Amplified neuroinflammatory responses following an immune challenge occur with normal aging and can elicit or exacerbate neuropa-thology. Themechanismsmediatingthissensitizedor "primed"immuneresponseintheagedbrainarenot fullyunderstood. Thealarmin high mobility group box 1 (HMGB1) can be released under chronic pathological conditions and initiate inflammatory cascades. This led us to investigate whether HMGB1 regulates age-related priming of the neuroinflammatory response. Here, we show that HMGB1 protein and mRNA were elevated in the hippocampus of unmanipulated aged rats (24-month-old F344XBN rats). Furthermore, aged rats had increased HMGB1 in the CSF, suggesting increased HMGB1 release. We demonstrate that blocking HMGB1 signaling with an intracisterna magna (ICM) injection of the competitive antagonist to HMGB1, Box-A, downregulates basal expression of several inflammatory pathway genes in the hippocampus of aged rats. This indicates that blocking the actions of HMGB1 might reduce age-associated inflammatory priming. To test this hypothesis, we evaluated whether HMGB1 antagonism blocks the protracted neuroinflammatory and sickness response to peripheral Escherichia coli (E. coli) infection in aged rats. ICM pretreatment of aged rats with Box-A 24 h before E. coli infection prevented the extended hippocampal cytokine response and associated cognitive and affective behavioral changes. ICM pretreatment with Box-A also inhibited aging-induced potentiation of the microglial proinflammatory response to lipopolysaccharide ex vivo. Together, these results suggest that HMGB1 mediates neuroinflammatory priming in the aged brain. Blocking the actions of HMGB1 appears to "desensitize" aged microglia to an immune challenge, thereby preventing exaggerated behavioral and neuroinflammatory responses following infection.
CITATION STYLE
Fonken, L. K., Frank, M. G., Kitt, M. M., D’Angelo, H. M., Norden, D. M., Weber, M. D., … Maier, S. F. (2016). The alarmin HMGB1 mediates age-induced neuroinflammatory priming. Journal of Neuroscience, 36(30), 7946–7956. https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1161-16.2016
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