• 'Resetting' the injured brain offers clu

    From ScienceDaily@1:317/3 to All on Mon May 2 22:30:40 2022
    'Resetting' the injured brain offers clues for concussion treatment
    In mice, 'turning over' cells reverses cognitive, behavior problems

    Date:
    May 2, 2022
    Source:
    Ohio State University
    Summary:
    New research in mice raises the prospects for development of post-
    concussion therapies that could ward off cognitive decline and
    depression, two common conditions among people who have experienced
    a moderate traumatic brain injury.



    FULL STORY ==========================================================================
    New research in mice raises the prospects for development of
    post-concussion therapies that could ward off cognitive decline and
    depression, two common conditions among people who have experienced a
    moderate traumatic brain injury.


    ==========================================================================
    The study in mice clarified the role of specific immune cells in the
    brain that contribute to chronic inflammation. Using a technique called
    forced cell turnover, researchers eliminated these cells in the injured
    brains of mice for a week and then let them repopulate for two weeks.

    "It's almost like hitting the reset button," said senior study author
    Jonathan Godbout, professor of neuroscience in The Ohio State University College of Medicine.

    Compared to brain-injured mice recovering naturally, mice that were
    given the intervention showed less inflammation in the brain and fewer
    signs of thinking problems 30 days after the injury.

    Though temporarily clearing away these cells, called microglia, in
    humans isn't feasible, the findings shed light on pathways to target that
    could lower the brain's overall inflammatory profile after a concussion, potentially reducing the risk for behavioral and cognitive problems long
    after the injury.

    "In a moderate brain injury, if the CT scan doesn't show damage, patients
    go home with a concussion protocol. Sometimes people come back weeks,
    months later with neuropsychiatric issues. It's a huge problem affecting millions of people," said Godbout, faculty director of Ohio State's
    Chronic Brain Injury Program and assistant director of basic science in
    the Institute for Behavioral Medicine Research.



    ==========================================================================
    "How do you treat that? At least in mice, by turning over the microglia
    in the brain we had a very positive effect on their behavior, cognitive
    status and level of inflammation in the brain. Now we can focus on
    cellular pathways that generate chronic inflammation as a target."
    The research is published online in the Journal of Neuroscience.

    About 85% of traumatic brain injuries are similar to the type of
    concussion examined in this study, involving dispersed impact to the head
    that causes brain tissue to bump against the skull. Previous research
    suggests that at least 75% of people who experience a moderate brain
    injury have long-term mental health and cognitive complications.

    Godbout's lab previously linked depressive symptoms in mice to
    microglia's sustained "high alert" status after a head injury, which
    causes the cells to overreact to later challenges to the immune system
    and become excessively inflammatory. In a more recent study in mice,
    his team showed that forced turnover of microglia before a head injury
    could reduce later neuropsychiatric complications.

    "That was a proof of principle to show that a lot of the inflammation, especially in the long term, is mediated by microglia," he said. "But
    there is an acute phase of inflammation -- you want to initiate that
    repair process.

    There's a positive to that early inflammatory response in the brain or
    spinal cord. If it lasts a long time and doesn't fully resolve, that's
    when it's dangerous." In this new study, researchers waited for seven
    days after the brain injury to force the turnover of microglia, giving
    the cells time to carry out their work promoting initial healing. An experimental drug that inhibits a protein that microglia in mice need
    for survival was added to their food for a week, resulting in depletion
    of over 95% of microglia in their brains.



    ========================================================================== After allowing 16 days for the microglia to repopulate, researchers
    compared the intervention mice to injured mice that recovered without
    the cell turnover treatment. The intervention mice performed better than control mice on tasks testing their memory and depressive symptoms.

    Further analyses of injured brain tissue suggested the cell
    turnover reversed some injury-related damage to neurons, lowered
    overall inflammation and improved the brain's ability to adapt to
    change. Researchers also injected mice with a molecule that triggers an
    immune response to mimic an infection, and found that sickness behavior
    was lower in the intervention mice.

    Godbout said these combined findings suggest that the repopulating
    microglia returned in a less "primed" state of readiness, lowering
    chances for a lifetime of exaggerated inflammatory responses in the
    brain to any challenge to the immune system -- that brain inflammation
    being the likely culprit behind the neuropsychiatric complications that
    follow a head injury.

    "If microglia in the human brain don't return to normal and chronic inflammation persists after a head injury, it's not just a secondary
    brain injury that causes problems. Even getting a viral infection
    after concussion recovery can progress into a cognitive or behavioral
    issue or amplify some other part of behavior, like depression," Godbout
    said. "There is a real connection between a head injury and mental health,
    and the risk doesn't go away.

    "Now we're looking more closely at the pathways that cause changes in microglia, and targeting something specific in that pathway. That is
    a way forward." This work was supported by the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, the National Institute on Aging, the National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research, an Ohio State University Presidential Fellowship and the Thailand Research Fund-Royal
    Golden Jubilee Program.

    Co-authors include Chelsea Bray, Kristina Witcher, Dunni
    Adekunle-Adegbite, Michelle Ouvina, Mollie Witzel, Emma Hans, Zoe Tapp, Jonathan Packer, Ethan Goodman, Fangli Zhao, Shane O'Neil, John Sheridan,
    Olga Kokiko-Cochran and Candice Askwith, all of Ohio State, and Titikorn Chunchai and Siriporn Chattipakorn of Chiang Mai University in Thailand.


    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by Ohio_State_University. Original
    written by Emily Caldwell. Note: Content may be edited for style and
    length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Chelsea E. Bray, Kristina G. Witcher, Dunni Adekunle-Adegbite,
    Michelle
    Ouvina, Mollie Witzel, Emma Hans, Zoe M. Tapp, Jonathan Packer,
    Ethan Goodman, Fangli Zhao, Titikorn Chunchai, Shane O'Neil,
    Siriporn C Chattipakorn, John Sheridan, Olga N. Kokiko-Cochran,
    Candice Askwith, Jonathan P. Godbout. Chronic Cortical Inflammation,
    Cognitive Impairment and Immune Reactivity Associated with
    Diffuse Brain Injury are Ameliorated by Forced Turnover of
    Microglia. The Journal of Neuroscience, 2022; JN-RM-1910-21 DOI:
    10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1910-21.2022 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2022/05/220502170928.htm

    --- up 9 weeks, 10 hours, 50 minutes
    * Origin: -=> Castle Rock BBS <=- Now Husky HPT Powered! (1:317/3)