Literature DB >> 1519285

Distribution of the 72-kd heat-shock protein as a function of transient focal cerebral ischemia in rats.

Y Li1, M Chopp, J H Garcia, Y Yoshida, Z G Zhang, S R Levine.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND
PURPOSE: The significance and physiological implications of the expression of the 72-kd heat-shock protein in ischemic tissue are unknown. To enhance our understanding of the relation between ischemic cell damage and 72-kd heat-shock protein expression, we evaluated the cellular expression and the anatomic distribution of 72-kd heat-shock protein in conjunction with the morphological analysis of rat brain, as a function of the duration of a single arterial occlusion.
METHODS: Adult Wistar rats were subjected to graded transient middle cerebral artery occlusion (for a duration of 10, 20, 30, 60, 90, and 120 minutes and sham; n = 4 per group). Forty-eight hours after reopening the artery, brain tissue sections were analyzed to determine the extent of neuronal damage (hematoxylin and eosin staining), the extent of astrocytic reactivity (immunohistochemistry, using anti-glial fibrillary acidic protein), and the distribution of 72-kd heat-shock protein (immunohistochemistry, using a monoclonal antibody to 72-kd heat-shock protein).
RESULTS: We found that 72-kd heat-shock protein was sequentially expressed in morphologically intact neurons, microglia, and endothelial cells with increasing duration of ischemia; 72-kd heat-shock protein immunoreactivity was not detected in astrocytes. The duration of ischemia required to evoke a 72-kd heat-shock protein response in neurons was dependent on the anatomic site and followed a pattern of increasing neuronal sensitivity to ischemic cell damage with duration of ischemia: 72-kd heat-shock protein and neuronal damage were sequentially detected in the caudate putamen, globus pallidus, cerebral cortex, amygdala, and hippocampus with increasing duration of ischemia. With ischemia of long duration (greater than or equal to 90 minutes), neurons expressing 72-kd heat-shock protein were localized to a zone peripheral to the severely damaged ischemic core.
CONCLUSIONS: These studies suggest that 1) the expression of 72-kd heat-shock protein in neurons precedes the development of ischemic cellular alterations detectable by conventional hematoxylin and eosin light microscopy methods; 2) there is a hierarchy of cell types and anatomic sites that express 72-kd heat-shock protein, and this hierarchy reflects cellular and anatomic vulnerability to ischemic cell damage; and 3) 72-kd heat-shock protein induction in neurons bordering a necrotic ischemic core may be the morphological equivalent of the ischemic penumbra.

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Year:  1992        PMID: 1519285     DOI: 10.1161/01.str.23.9.1292

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Stroke        ISSN: 0039-2499            Impact factor:   7.914


  7 in total

Review 1.  The adaptive effects of hypoxic preconditioning of brain neurons.

Authors:  M O Samoilov; E V Lazarevich; D G Semenov; A A Mokrushin; E I Tyul'kova; D Yu Romanovskii; E A Milyakova; K N Dudkin
Journal:  Neurosci Behav Physiol       Date:  2003-01

Review 2.  Heat shock proteins: cellular and molecular mechanisms in the central nervous system.

Authors:  R Anne Stetler; Yu Gan; Wenting Zhang; Anthony K Liou; Yanqin Gao; Guodong Cao; Jun Chen
Journal:  Prog Neurobiol       Date:  2010-06-04       Impact factor: 11.685

Review 3.  Biochemical and molecular characteristics of the brain with developing cerebral infarction.

Authors:  H Kato; K Kogure
Journal:  Cell Mol Neurobiol       Date:  1999-02       Impact factor: 5.046

4.  Elevated immunoreactivity for glutamic acid decarboxylase in the rat cerebral cortex following transient middle cerebral artery occlusion.

Authors:  K Yamada; S Goto; T Oyama; N Inoue; S Nagahiro; Y Ushio
Journal:  Acta Neuropathol       Date:  1994       Impact factor: 17.088

5.  In vivo theranostics at the peri-infarct region in cerebral ischemia.

Authors:  Jesús Agulla; David Brea; Francisco Campos; Tomás Sobrino; Bárbara Argibay; Wajih Al-Soufi; Miguel Blanco; José Castillo; Pedro Ramos-Cabrer
Journal:  Theranostics       Date:  2013-12-12       Impact factor: 11.556

6.  Neuronal Damage Induced by Perinatal Asphyxia Is Attenuated by Postinjury Glutaredoxin-2 Administration.

Authors:  Juan Ignacio Romero; Mariana Inés Holubiec; Tamara Logica Tornatore; Stéphanie Rivière; Eva-Maria Hanschmann; Rodolfo Alberto Kölliker-Frers; Julia Tau; Eduardo Blanco; Pablo Galeano; Fernando Rodríguez de Fonseca; Christopher Horst Lillig; Francisco Capani
Journal:  Oxid Med Cell Longev       Date:  2017-06-15       Impact factor: 6.543

7.  Identification of ischemic regions in a rat model of stroke.

Authors:  Anke Popp; Nadine Jaenisch; Otto W Witte; Christiane Frahm
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2009-03-10       Impact factor: 3.240

  7 in total

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