4.7 Article

Pregnant serum induces neuroinflammation and seizure activity via TNFα

Journal

EXPERIMENTAL NEUROLOGY
Volume 234, Issue 2, Pages 398-404

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.expneurol.2012.01.005

Keywords

Pregnancy; Seizure; Hippocampal slice; Neuroinflammation; TNF alpha; Microglia; Blood-brain barrier

Categories

Funding

  1. NINDS [RO1 NS045940, RO1 NS19108]
  2. NICHD [PO1 HD09402]
  3. Migraine Research Foundation
  4. White Foundation
  5. NIH [T32-GM07839]
  6. NHLBI [R01 HL089177]
  7. NCRR CoBRE [P20RR15557]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Preeclampsia is a hypertensive disorder of pregnancy that affects many organs including the brain. Neurological complications occur during preeclampsia, the most serious of which is seizure known as eclampsia. Although preeclampsia can precede the eclamptic seizure, it often occurs during normal pregnancy, suggesting that processes associated with normal pregnancy can promote neuronal excitability. Here we investigated whether circulating inflammatory mediators that are elevated late in gestation when seizure also occurs are hyperexcitable to neuronal tissue. Evoked field potentials were measured in hippocampal slices in which control horse serum that slices are normally grown in, was replaced with serum from nonpregnant or late-pregnant Wistar rats for 48 h. We found that serum from pregnant, but not nonpregnant rats, caused hyperexcitability to hippocampal neurons and seizure activity that was abrogated by inhibition of tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF alpha) signaling. Additionally, application of TNF alpha mimicked this increased excitability. Pregnant serum also caused morphological changes in microglia characteristic of activation, and increased TNF alpha mRNA expression that was not seen with exposure to nonpregnant serum. However, TNF alpha protein was not found to be elevated in pregnant serum itself, suggesting that other circulating factors during pregnancy caused activation of hippocampal slice cells to produce a TNF alpha-mediated increase in neuronal excitability. Lastly, although pregnant serum caused neuroinflammation and hyperexcitability of hippocampal slices, it did not increase blood-brain barrier permeability, nor were pregnant rats from which the serum was taken undergoing seizure. Thus, the BBB has an important role in protecting the brain from circulating neuroinflammatory mediators that are hyperexcitable to the brain during pregnancy. These studies provide novel insight into the underlying cause of eclampsia without elevated blood pressure and the protective role of the BBB that prevents exposure of the brain to hyperexcitable factors. (C) 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available