Preterm brain injury is highly associated with inflammation, which is likely related in part to sterile responses to hypoxia-ischemia. We have recently shown that neuroprotection with inflammatory pre-conditioning in the immature brain is associated with induction of toll-like receptor 7 (TLR7). We therefore tested the hypothesis that central administration of a synthetic TLR7 agonist, gardiquimod (GDQ), after severe hypoxia-ischemia in preterm-equivalent fetal sheep would improve white and gray matter recovery. Fetal sheep at 0.7 of gestation received sham asphyxia or asphyxia induced by umbilical cord occlusion for 25 minutes, followed by a continuous intracerebroventricular infusion of GDQ or vehicle from 1 to 4 hours (total dose 1.8 mg/kg). Sheep were killed 72 hours after asphyxia for histology. GDQ significantly improved survival of immature and mature oligodendrocytes (2′,3′-cyclic-nucleotide 3′-phosphodiesterase, CNPase) and total oligodendrocytes (oligodendrocyte transcription factor 2, Olig-2) within the periventricular and intragyral white matter. There were reduced numbers of cells showing cleaved caspase-3 positive apoptosis and astrogliosis (glial fibrillary acidic protein, GFAP) in both white matter regions. Neuronal survival was increased in the dentate gyrus, caudate and medial thalamic nucleus. Central infusion of GDQ was associated with a robust increase in fetal plasma concentrations of the anti-inflammatory cytokines, interferon-β (IFN-β) and interleukin-10 (IL-10), with no significant change in the concentration of the pro-inflammatory cytokine, tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α). In conclusion, delayed administration of the TLR7 agonist, GDQ, after severe hypoxia-ischemia in the developing brain markedly ameliorated white and gray matter damage, in association with upregulation of anti-inflammatory cytokines. These data strongly support the hypothesis that modulation of secondary inflammation may be a viable therapeutic target for injury of the preterm brain.
BackgroundWhite matter injury (WMI) is the major antecedent of cerebral palsy in premature infants, and is often associated with maternal infection and the fetal inflammatory response. The current study explores the therapeutic potential of glutamate receptor blockade or cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) inhibition for inflammatory WMI.MethodsUsing fetal ovine derived mixed glia cultures exposed to tumour necrosis factor-α (TNF-α) or lipopolysaccharide (LPS), the expression of alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazole-propionate (AMPA) and N-methyl D-aspartate (NMDA) glutamate receptors and their contribution to inflammation mediated pre-oligodendrocyte (OL) death was evaluated. The functional significance of TNF-α and COX-2 signalling in glutamate release in association with TNF-α and LPS exposure was also assessed.ResultsAMPA and NMDA receptors were expressed in primary mixed glial cultures on developing OLs, the main cell-type present in fetal white matter at a period of high risk for WMI. We show that glutamate receptor expression and configuration are regulated by TNF-α and LPS exposure, but AMPA and NMDA blockade, either alone or in combination, did not reduce pre-OL death. Furthermore, we demonstrate that glutamate and prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) release following TNF-α or LPS are mediated by a TNF-α-COX-2 dependent mechanism.ConclusionsOverall, these findings suggest that glial-localised glutamate receptors likely play a limited role in OL demise associated with chronic inflammation, but supports the COX-2 pathway as a potential therapeutic target for infection/inflammatory-mediated WMI.
Moderate cerebral hypothermia significantly improves survival without disability from perinatal hypoxia-ischemia. However, protection is partial. Insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1) plays a key role in oligodendrocyte survival and myelination. The purpose of this study was to test the hypothesis that the combination of IGF-1 plus hypothermia could reduce postischemic white matter damage compared with hypothermia alone. Unanesthetized near-term fetal sheep received 30 min of cerebral ischemia, followed by either an infusion of 3 µg of IGF-1 intracerebroventricularly from 4.5 to 5.5 h plus cooling from 5.5 to 72 h (IGF-1 + hypothermia; n = 8), vehicle infusion plus cooling from 5.5 to 72 h (vehicle + hypothermia; n = 12), sham cooling plus sham infusion (ischemia control; n = 12) or sham ischemia (n = 5). The fetal extradural temperature was reduced from 39.4 ± 0.1°C to between 30 and 33°C. White matter was assessed after 5 days. Ischemia was associated with severe loss of CNPase-positive oligodendrocytes in white matter compared with sham ischemia (380 ± 138 vs. 1,180 ± 152 cells/field; mean ± SD; p < 0.001). Delayed hypothermia reduced cell loss (847 ± 297 cells/field, p < 0.01, vs. ischemia control), but there was no significant difference between vehicle + hypothermia and IGF-1 + hypothermia (1,015 ± 211 cells/field; NS). Ischemia was associated with increased caspase 3 expression in white matter (216 ± 41 vs. 19 ± 18 cells/field; p < 0.001). Hypothermia reduced numbers of activated caspase 3-positive cells (116 ± 81 cells/field; p < 0.05), with no significant difference between vehicle + hypothermia and IGF-1 + hypothermia (91 ± 27 cells/field; NS). In conclusion, delayed cotreatment with IGF-1 plus hypothermia after ischemia was associated with an improvement in white matter damage similar to that achieved by hypothermia alone.
Astrocytes, microglial cells and oligodendrocytes (OLs) have been employed separately in vitro to assess cellular pathways following a variety of stimuli. Mixed glial cell cultures, however, have not been utilized to the same extent, despite the observed discrepancy in outcomes resulting from cell-to-cell contact of different glia in culture. Our objective was to standardize and morphologically characterize a primary culture of preterm ovine glial cells in order to attain a relevant in vitro model to assess the intracellular effects of infection and inflammation. This would provide a high-throughput model necessary for in-depth studies on the various pathophysiological mechanisms of white matter injury (WMI), which may occur in the preterm infant as a consequence of maternal infection or the fetal inflammatory response. Glial cells from the forebrains of 0.65-gestation ovine fetuses (comparable to 24- to 26-week human fetal brain development) were mechanically and enzymatically isolated and plated at a final density of 250,000 cells per well. When reaching confluence at 5 days after plating, the cultures contained astrocytes, microglial cells, as well as progenitor, precursor and immature OLs. Glial cell morphology and phenotypic immunoreactivity were characteristic of and consistent with previous observations of separately cultured cell types. To determine the effects of infection or inflammation in our in vitro model, we then treated mixed glial cultures with tumour necrosis factor-α (TNF-α; 50 or 100 ng/ml) or lipopolysaccharide (LPS; 1 µg/ml) for a period of 48 h. Cytokine levels were measured by ELISA and cell numbers for specific glial cell types were determined along with OL proliferation and apoptosis by Ki67 and caspase-3 immunocytochemistry, respectively. Our results showed that exposure to TNF-α or LPS resulted in a characteristic inflammatory response entailed by up-regulation of pro-inflammatory cytokines, a lack of astrogliosis and a marked reduction in OLs attributable to increased apoptosis. In LPS-treated cultures, there was a marked increase in the pro-inflammatory cytokine TNF-α at both 24 and 48 h. In conclusion, this is the first report of the immunocytochemical description and characterization of fetal ovine-derived mixed glial cell primary cultures. This in vitro model provides a novel and efficient system to explore the mechanisms of infection/inflammation-mediated WMI at the cellular level and for screening candidate therapeutic strategies.
To determine whether increased matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) proteolytic activity plays a pathological role in infection/inflammation-induced preterm brain injury, primary cultures of preterm (day 90 of gestation; term 145 days) fetal ovine mixed glia were exposed to 24-96 h of lipopolysaccharide (LPS, 1 μg/ml) or tumour necrosis factor-α (TNF-α, 100 ng/ml). MMP-2 mRNA levels were significantly increased after TNF-α (96 h) and LPS exposure (48 and 96 h), and MMP-9 mRNA levels were significantly increased at 48 and 96 h after TNF-α. On zymography, the active form of secreted MMP-2 was significantly increased 24 h after LPS, but not TNF-α. Both active and latent forms of MMP-9 gelatinolytic activity were significantly increased by TNF-α (96 h) and LPS (72 and 96 h). On reverse zymography, inhibitory activity of TIMP-1 but not TIMP-2 was significantly increased by TNF-α and LPS. SB-3CT-mediated MMP-2 and MMP-9 inhibition transiently reduced LPS-induced oligodendrocyte cell death but had no effect during TNF-α exposure. Collectively, these observations suggest a limited, transient effect of MMPs on immature white matter damage associated with infection but not TNF-α-mediated inflammation.
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