| Literature DB >> 21040547 |
An-Gaëlle Ceulemans1, Tine Zgavc, Ron Kooijman, Said Hachimi-Idrissi, Sophie Sarre, Yvette Michotte.
Abstract
Neuroinflammation is a key element in the ischemic cascade after cerebral ischemia that results in cell damage and death in the subacute phase. However, anti-inflammatory drugs do not improve outcome in clinical settings suggesting that the neuroinflammatory response after an ischemic stroke is not entirely detrimental. This review describes the different key players in neuroinflammation and their possible detrimental and protective effects in stroke. Because of its inhibitory influence on several pathways of the ischemic cascade, hypothermia has been introduced as a promising neuroprotective strategy. This review also discusses the influence of hypothermia on the neuroinflammatory response. We conclude that hypothermia exerts both stimulating and inhibiting effects on different aspects of neuroinflammation and hypothesize that these effects are key to neuroprotection.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 21040547 PMCID: PMC2988764 DOI: 10.1186/1742-2094-7-74
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neuroinflammation ISSN: 1742-2094 Impact factor: 8.322
The neurotoxic and neuroprotective properties of inflammatory players after ischemic stroke*
| Neurotoxicity | Neuroprotection | Effects of hypothermia | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Cytokines | IL-1β | Endogenous pyrogen | Increase survival promoting factors | Reduction increased levels |
| TNF-α | Inhibition glutamate uptake | Increase neurotrophic factors | Reduction TNF-α levels | |
| IL-6 | Endogenous pyrogen | Induction IL-1ra | Reduction IL-6 | |
| TGF-β | Increase β-amyloid precursor | Reduction gliosis | ||
| IL-10 | Less release cytokines and expression receptors | |||
| 2. HMGB Family | HMGB1 | Stimulation inflammatory mediators | Reduction of brain and plasma HMGB1 | |
| 3. Chemokines | CINC, MCP-1, MIP-1, MRF-1, fractalkine | Regulation and migration of leukocyte trafficking | Scavenge and repair necrotic tissue | Downregulation MCP-1 |
| 4. Free oxygen radicals | ROS, NO | Lipid peroxidation | Suppressed oxidative stress | |
| NO | Induction iron loss of cells | Vasodilator | Reduction nNOS | |
| 5. MMPs | MMP-9 | BBB breakdown | Stimulation plasticity, recovery and repair | Reduction MMP-9 |
| 1. Selectins | E- and P-selectin | Slow down neutrophils and monocytes | Inhibition E-selectin | |
| P-selectin | Enhancement platelet binding to neutrophils and monocytes | |||
| L-selectin | Guide unstimulated leukocytes | No effect on L-selectin | ||
| 2. CAMs | ICAM-1and2, VCAM-1 | Stronger attachment leukocytes to endothelium | ||
| 3. Integrins | LFA-1, Mac-1, | Stimulation adhesion to endothelium | No effect on LFA-1 | |
| 1. Glia | Microglia | Phagocytosis to clear dead cells | Production neurotrophic factors | Reduction of activation |
| Astrocytes | Production inflammatory and cytotoxic mediators | Production neurotrophic factors | ||
| 2. Endothelial cells (BBB) | BBB breakdown: | Reduction BBB disruption for large molecules | ||
| 3. Leukocytes | Neutrophils | Release pro-inflammatory and cytotoxic mediators | Less infiltration | |
| Monocytes | Generation superoxide anions | Removal necrotic cell debris and neutrophils | Less infiltration |
* See text for references
Figure 1Schematic overview of the neuroinflammatory response after ischemic stroke. Microglia become activated after ischemia (grey area) and release pro- and anti-inflammatory mediators. Astrocytes are activated as well and will neglect the maintenance of the neurons, which are most vulnerable to ischemia, and produce neurotoxic and neurotrophic factors. In the ischemic core, neurons die due to necrosis and release necrotic debris into the ischemic tissue, thereby stimulating further activation of glial cells. Astrocytes, together with the attachment of astrocyte endfeet to endothelium and connection with neurons define the neurovascular unit. Neutrophils roll onto the endothelial surface (which is primed by pro-inflammatory cytokines (blue and purple)) until they have slowed down to such a degree that they stick to the endothelium. After binding of selectins to sialyl-Lewisx and CAMs to integrins, the neutrophils undergo conformational changes and flatten. Subsequently, the neutrophils crawl on the endothelium to find an intercellular junction between the endothelial cells for extravasation to the abluminal side and transmigration to the ischemic tissue under the influence of chemokines (red and yellow). Adapted from [26].