Author:
Dean Terry,Mendiola Andrew S.,Yan Zhaoqi,Meza-Acevedo Rosa,Cabriga Belinda,Akassoglou Katerina,Ryu Jae Kyu
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) causes significant blood-brain barrier (BBB) breakdown, resulting in the extravasation of blood proteins into the brain. The impact of blood proteins, especially fibrinogen, on inflammation and neurodegeneration post-TBI is not fully understood, highlighting a critical gap in our comprehension of TBI pathology and its connection to innate immune activation.
Methods
We combined vascular casting with 3D imaging of solvent-cleared organs (uDISCO) to study the spatial distribution of the blood coagulation protein fibrinogen in large, intact brain volumes and assessed the temporal regulation of the fibrin(ogen) deposition by immunohistochemistry in a murine model of TBI. Fibrin(ogen) deposition and innate immune cell markers were co-localized by immunohistochemistry in mouse and human brains after TBI. We assessed the role of fibrinogen in TBI using unbiased transcriptomics, flow cytometry and immunohistochemistry for innate immune and neuronal markers in Fggγ390–396A knock-in mice, which express a mutant fibrinogen that retains normal clotting function, but lacks the γ390–396 binding motif to CD11b/CD18 integrin receptor.
Results
We show that cerebral fibrinogen deposits were associated with activated innate immune cells in both human and murine TBI. Genetic elimination of fibrin-CD11b interaction reduced peripheral monocyte recruitment and the activation of inflammatory and reactive oxygen species (ROS) gene pathways in microglia and macrophages after TBI. Blockade of the fibrin-CD11b interaction was also protective from oxidative stress damage and cortical loss after TBI.
Conclusions
These data suggest that fibrinogen is a regulator of innate immune activation and neurodegeneration in TBI. Abrogating post-injury neuroinflammation by selective blockade of fibrin’s inflammatory functions may have implications for long-term neurologic recovery following brain trauma.
Funder
National Institute of Child Health and Human Development
Thrasher Research Fund Early Career Award
NINDS
NMSS Postdoctoral Fellowship
UCSF Immunology NIH/NIAID
Berkelhammer Award for Excellence in Neuroscience
NIH/NINDS K99
Conrad N. Hilton Foundation
Ray and the Dagmar Dolby Family Fund
Simon Family Trust
NIH/NIA RF1
NIH/NINDS R35
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
3 articles.
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