Brain, Behavior, & Immunity - Health (Aug 2020)

Subacute metformin treatment reduces inflammation and improves functional outcome following neonatal hypoxia ischemia

  • Jessica M. Livingston,
  • Tasfia Syeda,
  • Taryn Christie,
  • Emily A.B. Gilbert,
  • Cindi M. Morshead

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7
p. 100119

Abstract

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Hypoxia-ischemia (HI) injury is a leading cause of neonatal death and long-term disability, and existing treatment options for HI offer only modest benefit. Early intervention with the drug metformin has been shown to promote functional improvement in numerous rodent models of injury and has pleiotropic cellular effects in the brain. We have previously shown that 1 week of metformin treatment initiated 24 ​h after HI in neonatal mice resulted in improved motor and cognitive performance, activation of endogenous neural precursor cells (NPCs), and increased oligodendrogenesis. While promising, a limitation to this work is that immediate pharmacological intervention is not always possible in the clinic. Herein, we investigated whether delaying metformin treatment to begin in the subacute phase post-HI would still effectively promote recovery. Male and female C57/BL6 mice received HI injury postnatally, and metformin treatment began 7 days post-HI for up to 4 weeks. Motor and cognitive performance was assessed across time using behavioural tests (cylinder, foot fault, puzzle box). We found that metformin improved motor and cognitive behaviour, decreased inflammation, and increased oligodendrocytes in the motor cortex. Our present findings demonstrate that a clinically relevant subacute metformin treatment paradigm affords the potential to treat neonatal HI, and that improved outcomes occur through modulation of the inflammatory response and oligodendrogenesis.

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