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Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is often complicated by long-lasting disabilities, including headache, fatigue, insomnia, hyperactivity, and cognitive deficits. In a previous study in mice, we showed that persistent non-goal-directed hyperactivity is a characteristic post-TBI behavior that was associated with low levels of endocannabinoids in the perilesional cortex. We now analyzed lipidome patterns in the brain and plasma in TBI versus sham mice in association with key behavioral parameters and endocannabinoids. Lipidome profiles in the plasma and subcortical ipsilateral and contralateral brain were astonishingly equal in sham and TBI mice, but the ipsilateral perilesional cortex revealed a strong increase in neutral lipids represented by 30 species of triacylglycerols (TGs) of different chain lengths and saturation. The accumulation of TG was localized predominantly to perilesional border cells as revealed by Oil Red O staining. In addition, hexosylceramides (HexCer) and phosphatidylethanolamines (PE and ether-linked PE-O) were reduced. They are precursors of gangliosides and endocannabinoids, respectively. High TG, low HexCer, and low PE/PE-O showed a linear association with non-goal-directed nighttime hyperactivity but not with the loss of avoidance memory. The analyses suggest that TG overload and HexCer and PE deficiencies contributed to behavioral dimensions of post-TBI psychopathology.
Behind the Wall - Compartment-Specific Neovascularisation during Post-Stroke Recovery in Mice
(2022)
Ischemic stroke is a highly prevalent vascular disease leading to oxygen- and glucose deprivation in the brain. In response, ischemia-induced neovascularization occurs, which is supported by circulating CD34+ endothelial progenitor cells. Here, we used the transient middle cerebral artery occlusion (tMCAO) mouse model to characterize the spatio-temporal alterations within the ischemic core from the acute to the chronic phase using multiple-epitope-ligand cartography (MELC) for sequential immunohistochemistry. We found that around 14 days post-stroke, significant angiogenesis occurs in the ischemic core, as determined by the presence of CD31+/CD34+ double-positive endothelial cells. This neovascularization was accompanied by the recruitment of CD4+ T-cells and dendritic cells as well as IBA1+ and IBA1− microglia. Neighborhood analysis identified, besides pericytes only for T-cells and dendritic cells, a statistically significant distribution as direct neighbors of CD31+/CD34+ endothelial cells, suggesting a role for these cells in aiding angiogenesis. This process was distinct from neovascularization of the peri-infarct area as it was separated by a broad astroglial scar. At day 28 post-stroke, the scar had emerged towards the cortical periphery, which seems to give rise to a neuronal regeneration within the peri-infarct area. Meanwhile, the ischemic core has condensed to a highly vascularized subpial region adjacent to the leptomeningeal compartment. In conclusion, in the course of chronic post-stroke regeneration, the astroglial scar serves as a seal between two immunologically active compartments—the peri-infarct area and the ischemic core—which exhibit distinct processes of neovascularization as a central feature of post-stroke tissue remodeling. Based on our findings, we propose that neovascularization of the ischemic core comprises arteriogenesis as well as angiogenesis originating from the leptomenigeal vasculature.