4.7 Article

Adapted focal experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis to allow MRI exploration of multiple sclerosis features

Journal

EXPERIMENTAL NEUROLOGY
Volume 230, Issue 2, Pages 248-257

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.expneurol.2011.04.023

Keywords

Brain inflammation; Animal model; Multiple sclerosis; MRI

Categories

Funding

  1. French Society of Radiology (Societe Francaise de Radiologie)
  2. CNRS-CHU

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We aimed to determine an optimal protocol for inducing a focal inflammatory lesion within the rat brain that could be large enough for an easier MRI monitoring while still relevant as a multiple sclerosis (MS) like lesion. We adapted a two-hit model based on pre-sensitization of the Lewis rat with myelin oligodendrocyte protein (MOG) followed by stereotaxic injection of pro-inflammatory cytokines (TNF alpha + IFN gamma) within the internal capsule. We compared the following two strategies to increase focal lesion development for an easier MR translation: (1) a higher sensitization step (MOG50) or (2) a higher cytokine step with lower sensitization (MOG25). Control animals were administered only cytokines without MUG pre-sensitization. Animals were followed with 12, diffusion and 11 post gadolinium weighted images at 1, 3 and 7 days following cytokine injection. Immunostaining was performed at the same time points for macrophages (ED1), myelin (MBP and Luxol Fast Blue) and blood brain barrier integrity (IgG). At day 1, the focal lesions depicted with T2-weighted images were very similar among groups and related to vasogenic edema (high apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC), gadolinium enhancement and IgG extravasation) induced by cytokines irrespective of the pre-sensitization step. Then, at day 3, MOG50 rats developed statistically larger 12 lesions than MOG25 and control rats that were correlated with inflammatory cell accumulation. At day 7, MOG50 rats also showed larger 12 lesions than MOG25 and control rats, together with loss of anisotropy that were correlated with demyelination. In contrast, MOG25 and control rats developed similar MR lesions decreasing over time and almost undetectable at day 7. We conclude that with a high pre-sensitization step, the focal lesion can be monitored by MRI whose signal reflects some features of a MS-like lesion, i.e. edema, inflammatory cell accumulation and later demyelination. (C) 2011 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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