Sustained Increases in Immune Transcripts and Immune Cell Trafficking During the Recovery of Experimental Brain Ischemia

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE:Stroke is a major cause of chronic neurological disability. There is considerable interest in understanding how acute transcriptome changes evolve into subacute and chronic patterns that facilitate or limit spontaneous recovery. Here we mapped longitudinal changes in gene expr...

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Published inStroke (1970) Vol. 51; no. 8; pp. 2514 - 2525
Main Authors Fury, Wen, Park, Keun Woo, Wu, Zhuhao, Kim, Eunhee, Woo, Moon-sook, Bai, Yu, Macdonald, Lynn E, Croll, Susan D, Cho, Sunghee
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States American Heart Association, Inc 01.08.2020
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Summary:BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE:Stroke is a major cause of chronic neurological disability. There is considerable interest in understanding how acute transcriptome changes evolve into subacute and chronic patterns that facilitate or limit spontaneous recovery. Here we mapped longitudinal changes in gene expression at multiple time points after stroke in mice out to 6 months. METHODS:Adult C57BL/6 mice were subjected to transient middle cerebral artery occlusion. Longitudinal transcriptome levels were measured at 10 time points after stroke from acute to recovery phases of ischemic stroke. Localization and the number of mononuclear phagocytes were determined in the postischemic brain. Whole-mount brain imaging was performed in asplenic mice receiving GFP (green fluorescent protein)-tagged splenocytes. RESULTS:Sustained stroke-induced mRNA abundance changes were observed in both hemispheres with 2989 ipsilateral and 822 contralateral genes significantly perturbed. In the hemisphere ipsilateral to the infarct, genes associated with immune functions were strongly affected, including temporally overlapping innate and adaptive immunity and macrophage M1 and M2 phenotype-related genes. The strong immune gene activation was accompanied by the sustained infiltration of peripheral immune cells at acute, subacute, and recovery stages of stroke. The infiltrated immune cells were found in the infarcted area but also in remote regions at 2 months after stroke. CONCLUSIONS:The study identifies that immune components are the predominant molecular signatures and they may propagate or continuously respond to brain injury in the subacute to chronic phase after central nervous system injury. The study suggests a potential immune-based strategy to modify injury progression and tissue remodeling in ischemic stroke, even months after the initiating event.
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Co-first authors
ISSN:0039-2499
1524-4628
DOI:10.1161/STROKEAHA.120.029440