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Journal of neurotrauma · Dec 2020
Repetitive mild traumatic brain injuries in mice during adolescence cause sexually dimorphic behavioural deficits and neuroinflammatory dynamics.
- Eric Eyolfson, Thomas Carr, Asher Khan, David K Wright, Richelle Mychasiuk, and Alexander W Lohman.
- Department of Psychology, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
- J. Neurotrauma. 2020 Dec 15; 37 (24): 2718-2732.
AbstractAdolescent brain injuries have devastating impacts on lifelong health given that adolescence is a critical period for brain development. Adolescents are susceptible to mild traumatic brain injuries (mTBIs) acquired from collisions in contact sports, which are often sustained in a repetitive nature (repetitive mild traumatic brain injuries; RmTBIs), and cause compounding, sexually dimorphic neurological deficits. Neuroinflammation accompanies RmTBIs and may be a central driving force for chronic neurological decline. To date, the impact of neuroinflammation and sex-specific dynamics during adolescent RmTBIs has been understudied. A lateral impact model (LIM) was developed that mimics the biomechanical forces commonly experienced in human mTBIs. Here, we report novel sexually dimorphic neurobehavioral and -inflammatory responses using LIM to model adolescent RmTBIs. We first subjected adolescent male C57Bl/6 mice to one, three, or five RmTBIs at 24-h intervals and quantified neurobehavioral deficits, and brain volumetric and structural changes by magnetic resonance imaging. Five RmTBIs caused significant motor deficits, increased brain volume in cortex, hippocampus, and corpus callosum, and reduced white matter integrity in the corpus callosum. We then compared neurobehavioral deficits in adolescent male and female mice and observed sex-specific deficits in motor function, whereas both sexes had dysfunction in learning and memory. Flow cytometric quantification of neuroinflammatory responses revealed time- and sex-dependent infiltration of peripheral macrophages and T cells and male-specific decreases in microglia number. Using immunohistochemistry, we report specific microglia density decreases in male mice in the motor cortex and thalamus. We show novel neuroinflammatory responses after adolescent brain injuries that expands the current understanding of RmTBI pathophysiology in this critical neurodevelopmental period.
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