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Interleukin-6 trans-signalling in hippocampal CA1 neurones mediates perioperative neurocognitive disorders in mice

Abstract

Background

Interleukin-6 (IL-6), a pleiotropic cytokine with both degenerative and regenerative properties, is necessary and sufficient to provoke perioperative neurocognitive disorders after aseptic trauma in mice. IL-6 initiates its actions after binding to either membrane-bound IL-6 receptor α (mIL-6Rα) through classical signalling, or soluble IL-6 receptor (IL-6R) through trans-signalling; both signalling pathways require the transducer gp130. We investigated the site and type of IL-6 signalling that pertains in a tibial fracture aseptic trauma model of perioperative neurocognitive disorder.

Methods

Wild-type or genetically altered adult mice that lacked molecules unique to either classical or trans-IL-6 signalling underwent tibial fracture under isoflurane anaesthesia. In separate cohorts, we assessed postoperative memory using a trace fear conditioning paradigm (72 h postoperatively), and post-receptor IL-6 signalling (24 h postoperatively) using phosphorylation of signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 (pSTAT3) in CA1 hippocampal neurones. Fracture healing was assessed at postoperative day 15 after inhibiting either both forms of IL-6 signalling with BE0047 or only trans-signalling with sgp130Fc.

Results

The surgical phenotype of memory decline (decrease in freezing in trace fear conditioning) and upregulated IL-6 signalling (pSTAT3) did not occur after pretreatment before surgery with either BE0047 or sgp130Fc, or after depleting gp130 from CA1 neurones. The surgical phenotype still occurred when IL-6Rα was depleted in either CA1 hippocampal neurones (freezing time, 38.9% [11.5%] vs 58.4% [12.3%]; pSTAT+ CA1 neurones, 31.7 [4.9] vs 7.0 [3.1]) or microglia (freezing time, 40.1% [13.9%] vs 65.2% [12.6%]; pSTAT+ CA1 neurones, 30.1 [5.5] vs 7.9 [3.2]). In global IL-6Rα-/- mice, hyper-IL-6, the trans-signalling agonist, produced the surgical phenotype when administered i.c.v. (freezing time, 42.4% [8.8%] vs 59.7% [10.4%]; pSTAT+ cells, 29.3 [4.3] vs 10.0 [4.4]). Bone-fracture healing (% of fracture callus comprised of new collagen) was significantly greater with sgp130Fc than with BE0047 (52.2% [8.3%] vs 39.7% [7.9%]).

Conclusions

After orthopaedic trauma, IL-6 produces perioperative neurocognitive disorders through IL-6 trans-signalling in mouse CA1 neurones. Druggable targets of the trans-signalling pathway should be sought to reduce perioperative neurocognitive disorders while allowing the healing properties of classical IL-6 signalling.

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