Division of Brain Sciences, Department of Medicine, Imperial College London, UK.
Department of Psychiatry and Neurochemistry, Institute of Neuroscience and Physiology, the Sahlgrenska Academy at the University of Gothenburg, Mölndal, Sweden.
Brain. 2018 Feb 1;141(2):459-471. doi: 10.1093/brain/awx339.
Survivors of a traumatic brain injury can deteriorate years later, developing brain atrophy and dementia. Traumatic brain injury triggers chronic microglial activation, but it is unclear whether this is harmful or beneficial. A successful chronic-phase treatment for traumatic brain injury might be to target microglia. In experimental models, the antibiotic minocycline inhibits microglial activation. We investigated the effect of minocycline on microglial activation and neurodegeneration using PET, MRI, and measurement of the axonal protein neurofilament light in plasma. Microglial activation was assessed using 11C-PBR28 PET. The relationships of microglial activation to measures of brain injury, and the effects of minocycline on disease progression, were assessed using structural and diffusion MRI, plasma neurofilament light, and cognitive assessment. Fifteen patients at least 6 months after a moderate-to-severe traumatic brain injury received either minocycline 100 mg orally twice daily or no drug, for 12 weeks. At baseline, 11C-PBR28 binding in patients was increased compared to controls in cerebral white matter and thalamus, and plasma neurofilament light levels were elevated. MRI measures of white matter damage were highest in areas of greater 11C-PBR28 binding. Minocycline reduced 11C-PBR28 binding (mean Δwhite matter binding = -23.30%, 95% confidence interval -40.9 to -5.64%, P = 0.018), but increased plasma neurofilament light levels. Faster rates of brain atrophy were found in patients with higher baseline neurofilament light levels. In this experimental medicine study, minocycline after traumatic brain injury reduced chronic microglial activation while increasing a marker of neurodegeneration. These findings suggest that microglial activation has a reparative effect in the chronic phase of traumatic brain injury.
创伤性脑损伤幸存者多年后可能会恶化,出现脑萎缩和痴呆。创伤性脑损伤会引发慢性小胶质细胞激活,但尚不清楚这是有益还是有害。创伤性脑损伤的成功慢性期治疗可能是针对小胶质细胞。在实验模型中,抗生素米诺环素抑制小胶质细胞激活。我们使用 PET、MRI 和测量血浆中的轴突蛋白神经丝轻链来研究米诺环素对小胶质细胞激活和神经退行性变的影响。使用 11C-PBR28 PET 评估小胶质细胞激活。使用结构和扩散 MRI、血浆神经丝轻链和认知评估评估小胶质细胞激活与脑损伤测量之间的关系,以及米诺环素对疾病进展的影响。15 名创伤性脑损伤后至少 6 个月的患者接受米诺环素 100mg 口服,每日 2 次,或不接受药物治疗,为期 12 周。在基线时,与对照组相比,患者大脑白质和丘脑的 11C-PBR28 结合增加,血浆神经丝轻链水平升高。MRI 测量的白质损伤在 11C-PBR28 结合较高的区域最高。米诺环素降低了 11C-PBR28 结合(平均白质结合变化=-23.30%,95%置信区间-40.9 至-5.64%,P=0.018),但增加了血浆神经丝轻链水平。在基线神经丝轻链水平较高的患者中,发现脑萎缩速度更快。在这项实验医学研究中,创伤性脑损伤后米诺环素降低了慢性小胶质细胞激活,同时增加了神经退行性变的标志物。这些发现表明,小胶质细胞激活在创伤性脑损伤的慢性期具有修复作用。