The Systemic and Local Acute Phase Response following Acute Brain Injury
Open Access
- 1 March 2002
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow & Metabolism
- Vol. 22 (3), 318-326
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00004647-200203000-00009
Abstract
It is not known whether acute brain injury results in a systemic acute phase response (APR) or whether an APR influences outcome after an insult to the CNS. The present study sought to establish whether brain injury elicits a systemic or local APR. The expression of acute phase protein (APP) mRNA in liver and brain tissues was measured by Taqman reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction after an excitotoxic lesion in the striatum or challenge with a proinflammatory cytokine. N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA)–induced brain lesion did not elicit a systemic APR. In contrast, proinflammatory challenge with mouse recombinant interleukin-1β (mrIL-1β) resulted in a significant hepatic APP mRNA expression within 6 hours. Thus, an inflammatory challenge that results in a meningitis leads to a hepatic APR, whereas acute brain injury alone, with no evidence of a meningitis, does not produce an APR. This is surprising because NMDA leads to an increase in endogenous IL-1β synthesis. This suggests that the brain has an endogenous antiinflammatory mechanism, which protects against the spread of inflammation after an acute injury. In the brain, both excitotoxic lesions and proinflammatory challenge resulted in a profound parenchymal upregulation of APP mRNA after 6 and 12 hours in the injected hemisphere. These results suggest that the local APR may play a role as an antiinflammatory mechanism. These findings indicate a potentially pivotal role for peripheral and local APP production on outcome after brain injury.Keywords
This publication has 37 references indexed in Scilit:
- Absolute quantification of mRNA using real-time reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction assaysJournal of Molecular Endocrinology, 2000
- Different forms of LTD in the CA1 region of the hippocampus: role of age and stimulus protocolEuropean Journal of Neuroscience, 2000
- Serum amyloid P component controls chromatin degradation and prevents antinuclear autoimmunityNature Medicine, 1999
- Differential Blood–Brain Barrier Breakdown and Leucocyte Recruitment Following Excitotoxic Lesions in Juvenile and Adult RatsExperimental Neurology, 1998
- Clearance of 125I-Labeled Interleukin-6 from Brain into Blood Following Intracerebroventricular Injection in Rats*Endocrinology, 1997
- Age-related effects of interleukin-1 beta on polymorphonuclear neutrophil-dependent increases in blood-brain barrier permeability in ratsBrain, 1997
- Antibodies against Mac-1 Attenuate Neutrophil Accumulation after Traumatic Brain Injury in RatsJournal of Neurotrauma, 1996
- The acute phase responseImmunology Today, 1994
- The acute inflammatory response to lipopolysaccharide in cns parenchyma differs from that in other body tissuesNeuroscience, 1992
- The kinetics and morphological characteristics of the macrophage-microglial response to kainic acid-induced neuronal degenerationNeuroscience, 1991