| Literature DB >> 20824218 |
Samah G Abdel Baki1, Ben Schwab, Margalit Haber, André A Fenton, Peter J Bergold.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There are no drugs presently available to treat traumatic brain injury (TBI). A variety of single drugs have failed clinical trials suggesting a role for drug combinations. Drug combinations acting synergistically often provide the greatest combination of potency and safety. The drugs examined (minocycline (MINO), N-acetylcysteine (NAC), simvastatin, cyclosporine A, and progesterone) had FDA-approval for uses other than TBI and limited brain injury in experimental TBI models. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPALEntities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20824218 PMCID: PMC2930858 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0012490
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Measurements of rat behavior during open field, passive place avoidance and active place avoidance.
| Task | Parameter | Sham CCI- Saline | CCI-saline | CCI- CYCLO | CCI-SIM | CCI-PROG | CCI-MINO | CCI-NAC | CCI-MINO plus NAC |
| Open Field | Total Distance | 26.8±0.98 | 25.4±1.5 | 27.1±3.7 | 24.2±3.5 | 26.3±2.7 | 27.7±2.2 | 28.0±1.7 | 26.3±1.7 |
| Passive PlaceAvoidance | Shock zone entrances | 13±0.75 | 18±0.89 | 18±0.77 | 22±0.76 | 15±0.96 | 14±0.49 | 16±0.42 | 14±0.42 |
| Total Distance | 7.8±0.3 | 7.3±0.5 | 6.9±0.5 | 7.7±0.7 | 7.1±0.7 | 6.4±0.6 | 6.7±0.5 | 7.0±0.6 | |
| Active PlaceAvoidance | Speed | 5.8±0.3 | 5.1±0.4 | 5.7±0.5 | 4.3±0.4 | 6.1±0.3 | 5.6±0.2 | 5.0±0.3 | 5.4±0.3 |
| Linearity | 0.60±0.03 | 0.64±0.04 | 0.71±0.04 | 0.75±0.05 | 0.66±0.01 | 0.67±0.03 | 0.65±0.03 | 0.62±0.03 | |
| Shocks/Entrance | 0.4±0.2 | 1.2±0.02 | 1.3±0.1 | 1.2±0.1 | 1.1±0.04 | 1.0±0.04 | 1.1±0.04 | 1.1±0.04 | |
| Time to first entrance | 472.5±63.4** | 46.5±5.6 | 39.8±5.1 | 42.9±3.8 | 45.6±2.8 | 146.0±33.4* | 52.9±7.3 | 243±24.0** |
Rats received either sham- or moderate-CCI. Beginning one hour after surgery the rats received either saline, cyclosporine (CYCLO) simvastatin (SIM), progesterone (PROG), minocycline (MINO), n-acetyl cysteine (NAC) or MINO plus NAC. Seven days later all groups were tested on the hierarchy of three behavioral tasks. In the open field test, there was no effect of treatment on total distance traveled (F7,40 = 0.40, p>0.8). In passive place avoidance, there was no effect of treatment on either average distance over 4 trials or shock zone entrances (total distance, F7,40 = 0.67, p>0.6; entrances, F7,40 = 0.48, p>0.8). In massed active place avoidance testing on the 6th trial of the first day, there was no effect of treatment on speed (F7,40 = 0.44, p>0.8) or linearity (F7,40 = 0.25, p>0.9)). The number of shocks per entrance in CCI-saline treated rats was not changed by the drugs individually or in combination (F7,40 = 0.39, p>0.6). In contrast, there was a significant treatment effect with MINO or MINO plus NAC significantly improved time to first entrance (F4,35 = 26.7, p<0.0001; **p<0.001, *p<0.05; post-hoc test).
Figure 1MINO provided a modest improvement of active place avoidance following moderate CCI.
The total number of entrances into the shock zone was assayed in the 6 trials of active place avoidance training.
Figure 2MINO plus NAC synergistically improved active place avoidance after massed training.
Panel A, Rats received either CCI or sham-CCI. One hour, one or days later the sham-injured the CCI-injured rats were divided into 4 groups; one group received saline treatment. The remaining CCI-injured rats received either MINO or NAC alone, or the combination of MINO plus NAC. Saline or drug treatments were administered 1 hour, 1 day and 2 days after injury. Rats received active place avoidance training 8 and 9 days after injury. On the 8th and 9th day following CCI, the number of shock zone entrances was measured. Panel B, Representative tracks of rats in the sham-CCI-saline, CCI-saline or CCI-MINO plus NAC groups on the 6th trial on the first day of active avoidance training. Red lines indicate the boundaries of the shock zone and the red circles indicate the location were a rat received a shock. Panel C, Summary of the number of shock zone entrances over the two days of active place avoidance.
Figure 3MINO plus NAC synergistically improved active place avoidance during spaced training that requires 24-hour memory.
Panel A, Experimental Design. Rats received moderate CCI or sham-injury. Saline or drug treatments were administered 1 hour, 1 day and 2 days after injury. Beginning 8 days after injury, rats received spaced training of active place avoidance consisting of a 20-minute trial each day for 15 days. Panel B, The number of entrances into the shock zone measured overall avoidance learning. Panel C, Time to 1st entrance into the shock zone measured learning that depended on 24-hour retention. These data suggest that long-term memory was improved by MINO plus NAC but not MINO. MINO plus NAC acted synergistically since the improvement in time to enter the shock zone occurred only with co-administration of both drugs.
Figure 4MINO plus NAC prevented myelin loss.
Panel A, Schematic of the regions of interest (ROIs) from a coronal section located −3.36 mm from Bregma [40]. The ROIs were: corpus callosum (A), dorsal hippocampal commissure (B), stratum radiatum (C), fimbria (D), internal capsule (E), fornix (F), mammilothalamic tract (G). Panel B, Representative images of corpus callosum and dorsal hippocampal commissure stained with luxol fast blue. B1, Sham-CCI-saline; B2 CCI-saline; B3, CCI-MINO plus NAC. The scale bar corresponds to 100µm.
Figure 5MINO or MINO plus NAC prevented IL-1β formation when administered before moderate CCI.
Rats were dosed with saline, MINO, NAC or both drugs 3 hours prior to sham- or moderate CCI. The rats were sacrificed one hour after surgery; and IL-1β and tubulin levels were assayed from protein extracts prepared from hippocampus. Panel A, Representative Il-1β and tubulin immunoblot analysis, Panel B, Summary of immunoblot analysis.