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Association of Gut Microbiome with Early Brain Injury After Subarachnoid Hemorrhage: an Experimental Study

Translational Stroke Research, ISSN: 1868-601X, Vol: 15, Issue: 1, Page: 87-100
2024
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Recent Findings in Early Brain Injury Described by Researchers from Osaka University (Association of Gut Microbiome With Early Brain Injury After Subarachnoid Hemorrhage: an Experimental Study)

2024 OCT 24 (NewsRx) -- By a News Reporter-Staff News Editor at NewsRx Cardiovascular Daily -- Investigators publish new report on Central Nervous System Diseases

Article Description

The occurrence of early brain injury (EBI) following subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) is crucial in the prognosis of SAH; however, no effective treatment for EBI has been developed. Gut microbiome (GM) composition influences the outcome of various diseases, including ischemic stroke. Here, we evaluated whether prior GM alteration could prevent EBI following SAH. We altered the GM of 7-week-old male rats by administering antibiotic-containing water for 2 weeks and performing fecal microbiome transplantation after antibiotic induction. Composition of the GM was profiled using 16S rRNA. We induced SAH by injecting blood in the subarachnoid space of control rats and rats with altered GM. We evaluated EBI indicators such as neurological score, brain water content, Evans blue extravasation, and neuronal injury. Additionally, we studied inflammatory cells using immunohistochemistry, immunocytochemistry, quantitative PCR, and flow cytometry. EBI was significantly averted by alterations in GM using antibiotics. The altered GM significantly prevented neutrophil infiltration into the brain among inflammatory cells, and this anti-inflammatory effect was observed immediately following SAH onset. The altered GM also prevented neutrophil extracellular trap formation in the brain and blood, indicating the systemic protective effect. The cause of the protective effect was attributed to a significant decrease in aged neutrophils (CXCR4 CD62L) by the altered GM. These protective effects against EBI disappeared when the altered GM was recolonized with normal flora. Our findings demonstrated that EBI following SAH is associated with GM, which regulated neutrophil infiltration.

Bibliographic Details

Kawabata, Shuhei; Takagaki, Masatoshi; Nakamura, Hajime; Nishida, Takeo; Terada, Eisaku; Kadono, Yoshinori; Izutsu, Nobuyuki; Takenaka, Tomofumi; Matsui, Yuichi; Yamada, Shuhei; Fukuda, Tatsumaru; Nakagawa, Ryota; Kishima, Haruhiko

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Neuroscience; Medicine

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