Functional recovery following traumatic brain injury in rats is enhanced by oral supplementation with bovine thymus extract

Author:

Surzenko Natalia1ORCID,Bastidas Johana2,Reid Robert W.3ORCID,Curaba Julien4,Zhang Wei1,Bostan Hamed4,Wilson Mickey1,Dominique Ashley1,Roberson Julia1,Ignacio Glicerio5,Komarnytsky Slavko6ORCID,Sanders Alexa3ORCID,Lambirth Kevin3,Brouwer Cory R.3ORCID,El‐Khodor Bassem F.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Nutrition Innovation Center, Standard Process, Inc. Kannapolis North Carolina USA

2. PsychoGenics, Inc. Paramus New Jersey USA

3. College of Computing and Informatics University of North Carolina at Charlotte Kannapolis North Carolina USA

4. Eremid Genomic Services, LLC Kannapolis North Carolina USA

5. David H. Murdock Research Institute Kannapolis North Carolina USA

6. Department of Food, Bioprocessing and Nutrition Sciences, Plants for Human Health Institute North Carolina State University Kannapolis North Carolina USA

Abstract

AbstractTraumatic brain injury (TBI) is one of the leading causes of death worldwide. There are currently no effective treatments for TBI, and trauma survivors suffer from a variety of long‐lasting health consequences. With nutritional support recently emerging as a vital step in improving TBI patients' outcomes, we sought to evaluate the potential therapeutic benefits of nutritional supplements derived from bovine thymus gland, which can deliver a variety of nutrients and bioactive molecules. In a rat model of controlled cortical impact (CCI), we determined that animals supplemented with a nuclear fraction of bovine thymus (TNF) display greatly improved performance on beam balance and spatial memory tests following CCI. Using RNA‐Seq, we identified an array of signaling pathways that are modulated by TNF supplementation in rat hippocampus, including those involved in the process of autophagy. We further show that bovine thymus‐derived extracts contain antigens found in neural tissues and that supplementation of rats with thymus extracts induces production of serum IgG antibodies against neuronal and glial antigens, which may explain the enhanced animal recovery following CCI through possible oral tolerance mechanism. Collectively, our data demonstrate, for the first time, the potency of a nutritional supplement containing nuclear fraction of bovine thymus in enhancing the functional recovery from TBI.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference141 articles.

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