Frontiers in Neurology (Dec 2017)

In Vivo Imaging of Glial Activation after Unilateral Labyrinthectomy in the Rat: A [18F]GE180-PET Study

  • Andreas Zwergal,
  • Andreas Zwergal,
  • Lisa Günther,
  • Matthias Brendel,
  • Matthias Brendel,
  • Roswitha Beck,
  • Simon Lindner,
  • Guoming Xiong,
  • Eva Eilles,
  • Marcus Unterrainer,
  • Nathalie Lisa Albert,
  • Sandra Becker-Bense,
  • Sandra Becker-Bense,
  • Thomas Brandt,
  • Thomas Brandt,
  • Sibylle Ziegler,
  • Christian la Fougère,
  • Christian la Fougère,
  • Marianne Dieterich,
  • Marianne Dieterich,
  • Marianne Dieterich,
  • Peter Bartenstein,
  • Peter Bartenstein,
  • Peter Bartenstein

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2017.00665
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8

Abstract

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The functional relevance of reactive gliosis for recovery from acute unilateral vestibulopathy is unknown. In the present study, glial activation was visualized in vivo by [18F]GE180-PET in a rat model of unilateral labyrinthectomy (UL) and compared to behavioral vestibular compensation (VC) overtime. 14 Sprague-Dawley rats underwent a UL by transtympanic injection of bupivacaine/arsenilate, 14 rats a SHAM UL (injection of normal saline). Glial activation was depicted with [18F]GE180-PET and ex vivo autoradiography at baseline and 7, 15, 30 days after UL/SHAM UL. Postural asymmetry and nystagmus were registered at 1, 2, 3, 7, 15, 30 days after UL/SHAM UL. Signs of vestibular imbalance were found only after UL, which significantly decreased until days 15 and 30. In parallel, [18F]GE180-PET and ex vivo autoradiography depicted glial activation in the ipsilesional vestibular nerve and nucleus on days 7 and 15 after UL. Correlation analysis revealed a strong negative association of [18F]GE180 uptake in the ipsilesional vestibular nucleus on day 7 with the rate of postural recovery (R = −0.90, p < 0.001), suggesting that glial activation accelerates VC. In conclusion, glial activation takes place in the ipsilesional vestibular nerve and nucleus within the first 30 days after UL in the rat and can be visualized in vivo by [18F]GE180-PET.

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