Kokiko-Cochran Olga, Ransohoff Lena, Veenstra Mike, Lee Sungho, Saber Maha, Sikora Matt, Teknipp Ryan, Xu Guixiang, Bemiller Shane, Wilson Gina, Crish Samuel, Bhaskar Kiran, Lee Yu-Shang, Ransohoff Richard M, Lamb Bruce T
1 Department of Neurosciences, Cleveland Clinic , Cleveland, Ohio.
2 Department of Pharmaceutical Science, Northeast Ohio Medical University , Rootstown, Ohio.
J Neurotrauma. 2016 Apr 1;33(7):625-40. doi: 10.1089/neu.2015.3970. Epub 2015 Nov 23.
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) has acute and chronic sequelae, including an increased risk for the development of Alzheimer's disease (AD). TBI-associated neuroinflammation is characterized by activation of brain-resident microglia and infiltration of monocytes; however, recent studies have implicated beta-amyloid as a major manipulator of the inflammatory response. To examine neuroinflammation after TBI and development of AD-like features, these studies examined the effects of TBI in the presence and absence of beta-amyloid. The R1.40 mouse model of cerebral amyloidosis was used, with a focus on time points well before robust AD pathologies. Unexpectedly, in R1.40 mice, the acute neuroinflammatory response to TBI was strikingly muted, with reduced numbers of CNS myeloid cells acquiring a macrophage phenotype and decreased expression of inflammatory cytokines. At chronic time points, macrophage activation substantially declined in non-Tg TBI mice; however, it was relatively unchanged in R1.40 TBI mice. The persistent inflammatory response coincided with significant tissue loss between 3 and 120 days post-injury in R1.40 TBI mice, which was not observed in non-Tg TBI mice. Surprisingly, inflammatory cytokine expression was enhanced in R1.40 mice compared with non-Tg mice, regardless of injury group. Although R1.40 TBI mice demonstrated task-specific deficits in cognition, overall functional recovery was similar to non-Tg TBI mice. These findings suggest that accumulating beta-amyloid leads to an altered post-injury macrophage response at acute and chronic time points. Together, these studies emphasize the role of post-injury neuroinflammation in regulating long-term sequelae after TBI and also support recent studies implicating beta-amyloid as an immunomodulator.
创伤性脑损伤(TBI)会导致急性和慢性后遗症,包括患阿尔茨海默病(AD)风险增加。TBI相关的神经炎症的特征是脑内常驻小胶质细胞的激活和单核细胞的浸润;然而,最近的研究表明β-淀粉样蛋白是炎症反应的主要调控因子。为了研究TBI后的神经炎症以及AD样特征的发展,这些研究考察了在有和没有β-淀粉样蛋白的情况下TBI的影响。使用了脑淀粉样变性的R1.40小鼠模型,重点关注在严重AD病理出现之前的时间点。出乎意料的是,在R1.40小鼠中,对TBI的急性神经炎症反应明显减弱,获得巨噬细胞表型的中枢神经系统髓样细胞数量减少,炎症细胞因子的表达降低。在慢性时间点,非转基因TBI小鼠中的巨噬细胞激活大幅下降;然而,在R1.40 TBI小鼠中相对未发生变化。持续的炎症反应与R1.40 TBI小鼠在受伤后3至120天之间的显著组织损失同时出现,而在非转基因TBI小鼠中未观察到这种情况。令人惊讶的是,无论损伤组如何,与非转基因小鼠相比,R1.40小鼠中的炎症细胞因子表达均增强。尽管R1.40 TBI小鼠在认知方面表现出特定任务缺陷,但总体功能恢复与非转基因TBI小鼠相似。这些发现表明,积累的β-淀粉样蛋白会导致在急性和慢性时间点受伤后巨噬细胞反应发生改变。总之,这些研究强调了损伤后神经炎症在调节TBI后长期后遗症中的作用,也支持了最近将β-淀粉样蛋白作为免疫调节剂的研究。