Intraarterial Transplantation of Mitochondria After Ischemic Stroke Reduces Cerebral Infarction

Transplantation of autologous mitochondria into ischemic tissue may mitigate injury caused by ischemia and reperfusion. Using murine stroke models of middle cerebral artery occlusion, we sought to evaluate feasibility of delivery of viable mitochondria to ischemic brain parenchyma. We evaluated the...

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Published inStroke: vascular and interventional neurology Vol. 3; no. 3
Main Authors Norat, Pedro, Sokolowski, Jennifer D., Gorick, Catherine M., Soldozy, Sauson, Kumar, Jeyan S., Chae, Youngrok, Yagmurlu, Kaan, Nilak, Joelle, Sharifi, Khadijeh A., Walker, Melanie, Levitt, Michael R., Klibanov, Alexander L., Yan, Zhen, Price, Richard J., Tvrdik, Petr, Kalani, Mohammad Yashar S.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Wiley Subscription Services, Inc 01.05.2023
Wiley
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Summary:Transplantation of autologous mitochondria into ischemic tissue may mitigate injury caused by ischemia and reperfusion. Using murine stroke models of middle cerebral artery occlusion, we sought to evaluate feasibility of delivery of viable mitochondria to ischemic brain parenchyma. We evaluated the effects of concurrent focused ultrasound activation of microbubbles, which serves to open the blood-brain barrier, on efficacy of delivery of mitochondria. Following intra-arterial delivery, mitochondria distribute through the stroked hemisphere and integrate into neural and glial cells in the brain parenchyma. Consistent with functional integration in the ischemic tissue, the transplanted mitochondria elevate concentration of adenosine triphosphate in the stroked hemisphere, reduce infarct volume and increase cell viability. Additional of focused ultrasound leads to improved blood brain barrier opening without hemorrhagic complications. Our results have implications for the development of interventional strategies after ischemic stroke and suggest a novel potential modality of therapy after mechanical thrombectomy.
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P.N., J.D.S., P.T. and M.Y.S.K. designed research; P.N, J.D.S, S.S., J.S.K., Y.C., C.M.G., K.A.S., and M.Y.S.K. carried out the experiments, P.N., C.M.G., S.S., J.D.S., and M.Y.S.K. analyzed the data. K.Y., M.W., M.R.L., Z.Y., and R.J.P. assisted with research design. P.N., J.D.S, P.T., and M.Y.S.K. wrote the paper, P.T. and M.Y.S.K. edited manuscript.
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ISSN:2694-5746
2694-5746
DOI:10.1161/SVIN.122.000644