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Intranasal delivery of interleukin-4 attenuates chronic cognitive deficits via beneficial microglial responses in experimental traumatic brain injury

Authors :
Rehana K. Leak
Xiaoming Hu
Michael V. L. Bennett
Wenting Zhang
Yejie Shi
Wanying Miao
Jun Chen
Fang Yu
T. Kevin Hitchens
Hongjian Pu
C. Edward Dixon
Yongfang Zhao
Yangfan Wang
Cheng Ma
Source :
Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow & Metabolism
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
SAGE Publications, 2021.

Abstract

Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is commonly followed by long-term cognitive deficits that severely impact the quality of life in survivors. Recent studies suggest that microglial/macrophage (Mi/MΦ) polarization could have multidimensional impacts on post-TBI neurological outcomes. Here, we report that repetitive intranasal delivery of interleukin-4 (IL-4) nanoparticles for 4 weeks after controlled cortical impact improved hippocampus-dependent spatial and non-spatial cognitive functions in adult C57BL6 mice, as assessed by a battery of neurobehavioral tests for up to 5 weeks after TBI. IL-4-elicited enhancement of cognitive functions was associated with improvements in the integrity of the hippocampus at the functional ( e.g., long-term potentiation) and structural levels (CA3 neuronal loss, diffusion tensor imaging of white matter tracts, etc.). Mechanistically, IL-4 increased the expression of PPARγ and arginase-1 within Mi/MΦ, thereby driving microglia toward a global inflammation-resolving phenotype. Notably, IL-4 failed to shift microglial phenotype after TBI in Mi/MΦ-specific PPARγ knockout (mKO) mice, indicating an obligatory role for PPARγ in IL-4-induced Mi/MΦ polarization. Accordingly, post-TBI treatment with IL-4 failed to improve hippocampal integrity or cognitive functions in PPARγ mKO mice. These results demonstrate that administration of exogenous IL-4 nanoparticles stimulates PPARγ-dependent beneficial Mi/MΦ responses, and improves hippocampal function after TBI.

Details

ISSN :
15597016 and 0271678X
Volume :
41
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow & Metabolism
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2ffc91b66b417a13480ac901292b078a
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/0271678x211028680