Repetitive Mild Closed Head Injury in Adolescent Mice Is Associated with Impaired Proteostasis, Neuroinflammation, and Tauopathy

Author:

Wu Limin,Kalish Brian T.,Finander Benjamin,Cao Tian,Jin Gina,Yahya Taha,Levy Emily S.ORCID,Kukreja Bharti,LaRovere Eliza Sophie,Chung Joon Yong,Lo Eng H.,Brown-Whalen Alexander,El Khoury Joseph,Kaplan David L.,Whalen Michael J.

Abstract

Repetitive mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) in children and adolescents leads to acute and chronic neurologic sequelae and is linked to later life neurodegenerative disease. However, the biological mechanisms connecting early life mTBI to neurodegeneration remain unknown. Using an adolescent mouse repetitive closed head injury model that induces progressive cognitive impairment in males and anxiety in females in the absence of overt histopathology, we examined transcriptional and translational changes in neurons isolated from sham and injured brain in the chronic phase after injury. At 14 months, single-nuclei RNA sequencing of cortical brain tissue identified disruption of genes associated with neuronal proteostasis and evidence for disrupted ligand-receptor signaling networks in injured mice. Western blot analysis of isolated neurons showed evidence of inflammasome activation and downstream IL-1β processing, as previously demonstrated in acute CNS injury models, and accumulation of misfolded, hyperphosphorylated tau, and changes in expression of proteins suggestive of impaired translation in males but not in females. At 6 months, injured IL-1 receptor 1 (IL-1R1) KO mice, which are protected from postinjury cognitive deficits, had decreased accumulation of pro-IL-1β and misfolded tau in cortex and cerebellum, suggesting that IL-1R1 is upstream of inflammasome priming (defined as increase in pro-IL-1β) and abnormal tau phosphorylation. Together, our findings provide evidence for neuronal inflammasome activation and impaired proteostasis as key mechanisms linking repetitive mTBI in adolescence to later life neurologic dysfunction and neurodegeneration.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENTRepetitive mild closed head injury in adolescent male mice leads to impaired proteostasis, tau phosphorylation, and inflammasome activation in neurons later in adulthood through mechanisms involving IL-1 receptor 1. The data are the first to link repetitive mild traumatic brain injury in adolescence to neurodegeneration and suggest molecular targets and pathways to prevent neurologic sequelae in the chronic period after injuries.

Funder

HHS | NIH | National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke

HHS | NIH | National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases

HHS | NIH | National Institute on Aging

Publisher

Society for Neuroscience

Subject

General Neuroscience

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