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Glial Growth Factor 2 as a treatment in a monkey model of cortical injury

Cortical injuries, such as those caused by stroke and other insults, are the leading cause of death and disability worldwide. While thrombolytics can be used to restore blood flow immediately following the onset of symptoms of an ischemic stroke, there are currently no neurorestorative therapeutics that can enhance long-term recovery of function following injury. Neuregulins are a family of growth factors involved with the survival and function of neurons and glia. Glial Growth Factor 2 (GGF2) is an isoform of neuregulin-1 that has demonstrated significant effects in the recovery of function in rodent models of stroke. Histological analyses suggest GGF2 promotes recovery by enhancing endogenous mechanisms to reduce inflammation and promote plasticity. To further explore the efficacy of GGF2, we used our rhesus monkey model of cortical injury and fine motor impairment to compare the rate and pattern of recovery in monkeys treated with GGF2. Twenty-four young adult male monkeys (ages 4-10 years old) were pre-trained on our task of fine motor function of the hand before undergoing surgery to produce a cortical lesion limited to the hand representation of the primary motor cortex on one side. Intravenous (IV) administration of GGF2 (0.5 mg/kg) began 24 hours after surgery and continued daily for 7 days. This was followed by 21 days of sub-cutaneous administration of GGF2 at two different dose levels (0.1 mg/kg or 0.3 mg/kg).
Post-operative testing began two weeks after the lesion and continued for 12 weeks. All trials were video recorded and latency to retrieve a reward was quantitatively measured to assess the trajectory of post-operative response latency and grasp pattern compared to pre-operative levels. The results showed no significant differences between the groups in the recovery of fine motor function. Moreover, all vehicle control monkeys returned to their pre-operative levels of latency and grasp pattern despite no significant differences in lesion volume from the experimental groups. In addition to measures of behavioral recovery, we processed the brain tissue with immunohistochemistry to investigate the role of GGF2 treatment in reducing the pro-inflammatory response of microglia and enhancing axonal sprouting and synaptogenesis following injury. All groups had a greater density of Iba1+ microglia in the perilesional grey matter and sublesional white matter, but there were no significant differences in the numerical density or phenotypes of microglia between the groups. We also found no significant differences in axonal sprouting between the groups. However, GGF2 treatment did enhance expression of synaptophysin in the contralesional hemisphere of monkeys that received subcutaneous doses of GGF2 following the initial 7 days of intravenous GGF2 treatment. This suggests that high dose GGF2 treatment may enhance plasticity of compensatory circuits involving the intact hemisphere and that this effect is dose dependent.
In addition, we followed up these analyses using a subset of monkeys from the larger GGF2 study to optimize and validate a method that labels newly synthesized myelin. This is accomplished by in vivo administration of a choline analog, propargylcholine (P-Cho) that labels newly synthesized myelin and can be visualized post-mortem. Our results demonstrate effective and stable incorporation of P-Cho with post injection survival of 1 to 6 weeks. Using this method to quantify new myelin after cortical injury to the primary motor cortex, showed significantly greater P-Cho labeling and co-localization with myelin basic protein (MBP) in the white matter underlying the ipsilesional hemisphere when compared with the contralesional hemisphere. This validates P-Cho for assessing myelin plasticity in a nonhuman primate brain and how it might be used to assess therapeutics aimed at inducing remyelination and enhancing myelin synthesis.
Finally, this dissertation also includes the comparison of sex differences in recovery of motor function after cortical injury. In a cohort of aged male and female monkeys, postmortem analysis showed no differences in lesion volume between the males and females. However, behaviorally, the females returned to their pre-operative latency and grasp patterns significantly faster and more completely than the males. These findings demonstrate the need for additional studies to further investigate the role of estrogens and other sex hormones that may differentially affect recovery outcomes in the primate brain.
Collectively, the results presented in this dissertation highlight the complexity of evaluating treatments and mechanisms underlying recovery of function by enhancing neuroplasticity. Specifically, we were unable to effectively evaluate GGF2 as a treatment due to the behavioral recovery of all control monkeys. Follow up studies should investigate treatment with GGF2 in aging monkeys and compare the results with our findings. Additionally, it is necessary to further explore the recovery of fine motor function in young monkeys. Finally, our study showing sex differences in recovery of function provides evidence that sex hormones may play a significant role in providing neuroprotection in the aging brain following cortical injury. Future studies should measure post-operative estrogen levels and evaluate supplementation as a potential treatment option.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:bu.edu/oai:open.bu.edu:2144/45315
Date04 November 2022
CreatorsBottenfield, Karen R.
ContributorsMoore, Tara L., Rosene, Douglas L.
Source SetsBoston University
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis/Dissertation

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