Abstract:Objective To investigate the expression of aquaporins 4 (AQP4) and histopathological changes in early phase of traumatic brain edema and the correlation between AQP4 expression and structural damage to blood-brain barrier (BBB).Methods A total of 120 healthy adult Wistar rats were divided into sham operation group and brain trauma group (which was subgrouped at hours 1,3,6,12 and 24 postinjury) according to random number table,with 20 rats per group.At each time point,brain water content was measured; brain edema and BBB structural changes were observed pathologically;IgG and AQP4 expressions in traumatic brain tissues were detected with immunohistochemical method and Western-blotting.Results In sham operation group,negatively stained IgG was observed and there were no abnormalities in brain tissue structure,brain water content as well as AQP4 expression.In brain trauma group,cerebral water content presented notable increase at 6 hours postinjury and peaked at 24hours; IgG expression showed significant increase at 1 hour postinjury,peaked at 6 hours postinjury and remained a high level at 24 hours.Pathologic observation revealed damage to BBB,blood red cells leaking out of the blood vessels,and tissue gap widening at 1 hour postinjury,which manifested as vasogenic brain edema.Further,those phenomena were gradually aggravated over time and became obvious at 6 hours postinjury.Intracellular edema occurred at 3 hours postinjury,with the presence of increased glial cell body,cytoplasm light staining or vacuolar degeneration,as well as mitochondria swelling and was also aggravated with time,particularly at 6 hours postinjury.Except that the previously mentioned two forms of edema coexisted at 12 hours postinjury,tissue necrosis,inflammatory cell infiltration and microglia proliferation were emerged and aggravated at 24 hours postinjury.AQP4 level decreased at 1 hour,minimized at 6 hours and regained at 12 hours,showing a V-shape curve.Conclusions Vasogenic edema characterized by BBB disruption is the primary histopathological change in early-phase of brain trauma,followed by the coexistence with intracellular edema and aggravation of the two forms of edema over time.AQP4 expression is down-regulated in the vasogenic edema phase but highly expressed at phase of the intracellular edema.
LU Hong,LEI Xiao-yan,HU Hui et al. Expression of aquaporins 4 and pathological changes in early phase of traumatic brain edema[J]. CHINESE JOURNAL OF TRAUMA, 2013, 29(12): 1224-1229.
[5]Kiening KL, van Landeghem FK, Schreiber S, et al. Decreased hemispheric aquaporin-4 is linked to evolving brain edema following controlled cortical impact injury in rats. Neurosci Lett, 2002, 324 (2):105-108.
[6]Ke C, Poon WS, Ng HK, et al. Heterogeneous responses of aquaporin-4 in oedema formation in a replicated severe traumatic brain injury model in rats. Neurosci Lett, 2001, 301(1):21-24.
[7]Zhao J, Moore AN, Clifton GL, et al. Sulforaphane enhances aquaporin-4 expression and decreases cerebral edema following traumatic brain injury. J Neurosci Res, 2005, 82(4):499-506.
[8]Feeney DM, Boyeson MG, Linn RT, et al. Responses to cortical injury:Methodology and local effects of contusion in the rats.Brain Res, 1981, 211(1):67-77.
[9]Akiguchi I, Tomimoto H, Suenaga T, et al.Blood-brain barrier dysfunction in Binswanger’s disease: an immunohis-tochemical study. Acta Neuropathol, 1998, 95(1):78-84.
[10]Tait MJ, Saadoun S, Bell BA, et al. Water movements in the brain: role of aquaporins. Trends Neurosci, 2008, 31(1):37-43.
[11]Papadopoulos MC, Manley GT, Krishna S, et al. Aquaporin-4 facilitates reabsorption of excess fluid in vasogenic brain edema. FASEB J, 2004, 18(11):1291-1293.
[13]Wei XE,Zhang YZ,Li YH,et al.Dynamics of rabbit brain edema in focal lesion and perilesion area after traumatic brain injury: a MRI study.J Neurotrauma,2012,29(14):2413-2420.
[14]Lescot T, Fulla-Oller L, Po C, et al. Temporal and regional changes after focal traumatic brain injury. J Neurotrauma, 2010, 27(1):85-94.
[15]Saadoun S, Tait MJ, Reza A, et al. AQP4 gene deletion in mice does not alter blood-brain barrier integrity or brain morphology. Neuroscience, 2009, 161(3):764-772.
[16]LU H,Hu H,He ZP.Reperfusion of the rat brain tissues following acute ischemia: the correlation among diffusion-weighted imaging, histopathology, and aquaporin-4 expression. Chin Med J(Engl), 2011, 124(19):3148-3153.
[18]Manley GT, Binder DK, Papadopoulos MC, et al. New insights into water transport and edema in the central nervous system from phenotype analysis of aquaporin-4 null mice. Neuroscience, 2004, 129(4):981-989.
[20]Lo Pizzo M, Schiera G, Di Liegro I, et al. Aquaporin-4 distribution in control and stressed astrocytes in culture and in the cerebrospinal fluid of patients with traumatic brain injuries. Neurol Sci, 2013, 34(8):1309-1314.
[21]Kiening KL, van Landeghem FK, Schreiber S, et al. Decreasedhemispheric Aquaporin-4 is linked to evolving brain edema followingcontrolled cortical impact injury in rats. Neurosci Lett, 2002, 324(2):105-108.
[22]Ren Z, Iliff JJ, Yang L, et al. 'Hit & Run' model of closed-skull traumatic brain injury (TBI) reveals complex patterns of post-traumatic AQP4 dysregulation. J Cereb Blood Flow Metab, 2013, 33(6):834-845.