Abstract

BackgroundThe annual incidence of traumatic brain injury (TBI) in the United States is over 2.5 million, with approximately 3–5 million people living with chronic sequelae. Compared with moderate-severe TBI, the long-term effects of mild TBI (mTBI) are less understood but important to address, particularly for contact sport athletes and military personnel who have high mTBI exposure. The purpose of this study was to determine the behavioural and neuropathological phenotypes induced by the Closed-Head Impact Model of Engineered Rotational Acceleration (CHIMERA) model of mTBI in both wild-type (WT) and APP/PS1 mice up to 8 months post-injury.MethodsMale WT and APP/PS1 littermates were randomized to sham or repetitive mild TBI (rmTBI; 2 × 0.5 J impacts 24 h apart) groups at 5.7 months of age. Animals were assessed up to 8 months post-injury for acute neurological deficits using the loss of righting reflex (LRR) and Neurological Severity Score (NSS) tasks, and chronic behavioural changes using the passive avoidance (PA), Barnes maze (BM), elevated plus maze (EPM) and rotarod (RR) tasks. Neuropathological assessments included white matter damage; grey matter inflammation; and measures of Aβ levels, deposition, and aducanumab binding activity.ResultsThe very mild CHIMERA rmTBI conditions used here produced no significant acute neurological or motor deficits in WT and APP/PS1 mice, but they profoundly inhibited extinction of fear memory specifically in APP/PS1 mice over the 8-month assessment period. Spatial learning and memory were affected by both injury and genotype. Anxiety and risk-taking behaviour were affected by injury but not genotype. CHIMERA rmTBI induced chronic white matter microgliosis, axonal injury and astrogliosis independent of genotype in the optic tract but not the corpus callosum, and it altered microgliosis in APP/PS1 amygdala and hippocampus. Finally, rmTBI did not alter long-term tau, Aβ or amyloid levels, but it increased aducanumab binding activity.ConclusionsCHIMERA is a useful model to investigate the chronic consequences of rmTBI, including behavioural abnormalities consistent with features of post-traumatic stress disorder and inflammation of both white and grey matter. The presence of human Aβ greatly modified extinction of fear memory after rmTBI.

Highlights

  • The annual incidence of traumatic brain injury (TBI) in the United States is over 2.5 million, with approximately 3–5 million people living with chronic sequelae

  • Closed-Head Impact Model of Engineered Rotational Acceleration (CHIMERA) repetitive mild TBI (rmTBI) produces no significant neurological or motor deficits in WT and APP/PS1 mice We previously reported the acute effects of mild TBI using 2 × 0.5 J CHIMERA impacts to hybrid C57BL/ 6-C3H WT and APP/PS1 mice [17]

  • CHIMERA rmTBI induces chronic white matter microgliosis, axonal injury and astrogliosis independent of genotype in the optic tract but not the corpus callosum We have previously shown that CHIMERA is a reliable model of diffuse axonal injury at acute time points up to D14 post-injury in multiple white matter regions [66, 68]

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Summary

Introduction

The annual incidence of traumatic brain injury (TBI) in the United States is over 2.5 million, with approximately 3–5 million people living with chronic sequelae. In the United States, the annual incidence of TBI is over 2.5 million [14], and over 3–5 million persons are living with chronic sequelae of TBI [20, 90]. Long-term survivors of moderate and severe TBI have numerous psychiatric symptoms, such as anxiety and depression, as well as cognitive impairments in memory and processing speed [46]. These symptoms persist both at the recovery plateau (6– 18 months post-injury) and thereafter [80]

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