| Literature DB >> 26528141 |
Arnaud Chevilley1, Flavie Lesept1, Sophie Lenoir1, Carine Ali1, Jérôme Parcq1, Denis Vivien1.
Abstract
Tissue-type plasminogen activator (tPA) a serine protease is constituted of five functional domains through which it interacts with different substrates, binding proteins, and receptors. In the last years, great interest has been given to the clinical relevance of targeting tPA in different diseases of the central nervous system, in particular stroke. Among its reported functions in the central nervous system, tPA displays both neurotrophic and neurotoxic effects. How can the protease mediate such opposite functions remain unclear but several hypotheses have been proposed. These include an influence of the degree of maturity and/or the type of neurons, of the level of tPA, of its origin (endogenous or exogenous) or of its form (single chain tPA versus two chain tPA). In this review, we will provide a synthetic snapshot of our current knowledge regarding the natural history of tPA and discuss how it sustains its pleiotropic functions with focus on excitotoxic/ischemic neuronal death and neuronal survival.Entities:
Keywords: NMDA receptors; apoptosis; differential effects; excitotoxicity; tissue-type plasminogen activator
Year: 2015 PMID: 26528141 PMCID: PMC4607783 DOI: 10.3389/fncel.2015.00415
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5102 Impact factor: 5.505
Reported effects of tPA on challenged neurons.
| Reference | Model(s) | tPA | Mechanism(s) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Exogenous 10 μg/ml | Independently of its proteolytic action, tPA attenuated zinc-induced cell death | |||
| Intracerebroventricular tPA 1 mg/ml | tPA attenuated kainate seizure-induced neuronal death in the hippocampus | |||
| Exogenous 1,000 IU | tPA protects neurons from oxygen glucose deprivation (OGD) by a non-proteolytic action | |||
| Endogenous | tPA enhanced ischemia-induced neuronal damage by facilitating apoptosis rather than necrosis | |||
| Exogenous 10 μg/ml | tPA attenuated zinc-induced neuronal death, independently of its proteolytic activity | |||
| Exogenous 0.03–3 μg/ml | Isoflurane induced apoptosis at DIV 5 (but not DIV 14 or DIV 21) in cultured neurons tPA decreases isoflurane-induced cell death in primary cultures of neurons (DIV 5) Isoflurane-induced neurotoxicity in the developing rodent brain is mediated by reduced tPA synaptic release and enhanced proBDNF/p75NTR-mediated apoptosis | |||
| Endogenous (tPA KO mice) and exogenous (0–1 μM) | Treatment after OGD (early preconditionning). Beneficial effect of tPA involving a LRP1 dependent signaling pathway and independent of its proteolytic activity. | |||
| Endogenous (transgenic mice T4) | Decrease of the activation of mTor- HIFα, involving NMDAR | |||
| T4 mice or IV 1 mg/Kg on WT mice | tPA protected the brain from excitotoxin-induced cell death | |||
| (1) The neuroprotective effect of tPA was mediated by activation of synaptic GluN2A containing NMDAR via a plasminogen-independent mechanism | ||||
| Exogenous 5–500 nM | (3) tPA activated the ERK -CREB-Atf3 pathway | |||
| Endogenous (transgenic mice T4) | Adaptation to metabolic stress – AMPK activation involving NMDAR | |||
| Exogenous (20 μg/mL) | tPA significantly reduced caspase-3 activity | |||
| Endogenous | tPA did not affect the vulnerability of cultured neurons to kainite | |||
| Exogenous 10 μg/ml | tPA required plasminogen to inhibit Aβ toxicity and to block Aβ deposition | |||
| Exogenous 1,000 IU | tPA resulted in a modest exaggeration of this injury | |||
| Exogenous 10 μg/ml | Calcium-mediated neuronal death was not attenuated by tPA | |||
| Mouse tPA –/– | Endogenous | tPA is required to promote neuronal degeneration | ||
| Mouse WT | 120 μg tPA for 3 days (intra-parenchymal) | |||
| Exogenous 50 μg/ml | tPA significantly increased hemoglobin-induced cell death | |||
| Exogenous 100 IU | Proteolytic action | |||
| Exogenous 0.2–20 μg/ml | tPA failed to modify the neurotoxicity induced by the exposure to a non-NMDA agonist (kainate) | |||
| Excitotoxicity: NMDA (10 or 12.5 μM) or 50 μM kainate | The catalytic activity of tPA enhanced neuronal death induced by exposure to NMDA | |||
| Exogenous 3.0 μg (intra-parenchymal) | ||||
| Apoptosis: serum deprivation (DIV 7)Nifedipine (50 μM, DIV 14) Excitotoxicity (DIV 13–14) | Endogenous | TGF-α rescued neurons from NMDA-induced excitotoxicity in mixed cultures through inhibition of tPA activity, involving PAI-1 overexpression by an ERK-dependent pathway in astrocytes | ||
| Exogenous 1.85 μmol/L | Infusion of tPA into tPA –/– mice restored sensitivity to kainate-mediated neurotoxicity and activation of microglia | |||
| Exogenous 46 μmol/L | tPA increased the lesion volumes induced by NMDA injection into the striatum | |||
| Exogenous 20 μg/ml | Proteolytic activity | |||
| Exogenous 20 μg/ml | tPA potentiated apoptosis in mouse cortical neurons treated with | |||
| Exogenous IV 1 mg/kg | tPA potentiated excitotoxic lesions | |||
| Endogenous | Overexpression of neuroserpin in the brain parenchyma might limit the deleterious effect of tPA on NMDAR-mediated neuronal death | |||
| Serum deprivation (DIV 7) | ||||
| Treatment: neuroserpin (0.5–1 μM) | Excitotoxic paradigms (DIV 13–14) NMDA (12.5 μmol/l) | |||
| Exogenous 20 μg/ml | tPA induced Erk1/2 activation in neurons (independently of plasmin), tau phosphorylation and promoted A-beta mediated apoptosis | |||
| Exogenous | Immunization against the NTD of the GluN1 subunit of NMDAR prevented the neurotoxic effect of endogenous and exogenous tPA | |||
| Exogenous IV 1 mg/kg | tPA increased lesion volumes induced by NMDA (+40%) | |||
| Excitotoxicity (NMDA 10 μmol/L) | Exogenous 0.3 μmol/L | Interaction of tPA with GluN1 led to a subsequent potentiation of NMDA-induced calcium influx and neurotoxicity | ||
| Exogenous 0.9 μg/ml | Addition of tPA after OGD enhanced neuronal death in CA1 and XG-102 administration reduced neuronal death, alone or in the presence of tPA | |||
| Exogenous 10–20 μg/ml | tPA induced N27 neuroblast cell death. Aprotinin and other protease inhibitors led to an inhibition of tPA-mediated neurotoxicity | |||
| Exogenous 20 μg/ml | Catalytic tPA promoted NMDAR-induced Erk(1/2) MAPK activation | |||
| Exogenous IV 10 mg/kg | ||||
| Exogenous 20 μg/ml | The anticoagulant factor protein S (PS) protects mouse cortical neurons from tPA/NMDA induced injury. PS blocks the extrinsic apoptotic cascade | |||
| Exogenous 20 μg/mL | tPA increased NMDA-mediated neurotoxicity in cortical neuronal cultures but not in hippocampal neuronal cultures | |||
| Exogenous IV 10 mg/kg | Inhibition of GluN2D-containing NMDAR with UBP145 can fully prevent the pro-excitotoxic effect of intravenously administered tPA | |||
| Exogenous 5 mg/mL | Treatment with tPA after OGD increased LDH release, active MMP-9, MCP-1, and MIP-2 | |||
| Exogenous 0.3 μM | HMGB-1 reversed the pro-neurotoxic effect of tPA | |||
| Endogenous | Neuroserpin protected neurons against OGD/R. mainly by inhibiting tPA-mediated acute neuronal excitotoxicity | |||
| Excitotoxicity NMDA (10 μmol/L) | Exogenous 0.3 μmol/L | Memantine prevented the potentiation of excitotoxic neuronal death induced by rtPA | ||
| Exogenous 0.3 μM | In contrast to WT tPA, tPA mutants including deletion of the kringle 2 domain and point mutation of the LBS-containing kringle 2 domain did not promote NMDAR-mediated neurotoxicity | |||
| Excitotoxicity induced by exposure of cortical neurons to NMDA (mice; 50 μM) at DIV 14 | Exogenous 0.3 μM | sc-tPA promoted NMDAR-mediated neurotoxicity through its proteolytic activity, tc-tPA did not sc-tPA promoted both NMDA-induced calcium influx and Erk (½) activation, tc-tPA did not | ||
| NMDA-induced calcium influx recorded from cultured cortical neurons (mice; DIV 12–14) exposed to NMDA (50 μM) | ||||
| NMDA-induced excitotoxic brain lesions (NMDA 10 mM) | Exogenous 45 μM | |||
| Exogenous 20 μg/mL | In deeper layers (more mature), tPA was associated with glutamate-promoted neuronal necrosis | |||
| Endogenous or exogenous 20 μg/ml | Neonatal brain lesions | |||