Differential acute and chronic responses of tumor necrosis factor-deficient mice to experimental brain injury Journal Article


Authors: Scherbel, U.; Raghupathi, R.; Nakamura, M.; Saatman, K. E.; Trojanowski, J. Q.; Neugebauer, E.; Marino, M. W.; McIntosh, T. K.
Article Title: Differential acute and chronic responses of tumor necrosis factor-deficient mice to experimental brain injury
Abstract: The present study evaluated behavioral and histopathological outcome after controlled cortical impact (CCI) brain injury in mice deficient in tumor necrosis factor [TNF(-/-)] and their wild-type (wt) littermates. Mice were subjected to CCI brain injury [TNF(-/-), n = 10; wt, n = 10] or served as uninjured controls [TNF(-/-), n = 10; wt, n = 10] and were evaluated for deficits in memory retention at 7 days postinjury, Although both brain-injured wt and TNF(-/-) mice exhibited significant memory dysfunction compared to uninjured controls (P < 0.02), the deficits in memory retention in injured TNF(-/-) mice were significantly less severe than in injured wt mice (P < 0.02). A second group of mice was subjected to CCI brain injury [TNF(-/-), n = 20; wt, n = 20] or served as uninjured controls [TNF(-/-), n = 15; wt, n = 15] and were evaluated over a 4-week period for neurological motor function. In the acute posttraumatic period (48 h postinjury), brain-injured TNF(-/-) mice were significantly less impaired than injured wt mice on composite neuroscore (P < 0.001), rotarod (P < 0.05), and beam balance (P < 0.02) tests. However, wt mice recovered from brain injury by 2-3 weeks postinjury, whereas TNF(-/-) mice continued to demonstrate persistent motor deficits up to 4 weeks postinjury, Histopathological analysis at 2 and 4 weeks postinjury revealed that brain-injured TNF(-/-) mice had significantly more cortical tissue loss than wt mice (P < 0.02). Our results suggest that although the presence of TNF in the acute posttraumatic period may be deleterious, this cytokine may play a role in facilitating long-term behavioral recovery and histological repair after brain injury.
Keywords: histopathology; cytokines; cognition; transgenic mice; cell-death; factor-alpha; rat-brain; tnf-alpha; peripheral-nerve; central; closed-head injury; cerebral-ischemia; neuromotor function; nervous system trauma; controlled cortical impact
Journal Title: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Volume: 96
Issue: 15
ISSN: 0027-8424
Publisher: National Academy of Sciences  
Date Published: 1999-07-20
Start Page: 8721
End Page: 8726
Language: English
ACCESSION: WOS:000081589400079
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.96.15.8721
PROVIDER: wos
PMCID: PMC17583
PUBMED: 10411942
Notes: Article -- Source: Wos
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  1. Michael W. Marino
    35 Marino