4.2 Article

Lipopolysaccharide-Induced Preconditioning Attenuates Apoptosis and Differentially Regulates TLR4 and TLR7 Gene Expression after Ischemia in the Preterm Ovine Fetal Brain

Journal

DEVELOPMENTAL NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 37, Issue 6, Pages 497-514

Publisher

KARGER
DOI: 10.1159/000433422

Keywords

Preterm brain injury; Infection; Lipopolysaccharide; Hypoxia-ischemia; Preconditioning; Toll-like receptors; Cytokines

Funding

  1. Health Research Council of New Zealand
  2. Cure Kids
  3. Gravida: National Centre for Growth and Development, a Centre of Research Excellence

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Acute exposure to subclinical infection modulates subsequent hypoxia-ischemia (HI) injury in a time-dependent manner, likely by cross-talk through Toll-like receptors (TLRs), but the specific pathways are unclear in the preterm-equivalent brain. In the present study, we tested the hypothesis that repeated low-dose exposure to lipopolysaccharide (LPS) before acute ischemia would be associated with induction of specific TLRs that are potentially neuroprotective. Fetal sheep at 0.65 gestation (term is similar to 145 days) received intravenous boluses of low-dose LPS for 5 days (day 1, 50 ng/kg; days 2-5, 100 ng/kg) or the same volume of saline. Either 4 or 24 h after the last bolus of LPS, complete carotid occlusion was induced for 22 min. Five days after LPS, brains were collected. Pretreatment with LPS for 5 days decreased cellular apoptosis, nnicroglial activation and reactive astrogliosis in response to HI injury induced 24 but not 4 h after the last dose of LPS. This was associated with upregulation of TLR4, TLR7 and IFN-beta mRNA, and increased fetal plasma IFN-beta concentrations. The association of reduced white matter apoptosis and astrogliosis after repeated low-dose LPS finishing 24 h but not 4 h before cerebral ischemia, with central and peripheral induction of IFN-beta, suggests the possibility that IFN-beta may be an important mediator of endogenous neuroprotection in the developing brain. (C) 2015 S. Karger AG, Basel

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