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Method Article
The method describes inflammation-sensitized hypoxic-ischemic and hyperoxic brain injury in the P17 ferret to model the complex interaction between prolonged inflammation and oxidative brain injury experienced in a number of late preterm infants.
There is an ongoing need for clinically relevant models of perinatal infection and hypoxia-ischemia (HI) in which to test therapeutic interventions for infants with the neurological sequela of prematurity. Ferrets are ideal candidates for modeling the preterm human brain, as they are born lissencephalic and develop gyrencephalic brains postnatally. At birth, ferret brain development is similar to a 13 week human fetus, with postnatal-day (P) 17 kits considered to be equivalent to an infant at 32–36 weeks' gestation. We describe an injury model in the P17 ferret, where lipopolysaccharide administration is followed by bilateral cerebral ischemia, hypoxia, and hyperoxia. This simulates the complex interaction of prolonged inflammation, ischemia, hypoxia, and oxidative stress experienced in a number of neonates who develop brain injury. Injured animals display a range of gross injury severity, with morphological changes in the brain including narrowing of multiple cortical gyri and associated sulci. Injured animals also show slowed reflex development, slower and more variable speed of locomotion in an automated catwalk, and decreased exploration in an open field. This model provides a platform in which to test putative therapies for infants with neonatal encephalopathy associated with inflammation and HI, study mechanisms of injury that affect cortical development, and investigate pathways that provide resilience in unaffected animals.
There is an ongoing need for large animal models that reflect the pathophysiology of prematurity and perinatal hypoxia-ischemia in which therapeutic interventions for infants can be tested. In 2017, 9.93% of the 382,726 infants born in the United States were born preterm, and 84% of these infants were born between 32 and 36 weeks of gestation1. In premature infants, perinatal exposure to infection or inflammation is common, where maternal immune activation due to viral or bacterial pathogens can initiate preterm labor. Postnatally, preterm infants are at high risk of early or late onset sepsis2. Preterm infants also frequently experience periods of hypoxia, hypotension, and hyperoxia due to their immature cardiorespiratory system, elevated oxygen tension in the atmosphere relative to those experienced in utero, and iatrogenic exposures. Additionally, in preterm infants, antioxidant defenses are immature3 and pro-apoptotic factors are naturally upregulated4. Oxidative stress and cell death lead to activation of the immune system and neuroinflammation. These combined factors are thought to contribute to developmental and physiologic vulnerability of the brain, and result in or exacerbate the encephalopathy associated with poor developmental outcomes in preterm infants5,6,7.
Due to the physical and developmental similarities that the ferret brain shares with the human brain, the ferret is an attractive species in which to model brain injury8,9,10,11,12. Ferrets are also ideal candidates to model the preterm human brain, as they are born lissencephalic and develop gyrencephalic brains postnatally, which provides a window in which to expose the developing brain to insults that mimic those experienced by infants born preterm. At birth, ferret brain development is similar to a 13 week human fetus, with postnatal-day (P) 17 kits considered to be equivalent to an infant at 32–36 weeks of gestation13.
Our group has recently published a model of extremely preterm (<28 weeks' gestation) brain injury in the P10 ferret by combining inflammatory sensitization with Escherichia coli lipopolysaccharide (LPS) with subsequent exposure to hypoxia and hyperoxia12. In the following protocol, we now describe a late preterm model in the P17 ferret, where LPS sensitization is followed by bilateral cerebral ischemia, hypoxia, and hyperoxia. This results in more severe injury in a subset of animals, and more closely models the complex interaction of prolonged inflammation, ischemia, hypoxia, and oxidative stress experienced in a number of preterm infants who develop brain injury.
Procedures were performed in accordance with the NIH Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals and as part of an approved protocol by the University of Washington Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee.
1. Preparation and LPS Administration
NOTE: Refer to Figure 1 for a timeline of the procedures.
2. Anesthesia
3. Surgical Preparation
4. Bilateral Carotid Artery Ligation
5. Sequential Hypoxia, Hyperoxia, and Hypoxia
6. Reversal of Right Carotid Artery Ligation
7. Recovery and Temperature Management
8. Reflex Testing
9. Catwalk Testing
10. Open Field Testing (P42)
11. Fixation-perfusion
12. Ex Vivo Brain Measurement
13. Gross Injury Scoring
14. Data Analysis
Of 34 (n = 18 males, n = 16 females) animals from six litters exposed to the insult, eight animals (24%; n = 4 males, n = 4 females) in the injured group died during the second hypoxia period (n = 5), during temperature management (n = 2), or overnight after the insult (n = 1). In the injured group, nine of 26 survivors (35%) had visible gross injury. Five animals (n = 5 males) had moderate injury, and four animals (n = 2 males, n = 2 females) had severe injury, defined as gross pathology scores of 2–5 and 6–...
Due to the physical and developmental similarities shared between the ferret brain and human brain, the ferret is increasingly being used to model both adult and developmental brain injury.8,9,10,11,12. However, research to date suggests that the ferret brain is both resistant to initial injury as well as highly-plastic, with behavioral deficits diminishing ov...
The authors have nothing to disclose.
Development of the model was funded Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, as well as by NIH grant 5R21NS093154-02 (NICHD).
Name | Company | Catalog Number | Comments |
80% Oxygen | Praxair | ||
9% Oxygen | Praxair | ||
Absorbent benchtop protector | Kimtech | 7546 | |
Automated catwalk | Noldus | ||
Betadine surgical scrub | |||
Bupivacaine | Patterson Veterinary | 07-888-9382 | |
Buprenorphine | |||
Calipers | SRA Measurement Products | ME-CAL-FP-200 | 200 mm range, 0.01 mm resolution |
Cotton Gauze Sponge | Fisher Scientific | 22028556 | |
Curved fine hemostat | Roboz | RS-7101 | |
Curved forceps | World Precision Instruments | 501215 | |
Curved suture-tying hemostat | Roboz | RS-7111 | |
Ethovision tracking software | Noldus | ||
Eye Lubricant | Rugby | NDC 0536-1970-72 | |
Ferrets (Mustela putorius furo) | Marshall Biosciences | Outbred (no specific strain) | |
Formalin | Fisher Scientific | SF100-4 | 10% (Phosphate Buffer/Certified) |
Hair Clippers | Conair | GMT175N | |
Insulin Syringes | BD | 329461 | 0.3 cc 3 mm 31 G |
Isoflurane | Piramal | 66794-017-25 | |
Lidocaine | Patterson Veterinary | 07-808-8202 | |
LPS | List Biological | LPS Ultrapure #423 | |
Oxygen sensor | BW Gas Alert | GAXT-X-DL-2 | |
Pentobarbital | |||
Plastic chamber | Tellfresh | 1960 | 10 L; 373 x 270 x 135 mm3 |
Saline Solution, 0.9% | Hospira | RL-4492 | |
Scalpel blade | Integra Miltex | 297 | |
Scalpel handle | World Precision Instruments | 500236 | #3, 13 cm |
Sterile suture | Fine Science Tools | 18020-50 | Braided Silk, 5/0 |
Surgical clip applicator | Fine Science Tools | 12020-09 | |
Surgical clip remover | Fine Science Tools | 12023-00 | |
Surgical drapes | Medline Unidrape | VET3000 | |
Surgical gloves | Ansell Perry Inc | 5785004 | |
Surigical clips | Fine Science Tools | 12022-09 | |
Thermometer (rectal) | YSI | Precision 4000A | |
Thermometer (water) | Fisher Scientific | 14-648-26 | |
Umbilical tape | Grafco | 3031 | Sterile |
Water bath | Thermo Scientific | TSCOL19 | 19 L |
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