0153) accompanied by a trend for increased edema on day 1 after SCI (p = 0.0712). Vascular and junctional markers revealed posttraumatic impairment with regeneration after day 7, without significant inter-group differences (p > 0.05). Neurological recovery however was not influenced by EC-specific Ephrin-B2 knockdown (p > 0.05).
CONCLUSIONS: Endothelial Ephrin-B2 is crucial for BSCB resilience after SCI. Its EC- specific knockdown aggravates barrier disruption and influences edema volume, suggesting Ephrin-B2 as a potential therapeutic target for acute SCI.
Keywords: Blood-spinal cord barrier; Cell-cell-communication; Ephrin-B2; Spinal cord injury; Spinal cord regeneration; Vascular regeneration