4.5 Article

Adenosine A1 Receptor Activation as a Brake on the Microglial Response after Experimental Traumatic Brain Injury in Mice

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROTRAUMA
Volume 27, Issue 5, Pages 901-910

Publisher

MARY ANN LIEBERT, INC
DOI: 10.1089/neu.2009.1075

Keywords

adenosine; A(1) receptor; BV-2 cells; head injury; Iba-1; knockout; microglia; neurotrauma

Funding

  1. NIH [NS 38087, NS 30318, DK 068575]
  2. Swiss National Science Foundation [32-64040.00, 320000-117998]
  3. Oncosuisse [OCS-01551-08-2004]

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We reported that adenosine A(1) receptor (A(1)AR) knockout (KO) mice develop lethal status epilepticus after experimental traumatic brain injury (TBI), which is not seen in wild-type (WT) mice. Studies in epilepsy, multiple sclerosis, and neuro-oncology suggest enhanced neuro-inflammation and/or neuronal death in A(1)AR KO. We hypothesized that A(1)AR deficiency exacerbates the microglial response and neuronal damage after TBI. A1AR KO and WT littermates were subjected to mild controlled cortical impact (3m/sec; 0.5mm depth) to left parietal cortex, an injury level below the acute seizure threshold in the KO. At 24 h or 7 days, mice were sacrificed and serial sections prepared. Iba-1 immunostaining was used to quantify microglia at 7 days. To assess neuronal injury, sections were stained with Fluoro-Jade C (FJC) at 24 h to evaluate neuronal death in the hippocampus and cresyl violet staining at 7 days to analyze cortical lesion volumes. We also studied the effects of adenosine receptor agonists and antagonists on H-3-thymidine uptake (proliferation index) by BV-2 cells (immortalized mouse microglial). There was no neuronal death in CA1 or CA3 quantified by FJC. A(1)AR KO mice exhibited enhanced microglial response; specifically, Iba-1 + microglia were increased 20-50% more in A1AR KO versus WT in ipsilateral cortex, CA3, and thalamus, and contralateral cortex, CA1, and thalamus (p<0.05). However, contusion and cortical volumes did not differ between KO and WT. Pharmacological studies in cultured BV-2 cells indicated that A(1)AR activation inhibits microglial proliferation. A(1)AR activation is an endogenous inhibitor of the microglial response to TBI, likely via inhibition of proliferation, and this may represent a therapeutic avenue to modulate microglia after TBI.

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