International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Jan 2021)

Repetitive Traumatic Brain Injury Causes Neuroinflammation before Tau Pathology in Adolescent P301S Mice

  • Saef Izzy,
  • Alexander Brown-Whalen,
  • Taha Yahya,
  • Aliyah Sarro-Schwartz,
  • Gina Jin,
  • Joon Yong Chung,
  • Sevda Lule,
  • Liza M. Morsett,
  • Ali Alquraini,
  • Limin Wu,
  • Suzanne E. Hickman,
  • Michael J. Whalen,
  • Joseph El Khoury

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms22020907
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 2
p. 907

Abstract

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Repetitive closed head injury (rCHI) is commonly encountered in young athletes engaged in contact and collision sports. Traumatic brain injury (TBI) including rCHI has been reported to be an important risk factor for several tauopathies in studies of adult humans and animals. However, the link between rCHI and the progression of tau pathology in adolescents remains to be elucidated. We evaluated whether rCHI can trigger the initial acceleration of pathological tau in adolescent mice and impact the long-term outcomes post-injury. To this end, we subjected adolescent transgenic mice expressing the P301S tau mutation to mild rCHI and assessed tau hyperphosphorylation, tangle formation, markers of neuroinflammation, and behavioral deficits at 40 days post rCHI. We report that rCHI did not accelerate tau pathology and did not worsen behavioral outcomes compared to control mice. However, rCHI induced cortical and hippocampal microgliosis and corpus callosum astrocytosis in P301S mice by 40 days post-injury. In contrast, we did not find significant microgliosis or astrocytosis after rCHI in age-matched WT mice or sham-injured P301S mice. Our data suggest that neuroinflammation precedes the development of Tau pathology in this rCHI model of adolescent repetitive mild TBI.

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