| Literature DB >> 31660984 |
Patrick Miller-Rhodes1,2, Cuicui Kong3, Gurpreet S Baht4, Priyanka Saminathan5, Ramona M Rodriguiz6, William C Wetsel6,7, Harris A Gelbard8,9,10,11,12, Niccolò Terrando13.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Patients with pre-existing neurodegenerative disease commonly experience fractures that require orthopedic surgery. Perioperative neurocognitive disorders (PND), including delirium and postoperative cognitive dysfunction, are serious complications that can result in increased 1-year mortality when superimposed on dementia. Importantly, there are no disease-modifying therapeutic options for PND. Our lab developed the "broad spectrum" mixed-lineage kinase 3 inhibitor URMC-099 to inhibit pathological innate immune responses that underlie neuroinflammation-associated cognitive dysfunction. Here, we test the hypothesis that URMC-099 can prevent surgery-induced neuroinflammation and cognitive impairment.Entities:
Keywords: Delirium; Intravital microscopy; Microglia; Mixed-lineage kinase 3; Postoperative neurocognitive disorders
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31660984 PMCID: PMC6816182 DOI: 10.1186/s12974-019-1582-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neuroinflammation ISSN: 1742-2094 Impact factor: 8.322
Fig. 1URMC-099 treatment reverses microgliosis and BBB leak following orthopedic surgery. Nine-month-old male mice underwent open tibial fracture and were terminated 24 h after surgery. URMC-099 was given i.p. at 10 mg/kg, three doses before surgery and two doses after surgery based on Marker et al. [14]. a Representative images of F4/80 microglial/macrophage staining (top panels) and IgG staining (bottom panels) show that URMC-099 significantly attenuated microgliosis in the hippocampus. b Differences in microglia cell numbers were quantified by unbiased stereology. c IgG relative optical density was quantified to measure differences in BBB opening. N = 2–4; results presented as mean ± SEM; *P < 0.05, ***P < 0.001, versus surgery + vehicle group; one-way ANOVA with Dunnett’s multiple comparison test
Fig. 4URMC-099 prophylaxis abrogates orthopedic surgery-induced deficits in object place and identity discrimination. Three-month-old mice received three doses i.p. of URMC-099 (10 mg/kg) prior to undergoing sham or orthopedic surgery. a An illustration of the “What-Where-When” Object Discrimination test. b URMC-099 prevented the surgery-induced impairments in the “What” and “Where” phases of the test, whereas “When” was unaffected. c Neither surgery nor drug treatment affected the total exploration times throughout the task. d Orthopedic surgery increased the total distance traveled during “set A” relative to sham-treated controls for both the vehicle- and URMC-099-treated mice. N = 10; results presented as mean ± SEM; *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01, ***P < 0.001, comparisons as indicated; repeated-measures ANOVA with Dunnett’s multiple comparison test (memory preference scores) or Tukey’s multiple comparison test (distance moved)
Fig. 5URMC-099 prophylaxis abrogates orthopedic surgery-induced deficits in the Memory Load task. Three-month-old mice received three doses i.p. of URMC-099 (10 mg/kg) prior to undergoing sham or orthopedic surgery. a An illustration of the Memory Load Object Discrimination test. b Illustration depicting the objects used for the task. c URMC-099 prevented the surgery-induced impairments in the Memory Load test overall. N = 10; results presented as mean ± SEM; *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01, versus surgery + vehicle group; repeated-measures ANOVA with Dunnett’s multiple comparison test
Fig. 2URMC-099 prophylaxis prevents microglial morphological changes following orthopedic surgery. Three-month-old mice received three doses i.p. of URMC-099 (10 mg/kg) prior to undergoing sham or orthopedic surgery. a Representative cropped and drift-corrected XYZ stacks obtained by 2PLSM (top panels), Imaris 3D surface reconstructions (middle panels), and process movement tracks (bottom panels) (scale bar = 10 μm). b Orthopedic surgery increased microglial sphericity in vehicle-treated, but not URMC-099-treated, mice. No differences were observed for mean track speed (c) nor mean track length (d). e Representative light-sheet micrographs obtained from optically cleared hippocampal sections. f Mean microglial sphericity was increased by orthopedic surgery, and URMC099 treatment prevented this. N = 4 (b–d), N = 2–3 (f); results presented as mean ± SEM; *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01, versus surgery + vehicle group; repeated-measures ANOVA (b–d) or one-way ANOVA (f) with Dunnett’s multiple comparison test
Fig. 3URMC-099 prophylaxis does not inhibit the peripheral innate immune response. Three-month-old mice received three doses i.p. of URMC-099 (10 mg/kg) prior to undergoing sham or orthopedic surgery. Whole blood was isolated 6 h post-surgery and used for cytokine/chemokine profiling and flow cytometry. a–c URMC-099 prophylaxis had no effect on surgery-induced plasma G-CSF, CXCL1, and CXCL2 levels at 6 h post-surgery. d–e URMC-099 prophylaxis had no effect on the surgery-induced increase in neutrophils at 6 h post-surgery. f–h URMC-099 prophylaxis and surgery did not significantly alter inflammatory (g) and patrolling monocyte (h) populations at 6 h post-surgery. N = 4; results presented as mean ± SEM; *P < 0.05, versus surgery + vehicle group; one-way ANOVA with Dunnett’s multiple comparison test