Early Blood-Brain Barrier Impairment as a Pathological Hallmark in a Novel Model of Closed-Head Concussive Brain Injury (CBI) in Mice.
Stefan J BlaschkeNora RautenbergHeike EndepolsAileen JendroJens KonradSusan VlachakisDirk WiedermannMichael SchroeterBernd HoffmannRudolf MerkelNiklas MarklundGereon R FinkMaria A RuegerPublished in: International journal of molecular sciences (2024)
Concussion, caused by a rotational acceleration/deceleration injury mild enough to avoid structural brain damage, is insufficiently captured in recent preclinical models, hampering the relation of pathophysiological findings on the cellular level to functional and behavioral deficits. We here describe a novel model of unrestrained, single vs. repetitive concussive brain injury (CBI) in male C56Bl/6j mice. Longitudinal behavioral assessments were conducted for up to seven days afterward, alongside the evaluation of structural cerebral integrity by in vivo magnetic resonance imaging (MRI, 9.4 T), and validated ex vivo by histology. Blood-brain barrier (BBB) integrity was analyzed by means of fluorescent dextran- as well as immunoglobulin G (IgG) extravasation, and neuroinflammatory processes were characterized both in vivo by positron emission tomography (PET) using [ 18 F]DPA-714 and ex vivo using immunohistochemistry. While a single CBI resulted in a defined, subacute neuropsychiatric phenotype, longitudinal cognitive testing revealed a marked decrease in spatial cognition, most pronounced in mice subjected to CBI at high frequency (every 48 h). Functional deficits were correlated to a parallel disruption of the BBB, (R 2 = 0.29, p < 0.01), even detectable by a significant increase in hippocampal uptake of [ 18 F]DPA-714, which was not due to activation of microglia, as confirmed immunohistochemically. Featuring a mild but widespread disruption of the BBB without evidence of macroscopic damage, this model induces a characteristic neuro-psychiatric phenotype that correlates to the degree of BBB disruption. Based on these findings, the BBB may function as both a biomarker of CBI severity and as a potential treatment target to improve recovery from concussion.
Keyphrases
- blood brain barrier
- cerebral ischemia
- brain injury
- high frequency
- positron emission tomography
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- magnetic resonance imaging
- computed tomography
- mild traumatic brain injury
- transcranial magnetic stimulation
- high fat diet induced
- traumatic brain injury
- oxidative stress
- pet ct
- contrast enhanced
- cross sectional
- stem cells
- mental health
- white matter
- pet imaging
- inflammatory response
- wild type
- resting state
- skeletal muscle
- cell therapy
- risk assessment
- spinal cord injury
- mesenchymal stem cells
- neuropathic pain
- insulin resistance
- smoking cessation
- human health
- replacement therapy
- spinal cord
- living cells
- single molecule