Brain, Behavior, & Immunity - Health (Jul 2024)

Sleep fragmentation after traumatic brain injury impairs behavior and conveys long-lasting impacts on neuroinflammation

  • Samuel Houle,
  • Zoe Tapp,
  • Shannon Dobres,
  • Sakeef Ahsan,
  • Yvanna Reyes,
  • Christopher Cotter,
  • Jessica Mitsch,
  • Zachary Zimomra,
  • Juan Peng,
  • Rachel K. Rowe,
  • Jonathan Lifshitz,
  • John Sheridan,
  • Jonathan Godbout,
  • Olga N. Kokiko-Cochran

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 38
p. 100797

Abstract

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Traumatic brain injury (TBI) causes a prolonged inflammatory response in the central nervous system (CNS) driven by microglia. Microglial reactivity is exacerbated by stress, which often provokes sleep disturbances. We have previously shown that sleep fragmentation (SF) stress after experimental TBI increases microglial reactivity and impairs hippocampal function 30 days post-injury (DPI). The neuroimmune response is highly dynamic the first few weeks after TBI, which is also when injury induced sleep-wake deficits are detected. Therefore, we hypothesized that even a few weeks of TBI SF stress would synergize with injury induced sleep-wake deficits to promote neuroinflammation and impair outcome. Here, we investigated the effects of environmental SF in a lateral fluid percussion model of mouse TBI. Half of the mice were undisturbed, and half were exposed to 5 h of SF around the onset of the light cycle, daily, for 14 days. All mice were then undisturbed 15–30 DPI, providing a period for SF stress recovery (SF-R). Mice exposed to SF stress slept more than those in control housing 7–14 DPI and engaged in more total daily sleep bouts during the dark period. However, SF stress did not exacerbate post-TBI sleep deficits. Testing in the Morris water maze revealed sex dependent differences in spatial reference memory 9–14 DPI with males performing worse than females. Post-TBI SF stress suppressed neurogenesis-related gene expression and increased inflammatory signaling in the cortex at 14 DPI. No differences in sleep behavior were detected between groups during the SF stress recovery period 15–30 DPI. Microscopy revealed cortical and hippocampal IBA1 and CD68 percent-area increased in TBI SF-R mice 30 DPI. Additionally, neuroinflammatory gene expression was increased, and synaptogenesis-related gene expression was suppressed in TBI-SF mice 30 DPI. Finally, IPA canonical pathway analysis showed post-TBI SF impaired and delayed activation of synapse-related pathways between 14 and 30 DPI. These data show that transient SF stress after TBI impairs recovery and conveys long-lasting impacts on neuroimmune function independent of continuous sleep deficits. Together, these finding support that even limited exposure to post-TBI SF stress can have lasting impacts on cognitive recovery and regulation of the immune response to trauma.

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