| Literature DB >> 35358498 |
Zoe M Tapp1, Sydney Cornelius2, Alexa Oberster3, Julia E Kumar4, Ravitej Atluri5, Kristina G Witcher6, Braedan Oliver7, Chelsea Bray8, John Velasquez9, Fangli Zhao10, Juan Peng11, John Sheridan12, Candice Askwith13, Jonathan P Godbout14, Olga N Kokiko-Cochran15.
Abstract
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) impairs the ability to restore homeostasis in response to stress, indicating hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA)-axis dysfunction. Many stressors result in sleep disturbances, thus mechanical sleep fragmentation (SF) provides a physiologically relevant approach to study the effects of stress after injury. We hypothesize SF stress engages the dysregulated HPA-axis after TBI to exacerbate post-injury neuroinflammation and compromise recovery. To test this, male and female mice were given moderate lateral fluid percussion TBI or sham-injury and left undisturbed or exposed to daily, transient SF for 7- or 30-days post-injury (DPI). Post-TBI SF increases cortical expression of interferon- and stress-associated genes characterized by inhibition of the upstream regulator NR3C1 that encodes glucocorticoid receptor (GR). Moreover, post-TBI SF increases neuronal activity in the hippocampus, a key intersection of the stress-immune axes. By 30 DPI, TBI SF enhances cortical microgliosis and increases expression of pro-inflammatory glial signaling genes characterized by persistent inhibition of the NR3C1 upstream regulator. Within the hippocampus, post-TBI SF exaggerates microgliosis and decreases CA1 neuronal activity. Downstream of the hippocampus, post-injury SF suppresses neuronal activity in the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus indicating decreased HPA-axis reactivity. Direct application of GR agonist, dexamethasone, to the CA1 at 30 DPI increases GR activity in TBI animals, but not sham animals, indicating differential GR-mediated hippocampal action. Electrophysiological assessment revealed TBI and SF induces deficits in Schaffer collateral long-term potentiation associated with impaired acquisition of trace fear conditioning, reflecting dorsal hippocampal-dependent cognitive deficits. Together these data demonstrate that post-injury SF engages the dysfunctional post-injury HPA-axis, enhances inflammation, and compromises hippocampal function. Therefore, external stressors that disrupt sleep have an integral role in mediating outcome after brain injury.Entities:
Keywords: HPA-axis; Neuroinflammation; Schaffer collateral; Sleep fragmentation; Stress; Traumatic brain injury; fear conditioning; glucocorticoid receptor; hippocampus
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35358498 PMCID: PMC9068267 DOI: 10.1016/j.expneurol.2022.114058
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Exp Neurol ISSN: 0014-4886 Impact factor: 5.620