» Articles » PMID: 20085927

Quantitative Analysis of Cellular Inflammation After Traumatic Spinal Cord Injury: Evidence for a Multiphasic Inflammatory Response in the Acute to Chronic Environment

Overview
Journal Brain
Specialty Neurology
Date 2010 Jan 21
PMID 20085927
Citations 316
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Traumatic injury to the central nervous system results in the disruption of the blood brain/spinal barrier, followed by the invasion of cells and other components of the immune system that can aggravate injury and affect subsequent repair and regeneration. Although studies of chronic neuroinflammation in the injured spinal cord of animals are clinically relevant to most patients living with traumatic injury to the brain or spinal cord, very little is known about chronic neuroinflammation, though several studies have tested the role of neuroinflammation in the acute period after injury. The present study characterizes a novel cell preparation method that assesses, quickly and effectively, the changes in the principal immune cell types by flow cytometry in the injured spinal cord, daily for the first 10 days and periodically up to 180 days after spinal cord injury. These data quantitatively demonstrate a novel time-dependent multiphasic response of cellular inflammation in the spinal cord after spinal cord injury and are verified by quantitative stereology of immunolabelled spinal cord sections at selected time points. The early phase of cellular inflammation is comprised principally of neutrophils (peaking 1 day post-injury), macrophages/microglia (peaking 7 days post-injury) and T cells (peaking 9 days post-injury). The late phase of cellular inflammation was detected after 14 days post-injury, peaked after 60 days post-injury and remained detectable throughout 180 days post-injury for all three cell types. Furthermore, the late phase of cellular inflammation (14-180 days post-injury) did not coincide with either further improvements, or new decrements, in open-field locomotor function after spinal cord injury. However, blockade of chemoattractant C5a-mediated inflammation after 14 days post-injury reduced locomotor recovery and myelination in the injured spinal cord, suggesting that the late inflammatory response serves a reparative function. Together, these data provide new insight into cellular inflammation of spinal cord injury and identify a surprising and extended multiphasic response of cellular inflammation. Understanding the role of this multiphasic response in the pathophysiology of spinal cord injury could be critical for the design and implementation of rational therapeutic treatment strategies, including both cell-based and pharmacological interventions.

Citing Articles

Macrophage polarization-related gene SOAT1 is involved in inflammatory response and functional recovery after spinal cord injury.

Peng P, Wang H, Pang Z, Zhang H, Hu S, Ma X Mol Cell Biochem. 2025; .

PMID: 40050510 DOI: 10.1007/s11010-025-05246-7.


Reawakening inflammation in the chronically injured spinal cord using lipopolysaccharide induces diverse microglial states.

John R, Vogel S, Zia S, Lee K, Nguyen A, Torres-Espin A J Neuroinflammation. 2025; 22(1):56.

PMID: 40022205 PMC: 11871772. DOI: 10.1186/s12974-025-03379-6.


Thoracic Spinal Cord Contusion Impacts on Lumbar Enlargement: Molecular Insights.

Kabdesh I, Tutova O, Akhmetzyanova E, Timofeeva A, Bilalova A, Mukhamedshina Y Mol Neurobiol. 2025; .

PMID: 40014268 DOI: 10.1007/s12035-025-04794-9.


Focusing on Formyl Peptide Receptors after Traumatic Spinal Cord Injury: from Immune Response to Neurogenesis.

Pu Z, Luo D, Shuai B, Xu Y, Liu M, Zhao J Neurochem Res. 2025; 50(2):98.

PMID: 39920516 DOI: 10.1007/s11064-025-04347-5.


Inhibition of CD36 ameliorates mouse spinal cord injury by accelerating microglial lipophagy.

Wang B, Du A, Chen X, Huang T, Al Mamun A, Li P Acta Pharmacol Sin. 2025; .

PMID: 39880928 DOI: 10.1038/s41401-024-01463-w.


References
1.
Bagamery K, Kvell K, Landau R, Graham J . Flow cytometric analysis of CD41-labeled platelets isolated by the rapid, one-step OptiPrep method from human blood. Cytometry A. 2005; 65(1):84-7. DOI: 10.1002/cyto.a.20133. View

2.
Popovich P, van Rooijen N, Hickey W, Preidis G, McGaughy V . Hematogenous macrophages express CD8 and distribute to regions of lesion cavitation after spinal cord injury. Exp Neurol. 2003; 182(2):275-87. DOI: 10.1016/s0014-4886(03)00120-1. View

3.
Cicco N, Lindemann A, Content J, Vandenbussche P, Lubbert M, Gauss J . Inducible production of interleukin-6 by human polymorphonuclear neutrophils: role of granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor and tumor necrosis factor-alpha. Blood. 1990; 75(10):2049-52. View

4.
Krickhahn M, Meyer T, Buhler C, Thiede A, Ulrichs K . Highly efficient isolation of porcine islets of Langerhans for xenotransplantation: numbers, purity, yield and in vitro function. Ann Transplant. 2002; 6(3):48-54. View

5.
Villalta S, Nguyen H, Deng B, Gotoh T, Tidball J . Shifts in macrophage phenotypes and macrophage competition for arginine metabolism affect the severity of muscle pathology in muscular dystrophy. Hum Mol Genet. 2008; 18(3):482-96. PMC: 2638796. DOI: 10.1093/hmg/ddn376. View