4.6 Article

Mild Traumatic Brain Injury Induces Transient, Sequential Increases in Proliferation, Neuroblasts/Immature Neurons, and Cell Survival: A Time Course Study in the Male Mouse Dentate Gyrus

Journal

FRONTIERS IN NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 14, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2020.612749

Keywords

neurogenesis; TBI; dentate gyrus; proliferation; LFPI

Categories

Funding

  1. NIH [T32-GM07517]
  2. Penn's McCabe Pilot Award
  3. Penn Undergraduate Research Foundation Award
  4. NARSAD Young Investigator Award from the Brain and Behavior Research Foundation
  5. Penn's Center for Undergraduate Research and Fellowships (CURF) program
  6. Penn's Undergraduate Research Mentoring Program (PURM)
  7. CHOP Research Institute Summer Scholars Program (CRISSP)
  8. [R37HD059288]
  9. [DA023555]
  10. [NNX15AE09G]
  11. [80NSSC17K0060]
  12. [MH117628]
  13. [NS007413]

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This study discusses the impact of mild traumatic brain injuries (mTBIs) on the process of adult hippocampal DG neurogenesis. The results show that mTBI induces transient increases in neurogenesis in the ipsilateral hippocampal region, but not in the contralateral hemisphere. These findings are important for understanding the functional implications of TBI-induced neurogenesis and potential neuron replacement or repair after TBI.
Mild traumatic brain injuries (mTBIs) are prevalent worldwide. mTBIs can impair hippocampal-based functions such as memory and cause network hyperexcitability of the dentate gyrus (DG), a key entry point to hippocampal circuitry. One candidate for mediating mTBI-induced hippocampal cognitive and physiological dysfunction is injury-induced changes in the process of DG neurogenesis. There are conflicting results on how TBI impacts the process of DG neurogenesis; this is not surprising given that both the neurogenesis process and the post-injury period are dynamic, and that the quantification of neurogenesis varies widely in the literature. Even within the minority of TBI studies focusing specifically on mild injuries, there is disagreement about if and how mTBI changes the process of DG neurogenesis. Here we utilized a clinically relevant rodent model of mTBI (lateral fluid percussion injury, LFPI), gold-standard markers and quantification of the neurogenesis process, and three time points post-injury to generate a comprehensive picture of how mTBI affects adult hippocampal DG neurogenesis. Male C57BL/6J mice (6-8 weeks old) received either sham surgery or mTBI via LFPI. Proliferating cells, neuroblasts/immature neurons, and surviving cells were quantified via stereology in DG subregions (subgranular zone [SGZ], outer granule cell layer [oGCL], molecular layer, and hilus) at short-term (3 days post-injury, dpi), intermediate (7 dpi), and long-term (31 dpi) time points. The data show this model of mTBI induces transient, sequential increases in ipsilateral SGZ/GCL proliferating cells, neuroblasts/immature neurons, and surviving cells which is suggestive of mTBI-induced neurogenesis. In contrast to these ipsilateral hemisphere findings, measures in the contralateral hemisphere were not increased in key neurogenic DG subregions after LFPI. Our work in this mTBI model is in line with most literature on other and more severe models of TBI in showing TBI stimulates the process of DG neurogenesis. However, as our DG data in mTBI provide temporal, subregional, and neurogenesis-stage resolution, these data are important to consider in regard to the functional importance of TBI-induction of the neurogenesis process and future work assessing the potential of replacing and/or repairing DG neurons in the brain after TBI.

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