Abstract

BackgroundInfection-inflammation combined with hypoxia-ischemia (HI) is the most prevalent pathological scenario involved in perinatal brain damage leading to life-long neurological disabilities. Following lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and/or HI aggression, different patterns of inflammatory responses have been uncovered according to the brain differentiation stage. In fact, LPS pre-exposure has been reported to aggravate HI brain lesions in post-natal day 1 (P1) and P7 rat models that are respectively equivalent - in terms of brain development - to early and late human preterm newborns. However, little is known about the innate immune response in LPS plus HI-induced lesions of the full-term newborn forebrain and the associated neuropathological and neurobehavioral outcomes.MethodsAn original preclinical rat model has been previously documented for the innate neuroimmune response at different post-natal ages. It was used in the present study to investigate the neuroinflammatory mechanisms that underline neurological impairments after pathogen-induced inflammation and HI in term newborns.ResultsLPS and HI exerted a synergistic detrimental effect on rat brain. Their effect led to a peculiar pattern of parasagittal cortical-subcortical infarcts mimicking those in the human full-term newborn with subsequent severe neurodevelopmental impairments. An increased IL-1β response in neocortical and basal gray neurons was demonstrated at 4 h after LPS + HI-exposure and preceded other neuroinflammatory responses such as microglial and astroglial cell activation. Neurological deficits were observed during the acute phase of injury followed by a recovery, then by a delayed onset of profound motor behavior impairment, reminiscent of the delayed clinical onset of motor system impairments observed in humans. Interleukin-1 receptor antagonist (IL-1ra) reduced the extent of brain lesions confirming the involvement of IL-1β response in their pathophysiology.ConclusionIn rat pups at a neurodevelopmental age corresponding to full-term human newborns, a systemic pre-exposure to a pathogen component amplified HI-induced mortality and morbidities that are relevant to human pathology. Neuronal cells were the first cells to produce IL-1β in LPS + HI-exposed full-term brains. Such IL-1β production might be responsible for neuronal self-injuries via well-described neurotoxic mechanisms such as IL-1β-induced nitric oxide production, or IL-1β-dependent exacerbation of excitotoxic damage.

Highlights

  • Hypoxia-ischemia (HI) and/or infection-inflammation are the principal risk factors of perinatal cerebral injuries in both term and preterm human newborns [1,2,3,4,5]

  • It has recently been reproduced in rats at a neurodevelopmental stage (P12) corresponding to fullterm human neonates and profound differences have been shown between patterns of innate immune responses at post-natal day 1 (P1) and P12 [12]

  • In the right cerebral hemispheres from LPS + HI-exposed animals infarcted areas appeared as confluent microcystic or large cavitary lesions, significantly more extended compared to HI exposure alone (Figure 2A and [12])

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Hypoxia-ischemia (HI) and/or infection-inflammation are the principal risk factors of perinatal cerebral injuries in both term and preterm human newborns [1,2,3,4,5]. Infection-inflammation complicated by a transient HI is one of the most common physiopathological scenarios encountered in human perinatal brain insults and subsequent neonatal encephalopathy, leading to cerebral palsy [1,8] Such combination of infection/inflammation and HI has been experimentally reproduced in rodents at neurodevelopmental stages equivalent to early and late preterm human neonates (rat pups at P1 and P7) [9,10,11]. LPS pre-exposure has been reported to aggravate HI brain lesions in post-natal day 1 (P1) and P7 rat models that are respectively equivalent - in terms of brain development - to early and late human preterm newborns. Little is known about the innate immune response in LPS plus HI-induced lesions of the full-term newborn forebrain and the associated neuropathological and neurobehavioral outcomes

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call