RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Depletion of Ly6G/Gr-1 Leukocytes after Spinal Cord Injury in Mice Alters Wound Healing and Worsens Neurological Outcome JF The Journal of Neuroscience JO J. Neurosci. FD Society for Neuroscience SP 753 OP 764 DO 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4918-08.2009 VO 29 IS 3 A1 David P. Stirling A1 Shuhong Liu A1 Paul Kubes A1 V. Wee Yong YR 2009 UL http://www.jneurosci.org/content/29/3/753.abstract AB Spinal cord injury (SCI) induces a robust inflammatory response and the extravasation of leukocytes into the injured tissue. To further knowledge of the functions of neuroinflammation in SCI in mice, we depleted the early arriving neutrophils using an anti-Ly6G/Gr-1 antibody. Complete blood counts revealed that neutrophils increased ∼3-fold over uninjured controls and peaked at 6–12 h after injury, and that anti-Ly6G/Gr-1 treatment reduced circulating neutrophils by >90% at these time points. Intravital and spinning disk confocal microscopy of the exposed posterior vein and postcapillary venules showed a significant reduction in rolling and adhering neutrophils in vivo after anti-Ly6G/Gr-1 treatment; this was accompanied by a parallel reduction in neutrophil numbers within the injured spinal cord at 24 and 48 h as determined by flow cytometry. The evolution of astrocyte reactivity, a wound healing response, was reduced in anti-Ly6G/Gr-1-treated mice, which also had less spared white matter and axonal preservation compared with isotype controls. These histological outcomes may be caused by alterations of growth factors and chemokines important in promoting wound healing. Importantly, anti-Ly6G/Gr-1 treatment worsened behavioral outcome as determined using the Basso Mouse Scale and subscores. Although the spectrum of cells affected by anti-Ly6G/Gr-1 antibody treatment cannot be fully ascertained at this point, the correspondence of neutrophil depletion and worsened recovery suggests that neutrophils promote recovery after SCI through wound healing and protective events that limit lesion propagation.