Treatment with RNase alleviates brain injury but not neuroinflammation in neonatal hypoxia/ischemia.
Rozita H AnderbergE Axel AnderssonValentina BucherKlaus T PreissnerCarina MallardC Joakim EkPublished in: Journal of neuroscience research (2024)
There is a need for new treatments to reduce brain injuries derived from neonatal hypoxia/ischemia. The only viable option used in the clinic today in infants born at term is therapeutic hypothermia, which has a limited efficacy. Treatments with exogenous RNase have shown great promise in a range of different adult animal models including stroke, ischemia/reperfusion injury, or experimental heart transplantation, often by conferring vascular protective and anti-inflammatory effects. However, any neuroprotective function of RNase treatment in the neonate remains unknown. Using a well-established model of neonatal hypoxic/ischemic brain injury, we evaluated the influence of RNase treatment on RNase activity, gray and white matter tissue loss, blood-brain barrier function, as well as levels and expression of inflammatory cytokines in the brain up to 6 h after the injury using multiplex immunoassay and RT-PCR. Intraperitoneal treatment with RNase increased RNase activity in both plasma and cerebropinal fluids. The RNase treatment resulted in a reduction of brain tissue loss but did not affect the blood-brain barrier function and had only a minor modulatory effect on the inflammatory response. It is concluded that RNase treatment may be promising as a neuroprotective regimen, whereas the mechanistic effects of this treatment appear to be different in the neonate compared to the adult and need further investigation.
Keyphrases
- brain injury
- white matter
- cerebral ischemia
- inflammatory response
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- traumatic brain injury
- multiple sclerosis
- machine learning
- ischemia reperfusion injury
- primary care
- oxidative stress
- resting state
- preterm infants
- endothelial cells
- deep learning
- lipopolysaccharide induced
- low birth weight
- toll like receptor
- preterm birth
- lps induced
- smoking cessation
- quantum dots