Given the prominent morphologic changes noted within Purkinje cells, we sought to identify the mechanisms underlying these degenerative changes by investigating all brain regions for the presence of cleaved caspase 3, the activated form of this key executioner of apoptosis. Cleaved caspase 3 was seen in at least one CNS region from all infected animals except AGM1, which did not have any positive cells (Fig.
2i, Supplementary Data Fig.
2). Three animals, RM1, AGM3, and AGM4 showed positivity in more than one brain region, while RM2 had cleaved caspase 3 positive cells in all regions examined (Fig.
2i; Supplementary Data Fig.
2). In cerebellum, cytoplasmic and nuclear-cleaved caspase 3 was predominantly restricted to cells within and proximal to the Purkinje cell layer (Fig.
2g). Other CNS regions, including brainstem, had foci of cleaved caspase 3 positivity (Fig.
2h). In comparison to infected animals, mock-infected controls showed little-to-no positivity (Fig.
2i; Supplementary Data Fig.
2). Unbiased quantitation revealed a statistically significant difference in cleaved caspase 3 positivity between infected and mock-infected animals in all brain regions investigated (Fig.
2i). When stratified by species, statistical significance was not achieved by Mann–Whitney
U Test, which is likely due to the low number of each species (Supplementary Data Fig.
2). Interestingly, cleaved caspase 3 was not detected in any CNS region examined from AGM1, who was euthanized at 8 days post infection due to advanced illness. This may suggest programmed cell death in the CNS occurs later in the disease process.
While vacuolation was at times observed in the cerebellar gray and white matter (Supplementary Data Fig.
3a, b), significant demyelination was not a major finding in this study. Luxol Fast Blue (LFB) did reveal localized myelin pallor, suggestive of oligodendrocyte injury and/or loss, in the cerebellum of RM3 and occipital lobe of AGM3 (Supplementary Data Fig.
3c, d).
Brain microhemorrhages
Microhemorrhages, as suggested by the presence of erythrocyte extravasation into the brain parenchyma, were identified in all study animals and seen with and without ischemic injury of adjacent tissues, characterized by localized/regional tissue pallor (Fig.
3a–f). Although the number of bleeds varied, all animals were observed to have at least one. Infected animals appeared to have larger bleeds than mock-infected controls, with more dense accumulation of red blood cells on the parenchymal side of the blood vessel (Fig.
3, compare a–d with e, f). Quantitation of microhemorrhages was determined on Axio Scan.Z1 (Zeiss) scanned slides and HALO software (Indica Labs, v2.3.2089.70 and v3.1.1076.405) and normalized by tissue area (Fig.
3g). The whole brain showed a higher increase in the number of microbleeds in infection which reached statistical significance in the basal ganglia (Fig.
3h and Supplementary Data Fig.
4).