Long-Term Upregulation of Inflammation and Suppression of Cell Proliferation in the Brain of Adult Rats Exposed to Traumatic Brain Injury Using the Controlled Cortical Impact Model
Male
Medical Sciences
Doublecortin Protein
Science
Neurogenesis
Genes, MHC Class II
610
Rats, Sprague-Dawley
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
Animals
Cell Proliferation
Inflammation
Brain Mapping
Cell Death
Animal
Q
R
Brain
Cell Differentiation
Immunohistochemistry
Rats
Up-Regulation
3. Good health
MHC Class II
Disease Models, Animal
Genes
Gene Expression Regulation
Brain Injuries
Disease Models
Medicine
Sprague-Dawley
Microglia
Research Article
DOI:
10.1371/journal.pone.0053376
Publication Date:
2013-01-04T00:50:39Z
AUTHORS (10)
ABSTRACT
The long-term consequences of traumatic brain injury (TBI), specifically the detrimental effects of inflammation on the neurogenic niches, are not very well understood. In the present in vivo study, we examined the prolonged pathological outcomes of experimental TBI in different parts of the rat brain with special emphasis on inflammation and neurogenesis. Sixty days after moderate controlled cortical impact injury, adult Sprague-Dawley male rats were euthanized and brain tissues harvested. Antibodies against the activated microglial marker, OX6, the cell cycle-regulating protein marker, Ki67, and the immature neuronal marker, doublecortin, DCX, were used to estimate microglial activation, cell proliferation, and neuronal differentiation, respectively, in the subventricular zone (SVZ), subgranular zone (SGZ), striatum, thalamus, and cerebral peduncle. Stereology-based analyses revealed significant exacerbation of OX6-positive activated microglial cells in the striatum, thalamus, and cerebral peduncle. In parallel, significant decrements in Ki67-positive proliferating cells in SVZ and SGZ, but only trends of reduced DCX-positive immature neuronal cells in SVZ and SGZ were detected relative to sham control group. These results indicate a progressive deterioration of the TBI brain over time characterized by elevated inflammation and suppressed neurogenesis. Therapeutic intervention at the chronic stage of TBI may confer abrogation of these deleterious cell death processes.
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