Increased neuronal damage in apolipoprotein E-deficient mice following global ischaemia

Abstract
There is accumulating evidence that apolipoprotein E (apoE) plays a role in regulating the response to and outcome following brain injury. The present study compared the histological outcome and recovery following an episode of global ischaemia in apoE-deficient mice and wild-type littermates (12-week-old males, n = 8 per group). Transient global ischaemia was induced for a period of 17 min and the animals were allowed to recover for 72 h. Transient global ischaemia induced selective neuronal degeneration in several brain regions in wild-type mice. There was statistically significant increased ischaemic neuronal damage in apoE-deficient mice compared with wild-type mice in six of the seven regions examined (hippocampal regions CA1, CA3/CA4 and dentate gyrus; thalamus; cortex and caudate nucleus; P < 0.05). The data substantiate a role for apoE in modifying the response of the CNS to acute injury.