Literature DB >> 26319264

Acute Response of the Hippocampal Transcriptome Following Mild Traumatic Brain Injury After Controlled Cortical Impact in the Rat.

Babru B Samal1, Cameron K Waites1, Camila Almeida-Suhett2, Zheng Li3, Ann M Marini4, Nihar R Samal5, Abdel Elkahloun6, Maria F M Braga2, Lee E Eiden7.   

Abstract

We have previously demonstrated that mild controlled cortical impact (mCCI) injury to rat cortex causes indirect, concussive injury to underlying hippocampus and other brain regions, providing a reproducible model for mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) and its neurochemical, synaptic, and behavioral sequelae. Here, we extend a preliminary gene expression study of the hippocampus-specific events occurring after mCCI and identify 193 transcripts significantly upregulated, and 21 transcripts significantly downregulated, 24 h after mCCI. Fifty-three percent of genes altered by mCCI within 24 h of injury are predicted to be expressed only in the non-neuronal/glial cellular compartment, with only 13% predicted to be expressed only in neurons. The set of upregulated genes following mCCI was interrogated using Ingenuity Pathway Analysis (IPA) augmented with manual curation of the literature (190 transcripts accepted for analysis), revealing a core group of 15 first messengers, mostly inflammatory cytokines, predicted to account for >99% of the transcript upregulation occurring 24 h after mCCI. Convergent analysis of predicted transcription factors (TFs) regulating the mCCI target genes, carried out in IPA relative to the entire Affymetrix-curated transcriptome, revealed a high concordance with TFs regulated by the cohort of 15 cytokines/cytokine-like messengers independently accounting for upregulation of the mCCI transcript cohort. TFs predicted to regulate transcription of the 193-gene mCCI cohort also displayed a high degree of overlap with TFs predicted to regulate glia-, rather than neuron-specific genes in cortical tissue. We conclude that mCCI predominantly affects transcription of non-neuronal genes within the first 24 h after insult. This finding suggests that early non-neuronal events trigger later permanent neuronal changes after mTBI, and that early intervention after mTBI could potentially affect the neurochemical cascade leading to later reported synaptic and behavioral dysfunction.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Controlled cortical impact; Hippocampus; Inflammation; Mild traumatic brain injury

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2015        PMID: 26319264     DOI: 10.1007/s12031-015-0626-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Mol Neurosci        ISSN: 0895-8696            Impact factor:   3.444


  30 in total

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Authors:  Vardit Rubovitch; Meital Ten-Bosch; Ofer Zohar; Catherine R Harrison; Catherine Tempel-Brami; Elliot Stein; Barry J Hoffer; Carey D Balaban; Shaul Schreiber; Wen-Ta Chiu; Chaim G Pick
Journal:  Exp Neurol       Date:  2011-09-17       Impact factor: 5.330

2.  Chronic traumatic encephalopathy in blast-exposed military veterans and a blast neurotrauma mouse model.

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Journal:  Sci Transl Med       Date:  2012-05-16       Impact factor: 17.956

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Review 7.  Experimental models of head trauma.

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Authors:  Camila P Almeida-Suhett; Eric M Prager; Volodymyr Pidoplichko; Taiza H Figueiredo; Ann M Marini; Zheng Li; Lee E Eiden; Maria F M Braga
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2.  Altered gene expression profile in a mouse model of SCN8A encephalopathy.

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3.  ERK-dependent induction of the immediate-early gene Egr1 and the late gene Gpr50 contribute to two distinct phases of PACAP Gs-GPCR signaling for neuritogenesis.

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6.  Cyclic AMP-dependent activation of ERK via GLP-1 receptor signalling requires the neuroendocrine cell-specific guanine nucleotide exchanger NCS-RapGEF2.

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7.  Analysis of Post-Traumatic Brain Injury Gene Expression Signature Reveals Tubulins, Nfe2l2, Nfkb, Cd44, and S100a4 as Treatment Targets.

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Review 8.  Hippocampal Neurophysiologic Changes after Mild Traumatic Brain Injury and Potential Neuromodulation Treatment Approaches.

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Journal:  Front Syst Neurosci       Date:  2016-02-09

Review 9.  Microglia Responses in Acute and Chronic Neurological Diseases: What Microglia-Specific Transcriptomic Studies Taught (and did Not Teach) Us.

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10.  Reduction of DNMT3a and RORA in the nucleus accumbens plays a causal role in post-traumatic stress disorder-like behavior: reversal by combinatorial epigenetic therapy.

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