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Accumulation of formaldehyde causes motor deficits in an in vivo model of hindlimb unloading

Yao, Dandan; He, Qingyuan; Bai, Shangyin; Zhao, Hang; Yang, Jun; Cui, Dehua; Yu, Yan; Fei, Xuechao; Mei, Yufei; Cheng, Ye; Yan, Shi; Huang, Nayan; Di, Yalan; Cai, Xianjie; Wang, Rui; Gao, Yajuan; Cheng, Fangrao; Zhao, Shengjie; Yang, Xu; Cai, Xiang; Han, Hongbin*; Lyu, Jihui*; Tong, Zhiqian*
Science Citation Index Expanded
北京大学

摘要

During duration spaceflight, or after their return to earth, astronauts have often suffered from gait instability and cerebellar ataxia. Here, we use a mouse model of hindlimb unloading (HU) to explore a mechanism of how reduced hindlimb burden may contribute to motor deficits. The results showed that these mice which have experienced HU for 2 weeks exhibit a rapid accumulation of formaldehyde in the gastrocnemius muscle and fastigial nucleus of cerebellum. The activation of semicarbazide-sensitive amine oxidase and sarcosine dehydrogenase induced by HU-stress contributed to formaldehyde generation and loss of the abilities to maintain balance and coordinate motor activities. Further, knockout of formaldehyde dehydrogenase (FDH-/-) in mice caused formaldehyde accumulation in the muscle and cerebellum that was associated with motor deficits. Remarkably, formaldehyde injection into the gastrocnemius muscle led to gait instability; especially, microinfusion of formaldehyde into the fastigial nucleus directly induced the same symptoms as HU-induced acute ataxia. Hence, excessive formaldehyde damages motor functions of the muscle and cerebellum. @@@ Dandan Yao et al. demonstrated that accumulation of formaldehyde in the cerebellum and skeletal muscle contributed toward motor deficits in a mouse model of hindlimb unloading. Their results collectively suggest that scavenging formaldehyde may be a useful treatment to limit motor dysfunction following limb offloading conditions.

关键词

SIMULATED MICROGRAVITY ATAXIA-TELANGIECTASIA POTASSIUM CONDUCTANCE RAT ATM MICE DEHYDROGENASE COORDINATION DISRUPTION METABOLISM