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The Dual Role of Neural-Immune Signaling in the Brain: Constitutive and Post-Traumatic Toll-Like Receptor 4 Regulation of Hippocampal Dentate Network Excitability and Memory Function

Abstract

Neuroimmune signals within the brain have a dual role in modulating neurophysiology both at baseline and in response to injury and infection. The primary focus of existing literature is on how inflammatory cascades affect network excitability following injury or in disease states. In these studies, we focus on the innate immune receptor, Toll-Like Receptor 4 (TLR4), and identify its novel neurophysiological roles in regulating hippocampal dentate excitatory and inhibitory networks under basal conditions and after fluid percussion injury (FPI) which impact working memory and behavior. Using CLI-095, a specific TLR4 antagonist, and a combination of local field potential recordings in the presence of glial metabolic inhibitors and whole cell voltage clamp recordings, we demonstrate a constitutive role of TLR4 in the uninjured dentate gyrus. This basal TLR4 signaling is absent in the presence of glial metabolic inhibitors and selectively modulates granule cell GABAergic inhibitory currents. In uninjured mice, blocking TLR4 decreased input driven evoked inhibitory post synaptic currents (eIPSCs) and impaired both working memory function in a Morris Water Maze task and spatial pattern separation in a Novel Object Location Task. In contrast, glial signaling is not required for TLR4 modulation of dentate excitability after brain injury. Specifically, neuronal expression of TLR4 enhances excitatory calcium permeable AMPA currents and reduces inhibitory GABA currents one week after brain injury. FPI resulted in early hilar somatostatin (SST) neuron loss, decreased eIPSC amplitude, and impaired working memory and spatial pattern separation at one week. Consistent with our finding that TLR4 is expressed on SST, but not parvalbumin interneurons, cell-type specific deletion of TLR4 in SST neurons identified that TLR4 expression in SST neurons as crucial for the injury-induced decrease in dentate eIPSC and behavioral deficits. These results indicate a differential role for cell-type specific TLR4 signaling in modulating of synaptic currents in granule cells from control and FPI mice. These studies demonstrate a novel role of TLR4 in modulating inhibitory synapses at baseline as well as after injury and provides promising therapeutic potential whereby acute targeting of TLR4 signaling after brain injury may limit post-injury increases in dentate excitability by augmenting synaptic inhibition.

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