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Dive into the research topics where Nicole Bye is active.

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Featured researches published by Nicole Bye.


Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism | 2010

Role of CCL2 (MCP-1) in traumatic brain injury (TBI): evidence from severe TBI patients and CCL2−/− mice

Bridgette D. Semple; Nicole Bye; Mario Rancan; Jenna M. Ziebell; M. Cristina Morganti-Kossmann

Cerebral inflammation involves molecular cascades contributing to progressive damage after traumatic brain injury (TBI). The chemokine CC ligand-2 (CCL2) (formerly monocyte chemoattractant protein-1, MCP-1) is implicated in macrophage recruitment into damaged parenchyma after TBI. This study analyzed the presence of CCL2 in human TBI, and further investigated the role of CCL2 in physiological and cellular mechanisms of secondary brain damage after TBI. Sustained elevation of CCL2 was detected in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of severe TBI patients for 10 days after trauma, and in cortical homogenates of C57Bl/6 mice, peaking at 4 to 12 h after closed head injury (CHI). Neurological outcome, lesion volume, macrophage/microglia infiltration, astrogliosis, and the cerebral cytokine network were thus examined in CCL2-deficient (−/−) mice subjected to CHI. We found that CCL2−/− mice showed altered production of multiple cytokines acutely (2 to 24 h); however, this did not affect lesion size or cell death within the first week after CHI. In contrast, by 2 and 4 weeks, a delayed reduction in lesion volume, macrophage accumulation, and astrogliosis were observed in the injured cortex and ipsilateral thalamus of CCL2−/− mice, corresponding to improved functional recovery as compared with wild-type mice after CHI. Our findings confirm the significant role of CCL2 in mediating post-traumatic secondary brain damage.


Experimental Neurology | 2007

Transient neuroprotection by minocycline following traumatic brain injury is associated with attenuated microglial activation but no changes in cell apoptosis or neutrophil infiltration

Nicole Bye; Mark D. Habgood; Jennifer K. Callaway; Nakisa Malakooti; A Potter; Thomas Kossmann; M. Cristina Morganti-Kossmann

Cerebral inflammation and apoptotic cell death are two processes implicated in the progressive tissue damage that occurs following traumatic brain injury (TBI), and strategies to inhibit one or both of these pathways are being investigated as potential therapies for TBI patients. The tetracycline derivative minocycline was therapeutically effective in various models of central nervous system injury and disease, via mechanisms involving suppression of inflammation and apoptosis. We therefore investigated the effect of minocycline in TBI using a closed head injury model. Following TBI, mice were treated with minocycline or vehicle, and the effect on neurological outcome, lesion volume, inflammation and apoptosis was evaluated for up to 7 days. Our results show that while minocycline decreases lesion volume and improves neurological outcome at 1 day post-trauma, this response is not maintained at 4 days. The early beneficial effect is likely not due to anti-apoptotic mechanisms, as the density of apoptotic cells is not affected at either time-point. However, protection by minocycline is associated with a selective anti-inflammatory response, in that microglial activation and interleukin-1beta expression are reduced, while neutrophil infiltration and expression of multiple cytokines are not affected. These findings demonstrate that further studies on minocycline in TBI are necessary in order to consider it as a novel therapy for brain-injured patients.


European Journal of Neuroscience | 2007

Changes in blood-brain barrier permeability to large and small molecules following traumatic brain injury in mice

Mark D. Habgood; Nicole Bye; Katarzyna M. Dziegielewska; C J Ek; Ma Lane; A Potter; C Morganti-Kossmann; Norman R. Saunders

The entry of therapeutic compounds into the brain and spinal cord is normally restricted by barrier mechanisms in cerebral blood vessels (blood–brain barrier) and choroid plexuses (blood–CSF barrier). In the injured brain, ruptured cerebral blood vessels circumvent these barrier mechanisms by allowing blood contents to escape directly into the brain parenchyma. This process may contribute to the secondary damage that follows the initial primary injury. However, this localized compromise of barrier function in the injured brain may also provide a ‘window of opportunity’ through which drugs that do not normally cross the blood–brain barriers are able to do so. This paper describes a systematic study of barrier permeability in a mouse model of traumatic brain injury using both small and large inert molecules that can be visualized or quantified. The results show that soon after trauma, both large and small molecules are able to enter the brain in and around the injury site. Barrier restriction to large (protein‐sized) molecules is restored by 4–5 h after injury. In contrast, smaller molecules (286–10 000 Da) are still able to enter the brain as long as 4 days postinjury. Thus the period of potential secondary damage from barrier disruption and the period during which therapeutic compounds have direct access to the injured brain may be longer than previously thought.


Injury-international Journal of The Care of The Injured | 2010

Animal models of traumatic brain injury: Is there an optimal model to reproduce human brain injury in the laboratory?

Maria Cristina Morganti-Kossmann; Edwin B. Yan; Nicole Bye

Compared to other neurological diseases, the research surrounding traumatic brain injury (TBI) has a more recent history. The establishment and use of animal models of TBI remains vital to understand the pathophysiology of this highly complex disease. Such models share the ultimate goals of reproducing patterns of tissue damage observed in humans (thus rendering them clinically relevant), reproducible and highly standardised to allow for the manipulation of individual variables, and to finally explore novel therapeutics for clinical translation. There is no doubt that the similarity of cellular and molecular events observed in human and rodent TBI has reinforced the use of small animals for research. When confronted with the choice of the experimental model it becomes clear that the ideal animal model does not exist. This limitation derives from the fact that most models mimic either focal or diffuse brain injury, whereas the clinical reality suggests that each patient has an individual form of TBI characterised by various combinations of focal and diffuse patterns of tissue damage. This is additionally complicated by the occurrence of secondary insults such as hypotension, hypoxia, ischaemia, extracranial injuries, modalities of traumatic events, age, gender and heterogeneity of medical treatments and pre-existing conditions. This brief review will describe the variety of TBI models available for laboratory research beginning from the most widely used rodent models of focal brain trauma, to complex large species such as the pig. In addition, the models mimicking diffuse brain damage will be discussed in relation to the early primate studies until the use of most common rodent models to elucidate the intriguing and less understood pathology of axonal dysfunction. The most recent establishment of in vitro paradigms has complemented the in vivo modelling studies offering a further cellular and molecular insight of this pathology.


Brain Research Reviews | 2001

Do glucocorticoids contribute to brain aging

Nancy R. Nichols; Malgorzata Zieba; Nicole Bye

The hippocampus, an area with abundant glucocorticoid receptors, continues to be the focus of research on effects of glucocorticoids on the aging brain. Based on recent studies, the primary structural change found during aging is synaptic loss, rather than neuronal loss. High levels of glucocorticoids are associated with synaptic loss in the hippocampus, hippocampal atrophy, and cognitive decline during aging in some individuals. However, increasing levels of glucocorticoid are not always found since early experiences can alter sensitivity to negative feedback and the level of activation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis in aged individuals. New ways in which glucocorticoids may contribute to brain aging are discussed, including decreased responses to glucocorticoids possibly as a result of decreased glucocorticoid receptors and also altered regulation of neuronal turnover in the dentate gyrus. Decreased responsiveness of glial fibrillary acidic protein to glucocorticoids during aging could facilitate reactive gliosis and loss of synapses by altering neuron-astrocyte interactions. Neuronal turnover is regulated by glucocorticoids in the dentate gyrus where ongoing neurogenesis may be important for hippocampal-based memory formation in adulthood. Although the age-related decline in neurogenesis can be reversed by removal of adrenal steroids, the death of dentate granule neurons is also greatly increased by this treatment. Recent studies show age-related resistance to induced apoptosis and neurogenesis in the dentate gyrus following adrenalectomy, which is associated with increased expression of transforming growth factor-beta1. Therefore, the contribution of glucocorticoids to brain aging depends on the physiological and cellular context and some of these effects are reversible.


Journal of Neurotrauma | 2010

Post-Traumatic Hypoxia Exacerbates Brain Tissue Damage: Analysis of Axonal Injury and Glial Responses

Sarah C. Hellewell; Edwin B. Yan; Doreen Agyapomaa; Nicole Bye; M. Cristina Morganti-Kossmann

Traumatic brain injury (TBI) resulting in poor neurological outcome is predominantly associated with diffuse brain damage and secondary hypoxic insults. Post-traumatic hypoxia is known to exacerbate primary brain injury; however, the underlying pathological mechanisms require further elucidation. Using a rat model of diffuse traumatic axonal injury (TAI) followed by a post-traumatic hypoxic insult, we characterized axonal pathology, macrophage/microglia accumulation, and astrocyte responses over 14 days. Rats underwent TAI alone, TAI followed by 30 min of hypoxia (TAI + Hx), hypoxia alone, or sham-operation (n = 6/group). Systemic hypoxia was induced by ventilating rats with 12% oxygen in nitrogen, resulting in a ∼ 50% reduction in arterial blood oxygen saturation. Brains were assessed for axonal damage, macrophage/microglia accumulation, and astrocyte activation at 1, 7, and 14 days post-treatment. Immunohistochemistry with axonal damage markers (β-amyloid precursor protein [β-APP] and neurofilament) showed strong positive staining in TAI + Hx rats, which was most prominent in the corpus callosum (retraction bulbs 69.8 ± 18.67; swollen axons 14.2 ± 5.25), and brainstem (retraction bulbs 294 ± 118.3; swollen axons 50.3 ± 20.45) at 1 day post-injury. Extensive microglia/macrophage accumulation detected with the CD68 antibody was maximal at 14 days post-injury in the corpus callosum (macrophages 157.5 ± 55.48; microglia 72.71 ± 20.75), and coincided with regions of axonal damage. Astrocytosis assessed with glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) antibody was also abundant in the corpus callosum and maximal at 14 days, with a trend toward an increase in TAI + Hx animals (18.99 ± 2.45 versus 13.56 ± 0.81; p = 0.0617). This study demonstrates for the first time that a hypoxic insult following TAI perpetuates axonal pathology and cellular inflammation, which may account for the poor neurological outcomes seen in TBI patients who experience post-traumatic hypoxia.


Neurobiology of Disease | 2010

Deficiency of the chemokine receptor CXCR2 attenuates neutrophil infiltration and cortical damage following closed head injury

Bridgette D. Semple; Nicole Bye; Jenna M. Ziebell; Maria Cristina Morganti-Kossmann

The contribution of infiltrated neutrophils to secondary damage following traumatic brain injury remains controversial. Chemokines that regulate neutrophil migration by signaling through the CXCR2 receptor are markedly elevated by brain injury and are associated with the propagation of secondary damage. This study thus investigated the function of CXCR2 in posttraumatic inflammation and secondary degeneration by examining Cxcr2-deficient (Cxcr2(-/-)) mice over 14 days following closed head injury (CHI). We demonstrate a significant attenuation of neutrophil infiltration in Cxcr2(-/-) mice at 12 hours and 7 days after CHI, despite increased levels of CXC neutrophil-attracting chemokines in the lesioned cortex. This coincides with reduced tissue damage, neuronal loss, and cell death in Cxcr2(-/-) mice compared to wild-type controls, with heterozygotes showing intermediate responses. In contrast, blood-brain barrier permeability and functional recovery did not appear to be affected by Cxcr2 deletion. This study highlights the deleterious contribution of neutrophils to posttraumatic neurodegeneration and demonstrates the importance of CXC chemokine signaling in this process. Therefore, CXCR2 antagonistic therapeutics currently in development for other inflammatory conditions may also be of benefit in posttraumatic neuroinflammation.


Journal of Neuroscience Research | 2011

Neurogenesis and glial proliferation are stimulated following diffuse traumatic brain injury in adult rats.

Nicole Bye; Sarah Carron; Xiaodi Han; Doreen Agyapomaa; Si Yun Ng; Edwin B. Yan; Jeffrey V. Rosenfeld; M. Cristina Morganti-Kossmann

Although increased neurogenesis has been described in rodent models of focal traumatic brain injury (TBI), the neurogenic response occurring after diffuse TBI uncomplicated by focal injury has not been examined to date, despite the pervasiveness of this distinct type of brain injury in the TBI patient population. Here we characterize multiple stages of neurogenesis following a traumatic axonal injury (TAI) model of diffuse TBI as well as the proliferative response of glial cells. TAI was induced in adult rats using an impact‐acceleration model, and 5‐bromo‐2′‐deoxyuridine (BrdU) was administered on days 1–4 posttrauma or sham operation to label mitotic cells. Using immunohistochemistry for BrdU combined with phenotype‐specific markers, we found that proliferation was increased following TAI in the subventricular zone of the lateral ventricles and in the hippocampal subgranular zone, although the ultimate production of new dentate granule neurons at 8 weeks was not significantly enhanced. Also, abundant proliferating and reactive astrocytes, microglia, and polydendrocytes were detected throughout the brain following TAI, indicating that a robust glial response occurs in this model, although very few new cells in the nonneurogenic brain regions became mature neurons. We conclude that diffuse brain injury stimulates early stages of a neurogenic response similar to that described for models of focal TBI.


Journal of Neurotrauma | 2014

Post-Traumatic Hypoxia Is Associated with Prolonged Cerebral Cytokine Production, Higher Serum Biomarker Levels, and Poor Outcome in Patients with Severe Traumatic Brain Injury

Edwin B. Yan; Laveniya Satgunaseelan; Eldho Paul; Nicole Bye; Phuong Nguyen; Doreen Agyapomaa; Thomas Kossmann; Jeffrey V. Rosenfeld; Maria Cristina Morganti-Kossmann

Secondary hypoxia is a known contributor to adverse outcomes in patients with traumatic brain injury (TBI). Based on the evidence that hypoxia and TBI in isolation induce neuroinflammation, we investigated whether TBI combined with hypoxia enhances cerebral cytokine production. We also explored whether increased concentrations of injury biomarkers discriminate between hypoxic (Hx) and normoxic (Nx) patients, correlate to worse outcome, and depend on blood-brain barrier (BBB) dysfunction. Forty-two TBI patients with Glasgow Coma Scale ≤8 were recruited. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and serum were collected over 6 days. Patients were divided into Hx (n=22) and Nx (n=20) groups. Eight cytokines were measured in the CSF; albumin, S100, myelin basic protein (MBP) and neuronal specific enolase (NSE) were quantified in serum. CSF/serum albumin quotient was calculated for BBB function. Glasgow Outcome Scale Extended (GOSE) was assessed at 6 months post-TBI. Production of granulocye macrophage-colony stimulating factor (GM-CSF) was higher, and profiles of GM-CSF, interferon (IFN)-γ and, to a lesser extent, tumor necrosis factor (TNF), were prolonged in the CSF of Hx but not Nx patients at 4-5 days post-TBI. Interleukin (IL)-2, IL-4, IL-6, and IL-10 increased similarly in both Hx and Nx groups. S100, MBP, and NSE were significantly higher in Hx patients with unfavorable outcome. Among these three biomarkers, S100 showed the strongest correlations to GOSE after TBI-Hx. Elevated CSF/serum albumin quotients lasted for 5 days post-TBI and displayed similar profiles in Hx and Nx patients. We demonstrate for the first time that post-TBI hypoxia is associated with prolonged neuroinflammation, amplified extravasation of biomarkers, and poor outcome. S100 and MBP could be implemented to track the occurrence of post-TBI hypoxia, and prompt adequate treatment.


Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism | 2004

The Chemokine Fractalkine in Patients With Severe Traumatic Brain Injury and a Mouse Model of Closed Head Injury

Mario Rancan; Nicole Bye; Vivianne I. Otto; Otmar Trentz; Thomas Kossmann; Stefan Frentzel; Maria Cristina Morganti-Kossmann

The potential role of the chemokine Fractalkine (CX3CL1) in the pathophysiology of traumatic brain injury (TBI) was investigated in patients with head trauma and in mice after experimental cortical contusion. In control individuals, soluble (s)Fractalkine was present at low concentrations in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) (12.6 to 57.3 pg/mL) but at much higher levels in serum (21,288 to 74,548 pg/mL). Elevation of sFractalkine in CSF of TBI patients was observed during the whole study period (means: 29.92 to 535.33 pg/mL), whereas serum levels remained within normal ranges (means: 3,100 to 59,159 pg/mL). Based on these differences, a possible passage of sFractalkine from blood to CSF was supported by the strong correlation between blood–brain barrier dysfunction (according to the CSF-/serum-albumin quotient) and sFractalkine concentrations in CSF (R = 0.706; P < 0.01). In the brain of mice subjected to closed head injury, neither Fractalkine protein nor mRNA were found to be augmented; however, Fractalkine receptor (CX3CR1) mRNA steadily increased peaking at 1 week postinjury (P < 0.05, one-way analysis of variance). This possibly implies the receptor to be the key factor determining the action of constitutively expressed Fractalkine. Altogether, these data suggest that the Fractalkine-CX3CR1 protein system may be involved in the inflammatory response to TBI, particularly for the accumulation of leukocytes in the injured parenchyma.

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Phuong Nguyen

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

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