Abstract

Traumatic brain injury (TBI) initiates a deleterious inflammatory response that exacerbates pathology and worsens outcome. This inflammatory response is partially mediated by a reduction in cAMP and a concomitant upregulation of cAMP-hydrolyzing phosphodiesterases (PDEs) acutely after TBI. The PDE4B subfamily, specifically PDE4B2, has been found to regulate cAMP in inflammatory cells, such as neutrophils, macrophages and microglia. To determine if PDE4B regulates inflammation and subsequent pathology after TBI, adult male Sprague Dawley rats received sham surgery or moderate parasagittal fluid-percussion brain injury (2 ± 0.2 atm) and were then treated with a PDE4B - selective inhibitor, A33, or vehicle for up to 3 days post-surgery. Treatment with A33 reduced markers of microglial activation and neutrophil infiltration at 3 and 24 hrs after TBI, respectively. A33 treatment also reduced cortical contusion volume at 3 days post-injury. To determine whether this treatment paradigm attenuated TBI-induced behavioral deficits, animals were evaluated over a period of 6 weeks after surgery for forelimb placement asymmetry, contextual fear conditioning, water maze performance and spatial working memory. A33 treatment significantly improved contextual fear conditioning and water maze retention at 24 hrs post-training. However, this treatment did not rescue sensorimotor or working memory deficits. At 2 months after surgery, atrophy and neuronal loss were measured. A33 treatment significantly reduced neuronal loss in the pericontusional cortex and hippocampal CA3 region. This treatment paradigm also reduced cortical, but not hippocampal, atrophy. Overall, these results suggest that acute PDE4B inhibition may be a viable treatment to reduce inflammation, pathology and memory deficits after TBI.

Highlights

  • Every year approximately 1.7 million people suffer a traumatic brain injury (TBI) in the United States [1]

  • We report that treatment with A33 reduced neutrophil accumulation, microglia activation, cortical contusion volume, memory deficits, neuronal loss and cortical atrophy after Traumatic brain injury (TBI)

  • This time point was selected because PDE4B2 is elevated in the injured cortex at 24 hrs after TBI, and it corresponds to the peak of neutrophil infiltration [27, 30, 45]

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Every year approximately 1.7 million people suffer a traumatic brain injury (TBI) in the United States [1]. This is a serious clinical problem that results in an estimated 3–5.3 million people living with lasting TBI-related disabilities, at a total cost of approximately $60 billion dollars annually [1,2,3]. A majority of TBI survivors go on to develop cognitive impairments, often resulting in reduced quality of life and increased economic burden for the individual and their family [4,5,6,7,8].

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

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