Chronic neuroinflammation can exist for months to years following traumatic brain injury (TBI), although the underlying mechanisms remain poorly understood.
In the current study, we used a controlled cortical impact mouse model of TBI to examine whether proinflammatory senescent cells are present in the brain long-term (months) after TBI and whether ablation of these cells via administration of senolytic drugs can improve long-term functional outcome after TBI. The results revealed that astrocytes and microglia in the cerebral cortex, hippocampus, corpus callosum and lateral posterior thalamus colocalized the senescent cell markers, p16Ink4a or p21Cip1/Waf1 at 5 weeks post injury (5wpi) and 4 months post injury (4mpi) in a controlled cortical impact (CCI) model. Intermittent administration of the senolytic drugs, dasatinib and quercetin (
Taken as a whole, these findings indicate there is robust and widespread induction of senescent cells in the brain long-term after TBI, and that senolytic drug treatment begun 1-month after TBI can efficiently ablate the senescent cells, reduce expression of proinflammatory SASP factors, reduce neurodegeneration, and rescue defects in reference memory, recognition memory, and depressive behavior.