Neurobiology of Disease (Nov 2013)

Administration of TSG-6 improves memory after traumatic brain injury in mice

  • Jun Watanabe,
  • Ashok K. Shetty,
  • Bharathi Hattiangady,
  • Dong-Ki Kim,
  • Jessica E. Foraker,
  • Hidetaka Nishida,
  • Darwin J. Prockop

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 59
pp. 86 – 99

Abstract

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Traumatic brain injury (TBI) causes multiple long-term defects including a loss of working memory that is frequently incapacitating. Administrations of mesenchymal stem/stromal cells (MSCs) previously produced beneficial effects in models of TBI as well as other disease models. In several models, the beneficial effects were explained by the MSCs being activated to express TSG-6, a multifunctional protein that modulates inflammation. In a mouse model of TBI, we found the initial mild phase of the inflammatory response persisted for at least 24 h and was followed by secondary severe response that peaked at 3 days. Intravenous human MSCs or TSG-6 during initial mild phase decreased neutrophil extravasation, expression of matrix metalloproteinase 9 by endothelial cells and neutrophils, and the subsequent blood brain barrier leakage in secondary phase. Administration of TSG-6 also decreased the lesion size at 2 weeks. Importantly, the acute administration of TSG-6 within 24 h of TBI was followed 6 to 10 weeks later by improvements in memory, depressive-like behavior and the number of newly born-neurons. The data suggested that acute administration of TSG-6 may be an effective therapy for decreasing some of the long-term consequences of TBI.

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