A Pilot Study to Investigate Peripheral Low-Level Chronic LPS Injection as a Model of Neutrophil Activation in the Periphery and Brain in Mice

Author:

Aries Michelle1ORCID,Cook Makayla1,Hensley-McBain Tiffany12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. McLaughlin Research Institute, Great Falls, MT 59405, USA

2. Department of Basic Sciences, Touro College of Osteopathic Medicine Montana, Great Falls, MT 59405, USA

Abstract

Lipopolysaccharide-induced (LPS) inflammation is used as model to understand the role of inflammation in brain diseases. However, no studies have assessed the ability of peripheral low-level chronic LPS to induce neutrophil activation in the periphery and brain. Subclinical levels of LPS were injected intraperitoneally into mice to investigate its impacts on neutrophil frequency and activation. Neutrophil activation, as measured by CD11b expression, was higher in LPS-injected mice compared to saline-injected mice after 4 weeks but not 8 weeks of injections. Neutrophil frequency and activation increased in the periphery 4–12 h and 4–8 h after the fourth and final injection, respectively. Increased levels of G-CSF, TNFa, IL-6, and CXCL2 were observed in the plasma along with increased neutrophil elastase, a marker of neutrophil extracellular traps, peaking 4 h following the final injection. Neutrophil activation was increased in the brain of LPS-injected mice when compared to saline-injected mice 4–8 h after the final injection. These results indicate that subclinical levels of peripheral LPS induces neutrophil activation in the periphery and brain. This model of chronic low-level systemic inflammation could be used to understand how neutrophils may act as mediators of the periphery–brain axis of inflammation with age and/or in mouse models of neurodegenerative or neuroinflammatory disease.

Funder

National Institute of General Medical Sciences of the National Institutes of Health

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

MDPI AG

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