Erythropoietin improves motor and cognitive deficit, axonal pathology, and neuroinflammation in a combined model of diffuse traumatic brain injury and hypoxia, in association with upregulation of the erythropoietin receptor

BACKGROUND:Diffuse axonal injury is a common consequence of traumatic brain injury (TBI) and often co-occurs with hypoxia, resulting in poor neurological outcome for which there is no current therapy. Here, we investigate the ability of the multifunctional compound erythropoietin (EPO) to provide ne...

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Main Authors: Hellewell, Sarah, Yan, Edwin, Alwis, Dasuni, Bye, Nicole, Morganti-Kossmann, M.
Other Authors: National Trauma Research Institute, Alfred Hospital, Level 4, Burnet Tower, 89 Commercial Road, Melbourne, VIC 3000, Australia
Language:en
Published: BioMed Central 2013
Subjects:
EPO
Online Access:Hellewell et al. Journal of Neuroinflammation 2013, 10:156 http://www.jneuroinflammation.com/content/10/1/156
http://hdl.handle.net/10150/610192
http://arizona.openrepository.com/arizona/handle/10150/610192
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spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-6101922016-05-22T03:01:44Z Erythropoietin improves motor and cognitive deficit, axonal pathology, and neuroinflammation in a combined model of diffuse traumatic brain injury and hypoxia, in association with upregulation of the erythropoietin receptor Hellewell, Sarah Yan, Edwin Alwis, Dasuni Bye, Nicole Morganti-Kossmann, M. National Trauma Research Institute, Alfred Hospital, Level 4, Burnet Tower, 89 Commercial Road, Melbourne, VIC 3000, Australia Department of Surgery, Monash University, Level 4, Burnet Tower, 89 Commercial Road, Melbourne, VIC 3000, Australia Department of Physiology, Monash University, Clayton, VIC 3800, Australia Department of Epidemiology and Preventive Medicine, Monash University, Level 5, Burnet Tower, 89 Commercial Road, Melbourne, VIC 3000, Australia Australian New Zealand Intensive Care Research Centre, Level 5, Burnet Tower, 89 Commercial Road, Melbourne, VIC 3000, Australia Barrow Neurological Institute, Department of Child Health, University of Arizona, Level 5, Burnet Tower, 89 Commercial Road, Melbourne, VIC 3000, Australia Traumatic brain injury (TBI) Traumatic axonal injury Hypoxia Erythropoietin EPO Neuroprotection BACKGROUND:Diffuse axonal injury is a common consequence of traumatic brain injury (TBI) and often co-occurs with hypoxia, resulting in poor neurological outcome for which there is no current therapy. Here, we investigate the ability of the multifunctional compound erythropoietin (EPO) to provide neuroprotection when administered to rats after diffuse TBI alone or with post-traumatic hypoxia.METHODS:Sprague-Dawley rats were subjected to diffuse traumatic axonal injury (TAI) followed by 30minutes of hypoxic (Hx, 12% O2) or normoxic ventilation, and were administered recombinant human EPO-alpha (5000IU/kg) or saline at 1 and 24hours post-injury. The parameters examined included: 1) behavioural and cognitive deficit using the Rotarod, open field and novel object recognition tests 2) axonal pathology (NF-200) 3) callosal degradation (hematoxylin and eosin stain) 3) dendritic loss (MAP2) 4) expression and localisation of the EPO receptor (EpoR) 5) activation/infiltration of microglia/macrophages (CD68) and production of IL-1beta.RESULTS:EPO significantly improved sensorimotor and cognitive recovery when administered to TAI rats with hypoxia (TAI+Hx). A single dose of EPO at 1hour reduced axonal damage in the white matter of TAI+Hx rats at 1day by 60% compared to vehicle. MAP2 was decreased in the lateral septal nucleus of TAI+Hx rats however, EPO prevented this loss, and maintained MAP2 density over time. EPO administration elicited an early enhanced expression of EpoR 1day after TAI+Hx compared with a 7-day peak in vehicle controls. Furthermore, EPO reduced IL-1beta to sham levels 2hours after TAI+Hx, concomitant to a decrease in CD68 positive cells at 7 and 14days.CONCLUSIONS:When administered EPO, TAI+Hx rats had improved behavioural and cognitive performance, attenuated white matter damage, resolution of neuronal damage spanning from the axon to the dendrite, and suppressed neuroinflammation, alongside enhanced expression of EpoR. These data provide compelling evidence of EPO's neuroprotective capability. Few benefits were observed when EPO was administered to TAI rats without hypoxia, indicating that EPO's neuroprotective capacity is bolstered under hypoxic conditions, which may be an important consideration when EPO is employed for neuroprotection in the clinic. 2013 Article Hellewell et al. Journal of Neuroinflammation 2013, 10:156 http://www.jneuroinflammation.com/content/10/1/156 10.1186/1742-2094-10-156 http://hdl.handle.net/10150/610192 http://arizona.openrepository.com/arizona/handle/10150/610192 1742-2094 Journal of Neuroinflammation en http://www.jneuroinflammation.com/content/10/1/156 © 2013 Hellewell et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) BioMed Central
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Traumatic brain injury (TBI)
Traumatic axonal injury
Hypoxia
Erythropoietin
EPO
Neuroprotection
spellingShingle Traumatic brain injury (TBI)
Traumatic axonal injury
Hypoxia
Erythropoietin
EPO
Neuroprotection
Hellewell, Sarah
Yan, Edwin
Alwis, Dasuni
Bye, Nicole
Morganti-Kossmann, M.
Erythropoietin improves motor and cognitive deficit, axonal pathology, and neuroinflammation in a combined model of diffuse traumatic brain injury and hypoxia, in association with upregulation of the erythropoietin receptor
description BACKGROUND:Diffuse axonal injury is a common consequence of traumatic brain injury (TBI) and often co-occurs with hypoxia, resulting in poor neurological outcome for which there is no current therapy. Here, we investigate the ability of the multifunctional compound erythropoietin (EPO) to provide neuroprotection when administered to rats after diffuse TBI alone or with post-traumatic hypoxia.METHODS:Sprague-Dawley rats were subjected to diffuse traumatic axonal injury (TAI) followed by 30minutes of hypoxic (Hx, 12% O2) or normoxic ventilation, and were administered recombinant human EPO-alpha (5000IU/kg) or saline at 1 and 24hours post-injury. The parameters examined included: 1) behavioural and cognitive deficit using the Rotarod, open field and novel object recognition tests === 2) axonal pathology (NF-200) === 3) callosal degradation (hematoxylin and eosin stain) === 3) dendritic loss (MAP2) === 4) expression and localisation of the EPO receptor (EpoR) === 5) activation/infiltration of microglia/macrophages (CD68) and production of IL-1beta.RESULTS:EPO significantly improved sensorimotor and cognitive recovery when administered to TAI rats with hypoxia (TAI+Hx). A single dose of EPO at 1hour reduced axonal damage in the white matter of TAI+Hx rats at 1day by 60% compared to vehicle. MAP2 was decreased in the lateral septal nucleus of TAI+Hx rats === however, EPO prevented this loss, and maintained MAP2 density over time. EPO administration elicited an early enhanced expression of EpoR 1day after TAI+Hx compared with a 7-day peak in vehicle controls. Furthermore, EPO reduced IL-1beta to sham levels 2hours after TAI+Hx, concomitant to a decrease in CD68 positive cells at 7 and 14days.CONCLUSIONS:When administered EPO, TAI+Hx rats had improved behavioural and cognitive performance, attenuated white matter damage, resolution of neuronal damage spanning from the axon to the dendrite, and suppressed neuroinflammation, alongside enhanced expression of EpoR. These data provide compelling evidence of EPO's neuroprotective capability. Few benefits were observed when EPO was administered to TAI rats without hypoxia, indicating that EPO's neuroprotective capacity is bolstered under hypoxic conditions, which may be an important consideration when EPO is employed for neuroprotection in the clinic.
author2 National Trauma Research Institute, Alfred Hospital, Level 4, Burnet Tower, 89 Commercial Road, Melbourne, VIC 3000, Australia
author_facet National Trauma Research Institute, Alfred Hospital, Level 4, Burnet Tower, 89 Commercial Road, Melbourne, VIC 3000, Australia
Hellewell, Sarah
Yan, Edwin
Alwis, Dasuni
Bye, Nicole
Morganti-Kossmann, M.
author Hellewell, Sarah
Yan, Edwin
Alwis, Dasuni
Bye, Nicole
Morganti-Kossmann, M.
author_sort Hellewell, Sarah
title Erythropoietin improves motor and cognitive deficit, axonal pathology, and neuroinflammation in a combined model of diffuse traumatic brain injury and hypoxia, in association with upregulation of the erythropoietin receptor
title_short Erythropoietin improves motor and cognitive deficit, axonal pathology, and neuroinflammation in a combined model of diffuse traumatic brain injury and hypoxia, in association with upregulation of the erythropoietin receptor
title_full Erythropoietin improves motor and cognitive deficit, axonal pathology, and neuroinflammation in a combined model of diffuse traumatic brain injury and hypoxia, in association with upregulation of the erythropoietin receptor
title_fullStr Erythropoietin improves motor and cognitive deficit, axonal pathology, and neuroinflammation in a combined model of diffuse traumatic brain injury and hypoxia, in association with upregulation of the erythropoietin receptor
title_full_unstemmed Erythropoietin improves motor and cognitive deficit, axonal pathology, and neuroinflammation in a combined model of diffuse traumatic brain injury and hypoxia, in association with upregulation of the erythropoietin receptor
title_sort erythropoietin improves motor and cognitive deficit, axonal pathology, and neuroinflammation in a combined model of diffuse traumatic brain injury and hypoxia, in association with upregulation of the erythropoietin receptor
publisher BioMed Central
publishDate 2013
url Hellewell et al. Journal of Neuroinflammation 2013, 10:156 http://www.jneuroinflammation.com/content/10/1/156
http://hdl.handle.net/10150/610192
http://arizona.openrepository.com/arizona/handle/10150/610192
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