4.7 Article

The p38α MAPK Regulates Microglial Responsiveness to Diffuse Traumatic Brain Injury

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 33, Issue 14, Pages 6143-6153

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.5399-12.2013

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Funding

  1. Alzheimer's Association Zenith award
  2. National Institutes of Health [R01 NS064247, R01 NS065052, R21 NS072611, R01 NS065052-S, F32 AG037280]

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Neuropathology after traumatic brain injury (TBI) is the result of both the immediate impact injury and secondary injury mechanisms. Unresolved post-traumatic glial activation is a secondary injury mechanism that contributes to a chronic state of neuroinflammation in both animal models of TBI and human head injury patients. We recently demonstrated, using in vitro models, that p38 alpha MAPK signaling in microglia is a key event in promoting cytokine production in response to diverse disease-relevant stressors and subsequent inflammatory neuronal dysfunction. From these findings, we hypothesized that the p38 alpha signaling pathway in microglia could be contributing to the secondary neuropathologic sequelae after a diffuse TBI. Mice where microglia were p38 alpha-deficient (p38 alpha KO) were protected against TBI-induced motor deficits and synaptic protein loss. In wild-type (WT) mice, diffuse TBI produced microglia morphological activation that lasted for at least 7 d; however, p38 alpha KO mice failed to activate this response. Unexpectedly, we found that the peak of the early, acute phase cytokine and chemokine levels was increased in injured p38 alpha KO mice compared with injured WT mice. The increased cytokine levels in the p38 alpha KO mice could not be accounted for by more infiltration of macrophages or neutrophils, or increased astrogliosis. By 7 d after injury, the cytokine and chemokine levels remained elevated in injured WT mice but not in p38 alpha KO mice. Together, these data suggest that p38 alpha balances the inflammatory response by acutely attenuating the early proinflammatory cytokine surge while perpetuating the chronic microglia activation after TBI.

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