Calretinin and Parvalbumin Trapping of TDP43 and XRCC1 Instructs Neocortical Interneuron Death in Neonatal Hypoxic-Ischemic Encephalopathy.

Publication/Presentation Date

4-22-2026

Abstract

We examined neocortical pathology and interneuron degeneration in neonatal hypoxia-ischemic encephalopathy (HIE). Piglets in two age groups (2-3 or 7-10 days old, n = 4-12/group) underwent global cerebral hypoxia-ischemia (HI) or sham treatment. Piglets (2-3 days old) had epidural electrodes for continuous electroencephalography (cEEG) and were treated with hypothermia (HT) or remained at normothermia (NT). Older piglets, all NT, had scalp EEG. Piglets at both ages had seizures and survived for 1-7 days. Cortical damage was assessed by hematoxylin & eosin staining and immunohistochemistry; calretinin (CR), parvalbumin (PV), and vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) interneurons (INs) were counted. Cell injury was assessed by DNA fragmentation and protein nitration. TAR DNA binding protein-43 (TDP43) and the DNA repair scaffold protein X-ray repair cross complementing-1 (XRCC1) were examined for degeneration mechanisms. Cortical layers 3 and 4 showed high vulnerability; damage emerged as isolated cells, focal and laminar, and distributed as panlaminar throughout different cortical regions that correlated with seizure burden. HT protected strongly against cortical damage. CR- and PV-INs were severely depleted in HI-NT piglets compared to sham. VIP INs appeared invulnerable. HT partially rescued the loss of INs. CR and PV formed nuclear and cytoplasmic inclusions that colocalized with TDP43 and XRCC1; co-immunoprecipitation identified interactions among these proteins, and tyrosine nitration of CR. CR and PV INs accumulated DNA single- and double-strand breaks and appeared as attritional apoptosis variants with proteinopathy. This cell death is identified as aggreosis. IN loss correlated with seizure presence. Postmortem human neonatal HIE cases had a similar loss of CR and PV INs and nuclear depletion of TDP43 in the neocortex. Thus, neonatal HIE causes the loss of neocortical inhibitory IN subtypes with vulnerabilities instructed by their intrinsic calcium-binding protein signature and by mechanisms consistent with toxic sequestration and the nuclear depletion of XRCC1 and TDP43 underlying DNA damage accumulation. Early inhibitory IN deletion could drive seizure evolution in HIE; TDP43 and XRCC1 could be therapeutic targets for neonatal HIE.

Volume

16

Issue

5

ISSN

2218-273X

Disciplines

Medicine and Health Sciences | Pediatrics

PubMedID

42193971

Department(s)

Department of Pediatrics

Document Type

Article

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