Altered cytokine expression and sustained hypothermia following traumatic brain injury in heat acclimated mice

Na'ama A. Shein, Hanny Doron, Michal Horowitz*, Victoria Trembovler, Alexander G. Alexandrovich, Esther Shohami

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

21 Scopus citations

Abstract

Long-term exposure to moderate ambient heat (heat acclimation, HA, 30 days at 34 ± 1 °C) provides protection toward a variety of stressors including traumatic brain injury. As previous studies suggested an anti-inflammatory effect of HA and given the ability of augmented pre-injury anti-inflammatory cytokine expression to harbor neuroprotection and to attenuate early post-injury expression of pro-inflammatory mediators, we hypothesized that HA-induced neuroprotection may involve enhanced pre-injury expression of anti-inflammatory mediators or a reduction in post-injury TNF alpha (TNFα) expression. Since the attenuation of inflammatory-associated entities has also been linked to mild hypothermia, an established neuroprotective paradigm, the effect of HA on post-injury body temperature was also studied. HA mice and normothermic (NT) counterparts were examined using a closed head injury model. Cytokines were measured within the ipsilateral cortex. Pre-injury protein levels of anti-inflammatory interleukins 10 and 4 (IL-10, IL-4) were quantified by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISA). mRNA and protein levels of TNFα were quantified during the initial 2 h post-injury using semi-quantitative and real-time polymerase chain reaction (sqRT-PCR and qRT-PCR) or ELISA, respectively. Rectal temperatures were measured. HA induced augmented pre-injury IL-10 expression and a post-injury reduction in TNFα mRNA levels, as well as altered expression dynamics of TNFα protein. TNFα protein levels decreased relative to the sham state in HA mice only. HA mice displayed sustained post-injury hypothermia, namely significantly lower body temperature at 4 h post-injury. Given the evidence on the neuroprotective nature of hypothermia and anti-inflammatory cytokines, we suggest that these changes may contribute to HA-induced neuroprotection.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)313-320
Number of pages8
JournalBrain Research
Volume1185
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 14 Dec 2007

Keywords

  • Closed head injury
  • Inflammation
  • Neuroprotection

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Altered cytokine expression and sustained hypothermia following traumatic brain injury in heat acclimated mice'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this