| Literature DB >> 24393199 |
Ana Antonic1, Mirella Dottori, Jessie Leung, Kate Sidon, Peter E Batchelor, William Wilson, Malcolm R Macleod, David W Howells.
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Hypothermia provides neuroprotection after cardiac arrest, hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy, and in animal models of ischemic stroke. However, as drug development for stroke has been beset by translational failure, we sought additional evidence that hypothermia protects human neurons against ischemic injury.Entities:
Keywords: brain; hypothermia; ischemic stroke; neuroprotection; stem cells; treatment
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24393199 PMCID: PMC4235397 DOI: 10.1111/ijs.12224
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Stroke ISSN: 1747-4930 Impact factor: 5.266
Figure 1β III tubulin positive human neurons after 11 days in culture with nuclei counterstained with 4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole dihydrochloride (DAPI).
Figure 5Time-dependent effects of hypothermia on H2O2 and OGD-induced cell death. Hypothermia reduces LDH-detected cell death induced with H2O2 by 52%, 43%, 34%, and 21% (a) and OGD-induced injury by 45%, 30%, 27%, and 4% when started at 0, one-, three-, and six-hours (b), respectively. *P ≤ 0·05, **P ≤ 0·01, #P ≤ 0·0005, and ##P ≤ 0·0001. Data presented as mean ± SEM.
Figure 2The effects of hypothermia on H2O2-induced cell death. Hypothermia reduces LDH detected cell death by 45% at four-hours (a) and effectively abolished (92% reduction) the delayed injury (b). The net effect at 24 h was reduction of 53% (c). H2O2-induced oxidative stress increased TUNEL-detected apoptotic cell death 2.9-fold after 24 h and hypothermia prevents 42% of this death (d). Statistical significance detected at *P ≤ 0·05, **P ≤ 0·01, #P ≤ 0·0005, and ##P ≤ 0·0001. Data presented as mean ± SEM.
Figure 3The effects of hypothermia on oxygen deprivation induced cell death. Hypothermia has no beneficial effect at four hours (a), 4–20 h (b), or in the combined 24 h LDH measurement of cell death (c) as well as on apoptotic cell death detected by TUNEL staining at 24 h (d). NS = not significant.
Figure 4The effects of hypothermia on oxygen glucose deprivation (OGD)-induced cell death. Hypothermia reduced OGD-induced cell death at four hours by 37% (a). Hypothermia reduced the delayed injury that occurred between removal of OGD at four hours and completion of the experiment at 24 h by 80% (b). The net effect at 24 h was a reduction of LDH release of 42% (c). TUNEL staining for apoptosis at 24 h suggested that 22% of cell death occurred by this mechanism and that hypothermia prevented 26% of this death (d). *P ≤ 0·05, #P ≤ 0·0005, and ##P ≤ 0·0001. Data presented as mean ± SEM.
Summary of hypothermia use to protect cells in vitro
| Year | Hypothermia temperature | Type of culture | Injury | Duration of injury | Outcome measure | Outcome | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1991 | 35°C, 33°C, and 31°C | Gerbil hippocampal slices | OGD | Unknown | Intracellular Ca2+ accumulation | Ca2+ accumulation was delayed following hypothermia treatment | |
| 1992 | 32°C | Rat cerebellar granule cells and GABAergic neurons | OGD | 3–6 h | LDH | Neuroprotective, reduces LDH caused cell death | |
| 1998 | 33°C | Guinea pig E40, E60, and adult slices | OGD | 2 h and 12 h | HPLC | Reduced glutamate release was only observed in the immature cultures | |
| 1998 | 35°C, 33°C, and 27°C | Rat hippocampal slices | OGD | Unknown | Extracellular membrane potential recordings | 27°C and 33°C the membrane potential was restored to the control conditions | |
| 2000 | 34°C | Rat hippocampal slices | OGD | 10–20 min | Immunohistochemistry | Hypothermia reduced CA1 cell loss | |
| 2001 | 31°C | Guinea pig hippocampal slices | OGD | 20, 30, or 40 min | Recovery of energy metabolism | When hypothermia added at 0 or 2 h postinjury induction it reduced energy metabolic rate | |
| 2002 | 33°C | Rat cortical cultures | OGD | Unknown | Caspase 3–8 and −9 activity | Hypothermia neuronal apoptotic cell death | |
| 2003 | 30°C and 33°C | Rat retina | OGD | 1–2 h | LDH | Hypothermia reduced glucose utilization and lactate production | |
| 2004 | 31°C, 33°C, and 35°C | Rat hippocampal slices | OGD | 60 min | Propidium iodide (PI) | Reduced PI detected cell death only at 31°C and 33°C | |
| 2004 | 33°C preconditioning | Rat cerebellar slices | OGD | 20 min | Immunohistochemistry | Hypothermic preconditioning induces acute neuroprotection | |
| 2005 | 35°C | Rat hippocampal slices | OGD | 1 h | Propidium iodide | Protects all regions of hippocampus from cell death | |
| 2005 | 27°C or 33°C | Dissociated mouse hippocampal neurons | OGD | 10–25 min | Spine shape and motility assessed by microscopy | Decrease in temperature reduced the spine modality, and the length of spines was reduced | |
| 2005 | 35°C and 31°C | Rat hippocampal slices | OGD | 40 min | Immunohistochemistry | Decrease in temperature – increased protection in all the hippocampal regions | |
| 2006 | 34°C pre treatment | Rat hippocampal slices | OGD | 20 min | Electrophysiology | Temperature lowering reduced OGD-induced cell death | |
| 2006 | 34°C, 30°C, or 22°C | Rat hippocampal neurons | OGD | Unknown | Expression of Bcl-2, fluorescence magnitude of intracellular Ca2+ | Expression of Bcl-2 was increased with decrease in temperature | |
| 2006 | 33°C preconditioning for 20 min, 1 h before OGD | Rat cerebellar cells | OGD | 20 min | Immunohistochemistry | Hypothermic preconditioning increased survival of Purkinje neurons in rat cerebellar slices after OGD | |
| 2009 | 33°C | Human NT2-N neurons | OGD | 20 min | MTT | Posthypoxic hypothermia is protective in human NT2-N neurons | |
| 2010 | 33°C and 30°C | Rat cortical neurons | Hypoxia | 24 h | Cell viability | Increased cell survival following hypothermia |