Time courses of cortical glucose metabolism and microglial activity across the life span of wild-type mice: A PET study

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Abstract

Contrary to findings in the human brain, 18F-FDG PET shows cerebral hypermetabolism of aged wild-type (WT) mice relative to younger animals, supposedly due to microglial activation. Therefore, we used dual-tracer small-animal PET to examine directly the link between neuroinflammation and hypermetabolism in aged mice. Methods: WT mice (5-20 mo) were investigated in a cross-sectional design using 18F-FDG (n = 43) and translocator protein (TSPO) (18F-GE180; n = 58) small-animal PET, with volume-of-interest and voxelwise analyses. Biochemical analysis of plasma cytokine levels and immunohistochemical confirmation of microglial activity were also performed. Results: Age-dependent cortical hypermetabolism in WT mice relative to young animals aged = mo peaked at 14.5 mo (116%, P < 0.001) and declined to baseline at 20 mo. Similarly, cortical TSPO binding increased to a maximum at 14.5 mo (+15%, P < 0.001) and remained high to 20 mo, resulting in an overall correlation between 18F-FDG uptake and TSPO binding (R = 0.69, P < 0.005). Biochemical and immunohistochemical analyses confirmed the TSPO small-animal PET findings. Conclusion: Agedependent neuroinflammation is associated with the controversial observation of cerebral hypermetabolism in aging WT mice.

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Brendel, M., Focke, C., Blume, T., Peters, F., Deussing, M., Probst, F., … Rominger, A. (2017). Time courses of cortical glucose metabolism and microglial activity across the life span of wild-type mice: A PET study. Journal of Nuclear Medicine, 58(12), 1984–1990. https://doi.org/10.2967/jnumed.117.195107

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