| Literature DB >> 34924026 |
Prashanth S Velayudhan1,2, Nicole Schwab2,3, Lili-Naz Hazrati2,3, Anne L Wheeler4,5.
Abstract
Mild traumatic brain injuries (mTBIs) are a prevalent form of injury that can result in persistent neurological impairments. Microglial activation has become increasingly recognized as a key process regulating the pathology of white matter in a wide range of brain injury and disease contexts. As white matter damage is known to be a major contributor to the impairments that follow mTBI, microglia have rightfully become a common target of investigation for the development of mTBI therapies and biomarkers. Recent work has demonstrated that the efficacy of microglial manipulation as a therapeutic intervention following injury or disease is highly time-sensitive, emphasizing the importance of advancing our understanding of the dynamics of post-mTBI microglial activation from onset to resolution. Current reporting of microglial activation in experimental studies of mTBI is non-standardized, which has limited our ability to identify concrete patterns of post-mTBI microglial activation over time. In this review, we examine preclinical studies of mTBI that report on microglial activation in white matter regions to summarize our current understanding of these patterns. Specifically, we summarize timecourses of post-mTBI microglial activation in white matter regions of the brain, identify factors that influence this activation, examine the temporal relationship between microglial activation and other post-mTBI assessments, and compare the relative sensitivities of various methods for detecting microglial activation. While the lack of replicated experimental conditions has limited the extent of conclusions that can confidently be drawn, we find that microglia are activated over a wide range of timecourses following mTBI and that microglial activation is a long-lasting outcome of mTBI that may resolve after most typical post-mTBI assessments, with the exception of those measuring oligodendrocyte lineage cell integrity. We identify several understudied parameters of post-mTBI microglial activation in white matter, such as the inclusion of female subjects. This review summarizes our current understanding of the progression of microglial activation in white matter structures following experimental mTBI and offers suggestions for important future research directions.Entities:
Keywords: Activation; Corpus callosum; Iba1; Microglia; Mild traumatic brain injury; Timecourses; White matter
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34924026 PMCID: PMC8684664 DOI: 10.1186/s40478-021-01297-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Neuropathol Commun ISSN: 2051-5960 Impact factor: 7.801
Search strategy for Embase and PubMed
| Search number | Query | Significance |
|---|---|---|
| #1 | “microglia” or “microglial” or “microgliosis” or “Iba-1” or “Iba1” or “CD68” or “CD40” or “F4/80” or “CX3CR1” or “CD11b” or “CD45” or “TMEM119” or “TREM2” | Microglia |
| #2 | “brain injury” or “brain injuries” or “brain damage” or “head injury” or “head injuries” or “head impact” or “head impacts” | Brain injuries |
| #3 | “TBI” or “TBIs” or “mTBI” or “mTBIs” | Abbreviated head injuries |
| #4 | “mild” or “concussion” or “concussions” or “concussive” | Mild qualifier |
| #5 | “white matter” or “axon” or “axons” or “axonal” or “myelin” or “myelinating” or “myelination” or “demyelinating” or “demyelination” or “callosum” or “tract” or “fasciculus” or “fasciculi” or “cingulum” or “cingula” or “commissure” or “commissures” or “fornix” or “forceps” or “capsule” or “capsules” or “radiatum” or “radiata” or “semiovale” or “lemniscus” or “lemnisci” or “u-fiber” or “u-fibers” | White matter structures |
| #6 | “diffusion” or “diffusivity” or “DTI” or “DWI” or “anisotropy” or “tractography” or “tractogram” or “tractograms” | Additional terms associated with white matter measurements |
| #7 | #2 or #3 | Pooled head injuries |
| #8 | #5 or #6 | Pooled white matter |
| #9 | #1 and #4 and #7 and #8 | Pooled microglia, mild qualifier, head injuries, and white matter |
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram. Adapted from Moher D, Liberati A, Tetzlaff J, Altman DG, The PRISMA Group (2009). Preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analyses: The PRISMA Statement. PLoS Med 6(7): e1000097. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed1000097 [33]
Summary of experimental groups plotted in Fig.
| ID: 1st Author, Citation | Animal: Strain | Sex | Model | NOI | Other |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 01a: Gatson [ | M: C57BL/6 | m | CI [C] | 1 | |
| 01b: Gatson [ | M: C57BL/6 | m | CI [C] | 1 | |
| 02a: Goodus [ | mix | CI [C] | 1 | ||
| 02b: Goodus [ | mix | CI [C] | 1 | ||
| 03a: Haber [ | R: SD | m | CI [O] | 1 | |
| 04a: Haber [ | R: SD | m | CI [O] | 1 | |
| 05a: Hernandez [ | R: SD | m | BI [C] | 1 | |
| 06a: McCabe [ | M: C57BL/6 | m | HIFU [C] | 1 | |
| 07a: Namjoshi [ | M: C57BL/6 | m | CH [C] | 1 | |
| 08a: Schwerin [ | Ferret | m | CI [O] | 1 | |
| 09a: Sherman [ | M: C57BL/6 | CI [C] | 1 | ||
| 09b: Sherman [ | M: C57BL/6 | CI [C] | 1 | ||
| 09c: Sherman [ | M: C57BL/6 | CI [C] | 1 | ||
| 10a: Tu [ | R: Wistar | f | WD [C] | 1 | |
| 10b: Tu [ | R: Wistar | f | WD [C] | 1 | |
| 11a: Bennett [ | M: C57BL/6 | m | CI [C] | 2 | |
| 12a: Cheng [ | m | CH [C] | |||
| 12b: Cheng [ | m | CH [C] | |||
| 12c: Cheng [ | m | CH [C] | |||
| 12d: Cheng [ | m | CH [C] | |||
| 13b: Fidan [ | R: SD | m | CI [C] | ||
| 13a: Fidan [ | R: SD | m | CI [C] | ||
| 14a: Namjoshi [ | M: C57BL/6 | m | CH [C] | ||
| 14b: Namjoshi [ | M: C57BL/6 | m | CH [C] | 2 | |
| 15a: Semple [ | M: C57BL/6 | m | CI [C] | ||
| 15b: Semple [ | M: C57BL/6 | m | CI [C] | ||
| 16a: Shitaka [ | M: C57BL/6 J | m | CI [C] | 2 | |
| 17a: Fehily [ | R: PVG | f | WD [C] | ||
| 17b: Fehily [ | R: PVG | f | WD [C] | ||
| 17c: Fehily [ | R: PVG | f | WD [C] | ||
| 18a: Maynard [ | M: C57BL/6 | m | WD [C] | 3 | |
| 19a: Brooks [ | R: Wistar | m | FPI [O] | 4 | |
| 20a: Maynard [ | m | CI [C] | 4 | ||
| 20b: Maynard [ | m | CI [C] | 4 | ||
| 21a: Bolton Hall [ | M: C57BL/6 | m | CI [C] | ||
| 21b: Bolton Hall [ | M: C57BL/6 | m | CI [C] | ||
| 21c: Bolton Hall [ | M: C57BL/6 | m | CI [C] | ||
| 22a: Eyolfson [ | M: C57BL/6 | LIM [C] | |||
| 22b: Eyolfson [ | M: C57BL/6 | LIM [C] | |||
| 22c: Eyolfson [ | M: C57BL/6 | LIM [C] | |||
| 23a: Ferguson [ | M: C57BL/6 J | m | CI [C] | 5 | |
| 24a: Mouzon [ | M: C57BL/6-hTau | CI [C] | 5 | ||
| 24b: Mouzon [ | M: C57BL/6-hTau | CI [C] | 5 | ||
| 24c: Mouzon [ | M: C57BL/6-hTau | CI [C] | 5 | ||
| 24d: Mouzon [ | M: C57BL/6-hTau | CI [C] | 5 | ||
| 25a: Mouzon [ | M: C57BL/6-hTau | m | CI [C] | ||
| 25b: Mouzon [ | M: C57BL/6-hTau | m | CI [C] | ||
| 26a: Ojo [ | M: C57BL/6 | m | CI (C) | 5 | |
| 27a: Yu [ | M: C57BL/6 | m | CI (C) | 5 | |
| 28a: Robinson [ | M: C57BL/6 | m | WD [C] | 7 | |
| 29a: Angoa-Pérez [ | M: C57BL6/J | m | WD [C] | 20 | |
| 30a: Winston [ | M: C57BL/6 | m | CI (C) | 30 |
Fig. 2Distributions of common parameters among included studies. A Sexes of included subjects. Both = male and female subjects examined separately; Mixed = male and female subjects pooled together. B Species of included subjects. C Injury model used. CI = controlled piston-driven impact; WD = weight drop; CH = Closed-Head Impact Model of Engineered Rotational Acceleration (CHIMERA); BI = blast injury; FPI = fluid pulse injury; HIFU = high-intensity focused ultrasound; LIM = lateral impact model. C = closed-skull; O = open-skull. D Analgesia administered following mTBI procedure. E Regions in which microglial activation in the white matter was quantified. F Methods used to quantify microglial activation in the white matter. CD11b = cluster of differentiation 11b; CD68 = cluster of differentiation 68; EM = electron microscopy; H = histology; mRNA = messenger ribonucleic acid; qPCR = quantitative polymerase chain reaction
Fig. 3Summary of reported timecourses of microglial activation across experimental groups of included studies. The x-axis represents days since their final injury (or days since injury in the case of single mTBI studies) on a logarithmic scale. Each row along the y-axis represents one set of experimental conditions (denoted by lettering from a to d from a particular study (denoted by identification numbers 01 to 30). Studies were arranged along the y-axis by the largest number of injuries (NOI) examined by any one of their experimental groups. Experimental groups within a study were arranged by NOI if possible or arranged randomly otherwise. For studies containing multiple experimental groups that differed by a parameter other than NOI, annotations containing the differing parameters are present. The number of injuries for each experimental group is listed in a colour coded column on the righthand side of the graph. Each circle marker represents a timepoint at which microglial activation was examined. Green circle markers indicate no detected change in microglial activation in the white matter relative to shams, while orange markers indicate significantly increased microglial activation in the white matter relative to shams. Depth = impact depth of controlled impactor during mTBI; ICI = ion channel inhibitors; III = inter-injury interval; MVM = mild ventriculomegaly; NOI = number of injuries; WT = wild-type
Summary of comparisons between all pairs of experimental groups that differ by only a single subject or injury factor. Sarm1-KO = sterile alpha and toll-interleukin receptor motif containing 1
| Parameter | Comparable groups | Summary of comparison of microglial activation in the white matter |
|---|---|---|
| Age | Increased in older group | |
| Increased in younger group | ||
| Inconclusive comparison | ||
| Inconclusive comparison | ||
| Genotype | Increased in APP/PS1 group | |
| Increased in wild-type group | ||
| Initial increase in wild-type group, delayed increase in LIF ( ±) group | ||
| Inconclusive comparison | ||
| Inter-injury interval | Inconclusive comparison | |
| Number of mTBIs | Increased in group with more mTBIs | |
| Increased in group with more mTBIs | ||
| Highest in group with 2 mTBIs | ||
| Inconclusive comparison | ||
| Inconclusive comparison | ||
| Inconclusive comparison | ||
| Sex | Inconclusive comparison | |
| Inconclusive comparison | ||
| Inconclusive comparison | ||
| Inconclusive comparison | ||
| Weight | Inconclusive comparison | |
| Other | Inconclusive comparison |
Summary of comparisons of methods for the detection and analysis of microglial activation
| Microglial activation detection method | Study | Summary of comparison |
|---|---|---|
| CD11b + area vs. CD11b + morphology | Yu et al. [ | CD11b + morphology showed higher sensitivity |
| CD68 + area vs. CD68 qPCR | Haber et al. [ | CD68 + area showed higher sensitivity |
| CD68 + area vs. Iba1 + area | Haber et al. [ | CD68 + area showed higher sensitivity |
| Haber et al. [ | Iba1 + area showed higher sensitivity | |
| CD68 + intensity vs. Iba1 + intensity | Robinson et al. [ | Inconclusive comparison |
| Iba1 + area vs. CD68 qPCR | Haber et al. [ | Iba1 + area showed higher sensitivity |
| Iba1 + area vs. Iba1 + clustering | Schwerin et al. [ | Iba1 + clustering showed higher sensitivity |
Fig. 4Contextualizing microglial activation in white matter relative to other post-mTBI assessments. ‘Before’ and ‘after’ tallies refer to when an assessment resolved relative to the resolution of microglial activation. Instances where limited temporal range or resolution of the assessment obscured the relative orders of resolution were tallied as ‘Inconclusive’. Specific assessment descriptions are provided in Additional File 7. 5-HT1B = 5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 1B; 8-OHdG = 8-hydroxy-2’-deoxyguanosine; AD = axial diffusivity; ADC = apparent diffusion coefficient; APP = amyloid precursor protein; Arg-1 = arginase-1; BDA = biotinylated dextran amine; CD11b = cluster of differentiation molecule 11b; CD206 = cluster of differentiation 206; CD40 = cluster of differentiation 40; CD68 = cluster of differentiation 68; CD86 = cluster of differentiation 86; CNPase = 2’,3’-Cyclic-nucleotide 3’-phosphodiesterase; CV = cresyl violet; DAPI = 4’,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole; FA = fractional anisotropy; FJC = Fluoro-Jade C; GFAP = glial fibrillary acidic protein; IL-1β = interleukin 1 beta; IL-12 = interleukin 12; IL-6 = interleukin 6; iNOS = inducible nitric oxide synthase; Ka = axial kurtosis; Kr = radial kurtosis; LFB = luxol fast blue; MBP = myelin basic protein; MD = mean diffusivity; MK = mean kurtosis; MOG = myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein; mRNA = messenger ribonucleic acid; MTR = magnetization transfer ratio; NF200 = neurofilament protein; NF-L = neurofilament light protein; NG2 = neural/glial antigen 2; Nrf2 = NF-E2 DNA binding protein; Olig2 = oligodendrocyte transcription factor; PDGFRα = Platelet-derived growth factor receptor α; PLP = proteolipid protein 1; p-STAT3 = phospho-signal transducer and activator of transcription 3; p-tau = phospho-tau; qPCR = quantitative polymerase chain reaction; RA = relative anisotropy; RD = radial kurtosis; RNA = ribonucleic acid; TNF-α = tumor necrosis factor alpha; TNFR1 = tumor necrosis factor receptor 1; TNFR2 = tumor necrosis factor receptor 2; t-tau = total tau