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Glial cell-mediated deterioration and repair of the nervous system after traumatic brain injury in a rat model as assessed by positron emission tomography

  • Iwae Yu
  • , Motoki Inaji
  • , Jun Maeda
  • , Takashi Okauchi
  • , Tadashi Nariai
  • , Kikuo Ohno
  • , Makoto Higuchi
  • , Tetsuya Suhara

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is one of the most acute degenerative pathologies in the central nervous system, and in vivo indices enabling an assessment of TBI on a mechanistic basis have yet to be established. The aim of this work was to pursue neuroinflammatory changes and their link to functional disruptions of traumatically-damaged neurons in a rat model of TBI by longitudinal positron emission tomographic (PET) assays. TBI was induced in the unilateral frontal cortex of craniotomied rats according to a lateral fluid percussion brain injury protocol. The use of [18F]fluoroethyl-DAA1106 as a PET tracer for translocator protein (TSPO) permitted demonstration of the inflammatory response to the injury, peaking at 1 week after impact. This alteration was parallel to metabolic deficits assessed by PET with [ 18F]fluorodeoxyglucose, but the difference in TSPO levels between impacted and non-impacted frontal cortices was more than threefold of the interlateral metabolic difference, indicating superiority of TSPO imaging for sensitive detection of post-traumatic pathologies. Comparative PET, autoradiographic. and immunohistochemical investigations illustrated the primary contribution of hypertrophic microglia and macrophages to acute TSPO signals in the vicinity of the impact. Astrocytes also formed a TSPO-positive glial scar encompassing necrotic inflammation, and were clustered with PET-detectable TSPO signals in the bilateral external and internal capsules at late stages, putatively reacting with diffuse axonal injury. These observations support the applicability of TSPO-PET as an imaging-based preclinical and clinical biomarker assay in TBI, and indicate its potential capability to clarify aggressive and protective roles of glial responses to injury when combined with emerging anti-inflammatory and immunomodulatory treatments.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1463-1475
Number of pages13
JournalJournal of Neurotrauma
Volume27
Issue number8
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 01-08-2010
Externally publishedYes

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • Clinical Neurology

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