| Literature DB >> 28659854 |
Joshua M Garcia1, Stephanie A Stillings1, Jenna L Leclerc2,3, Harrison Phillips4, Nancy J Edwards5,6, Steven A Robicsek4,7,8, Brian L Hoh7, Spiros Blackburn9, Sylvain Doré2,3,10,11,12,13.
Abstract
Interleukin-10 (IL-10) is an important anti-inflammatory cytokine expressed in response to brain injury, where it facilitates the resolution of inflammatory cascades, which if prolonged causes secondary brain damage. Here, we comprehensively review the current knowledge regarding the role of IL-10 in modulating outcomes following acute brain injury, including traumatic brain injury (TBI) and the various stroke subtypes. The vascular endothelium is closely tied to the pathophysiology of these neurological disorders and research has demonstrated clear vascular endothelial protective properties for IL-10. In vitro and in vivo models of ischemic stroke have convincingly directly and indirectly shown IL-10-mediated neuroprotection; although clinically, the role of IL-10 in predicting risk and outcomes is less clear. Comparatively, conclusive studies investigating the contribution of IL-10 in subarachnoid hemorrhage are lacking. Weak indirect evidence supporting the protective role of IL-10 in preclinical models of intracerebral hemorrhage exists; however, in the limited number of clinical studies, higher IL-10 levels seen post-ictus have been associated with worse outcomes. Similarly, preclinical TBI models have suggested a neuroprotective role for IL-10; although, controversy exists among the several clinical studies. In summary, while IL-10 is consistently elevated following acute brain injury, the effect of IL-10 appears to be pathology dependent, and preclinical and clinical studies often paradoxically yield opposite results. The pronounced and potent effects of IL-10 in the resolution of inflammation and inconsistency in the literature regarding the contribution of IL-10 in the setting of acute brain injury warrant further rigorously controlled and targeted investigation.Entities:
Keywords: concussion; endothelium; intracerebral hemorrhage; ischemia; stroke; subarachnoid hemorrhage; traumatic brain injury; vasculature
Year: 2017 PMID: 28659854 PMCID: PMC5466968 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2017.00244
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Figure 1Role of interleukin-10 (IL-10) in vascular remodeling and dysfunction. Low or absent IL-10 results in numerous changes to the vasculature leading to harmful vascular remodeling and impaired vascular relaxation in response to important physiologic mediators.
Summary of IL-10 ischemic stroke preclinical studies.
| Experimental paradigm | Model | Outcomes | Animals | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| – | pMCAO | IL-10 is upregulated in neurons after stroke | Wistar | ( |
| – | tMCAO | Hypertension blunts neuronal upregulation of IL-10 | Wistar, spontaneously hypertensive rats | ( |
| IL-10−/− | pMCAO | Larger infarct 24 h post-stroke in IL-10-deficient mice | C57BL/6 | ( |
| IL-10−/− | pMCAO | Larger infarct and increased neurologic deficits in IL-10-deficient mice | C57BL/10J | ( |
| IL-10−/−, MOG35-55 | tMCAO | CD4+ T cells reduce infarct through IL-10 secretion | C57BL/6 | ( |
| IL-10−/−, MOG35-55 | tMCAO | Smaller infarct in WT mice treated with MOG35-55, benefit not seen in IL-10-deficient mice | C57BL/6 | ( |
| IV IL-10 | pMCAO | IL-10 significantly reduces infarct volume | Spontaneously hypertensive rats | ( |
| ICV IL-10 | pMCAO | IL-10 significantly reduces infarct volume | Spontaneously hypertensive rats | ( |
| ICV IL-10 | pMCAO | IL-10 downregulates proinflammatory molecules and reduces infarct volume | C57BL/6J | ( |
| Transgenic IL-10 | pMCAO | Transgenics have smaller infarcts and reduced proinflammatory cytokines | C57BL/6J | ( |
| Carotid AAV IL-10 | tMCAO | Smaller infarct and less neuronal injury and neurological deficit scores with AAV treatment | Wistar | ( |
| IM AAV IL-10 | – | Reduced stroke incidence, prolonged survival with AAV treatment | Spontaneously hypertensive rats | ( |
| H2S donor | tMCAO | H2S donors at reperfusion lead to increased IL-10 levels and BBB integrity | ICR | ( |
| Transgenic IL-32α | tMCAO | IL-10 and STAT3 upregulation observed in mice with better outcomes | C57BL/6 | ( |
| Histone deacetylase inhibition | pMCAO | Treg activation is neuroprotective through IL-10 secretion | C57BL/6J | ( |
| IP CD28SA | pMCAO | Treg amplification reduces infarct through increasing IL-10 levels | C57BL/6J | ( |
| SQ G-CSF and SCF | pMCAO | Early and late treatment improves motor and cognitive function and promotes neurogenesis | C57BL/6, GFP-transgenic mice | ( |
| SQ G-CSF and SCF | pMCAO | Early and late treatment increases IL-10 mRNA and reduces activated macrophages and microglia | C57BL/6 | ( |
| IV B-cells-expressing IL-10 | tMCAO | Smaller infarct, less T-cell proliferation | C57BL/6J | ( |
| μMT−/−, IV B-cells-expressing IL-10 | tMCAO | IL-10-secreting B-cell replenishment in B-cell-deficient mice reduces infarct volumes | C57BL/6J | ( |
| ICV Treg | tMCAO | Tregs act | C57BL/6 | ( |
| ICV MSC | pMCAO | Increased IL-10 mRNA and protein levels, smaller infarct, decreased TNFα | Sprague-Dawley | ( |
| ICV, IA, IV ADSC | tMCAO | Smaller infarct, improved neurological function, decreased TNFα | Sprague-Dawley | ( |
AAV, adeno-associated virus; ADSC, adipose-derived stem cells; CD28SA, CD28 superagonist antibody; G-CSF, granuloycyte colony-stimulating factor; IA, intra-arterial; ICV, intracerebroventricular; IM, intramuscular; IL-10, interleukin-10; IP, intraperitoneal; IV, intravenous; MSC, mesenchymal stem cells; SCF, stem cell factor; SQ, subcutaneous; Treg, regulatory T cell; μMT.
Summary of non-genetic IL-10 ischemic stroke clinical studies.
| Study modality | Population | Outcomes | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| LPS whole blood assay | Netherland | Low IL-10 production in response to LPS increases risk for incident fatal IS | ( |
| Russian | Low serum IL-10 in IS and higher incidence of hemorrhagic transformation | ( | |
| ELISA | Canadian | Low plasma IL-10 and worse IS outcomes | ( |
| ELISA | Brazilian | Low serum IL-10 and neurological deterioration | ( |
| ELISA | Indian | IL-10 level is low within 72 h post-stroke, no correlation to NIHSS at admission | ( |
| ELISA | Indian | Low IL-10 at 24 h but higher at 72 and 144 h for IS patients that survive compared with those that expire | ( |
| ELISA | Chinese | IS patients have low IL-10 and Tregs at 7 and 28 days | ( |
| ELISA | Eastern Finland | Plasma IL-10 level correlates with cardioembolic IS etiology | ( |
| ELISA | Spaniards | High plasma IL-10 associated with SAI within 24 h | ( |
| Immulite 1000 | German | High IL-10 at 6 h predicts SAI | ( |
| ELISPOT | Swedish | IS patients have elevated IL-10-secreting MNCs | ( |
| – | Taiwanese | High serum IL-10 at 48 h and increased neurological impairment and adverse outcomes | ( |
| – | Turkish | IL-10 not associated with IS prognosis | ( |
ELISA, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay; ELISPOT, enzyme-linked immunospot assay; LPS, lipopolysaccharide; MNC, mononuclear cells; NIHSS, National Institute of Health stroke scale; SAI, stroke-associated infection; Tregs, regulatory T cells; IL-10, interleukin-10; IS, ischemic stroke.
Summary of IL-10 subarachnoid hemorrhage preclinical studies.
| Experimental paradigm | Model | Outcomes | Animals | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| – | Cisternal Autologous Blood | Non-significant change in IL-10 mRNA levels in the basilar artery | Mongrel Canines | ( |
| ICV ACh | Cisternal Autologous Blood | Non-significant change in CSF IL-10 levels; ACh had no effect on IL-10 level | Sprague-Dawley | ( |
| – | Endovascular Perforation | Non-significant change in IL-10 mRNA levels in the cortex | Wistar | ( |
ACh, acetylcholine; ICV, intracerebroventricular; IL-10, interleukin-10.
Summary of IL-10 subarachnoid hemorrhage clinical studies.
| Study modality | Population | Outcomes | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| – | Austrian | Mean blood IL-10 levels low throughout ICU stay | ( |
| ELISA | Swedish | Microdialysate IL-10 present at low levels and remained constant through 7 days post-bleed | ( |
| ELISA | British | Plasma and CSF IL-10 levels constant through 10 days post-bleed, plasma and CSF levels equal | ( |
| PCR | American | IL-10 mRNA not found in aneurysm walls, but was present in temporal artery controls | ( |
| TaqMan Allelic Assay | Indian | IL-10 SNPs rs1800871 and 1800872 associated with intracranial aneurysm incidence, no correlation with rupture | ( |
ICU, intensive care unit; PCR, polymerase chain reaction; SNP, single nucleotide polymorphism; IL-10, interleukin-10.
Summary of IL-10 intracerebral hemorrhage preclinical studies.
| Experimental paradigm | Model | Outcomes | Animals | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| – | Collagenase | IL-10 increased at 6 h and 7 days | Sprague-Dawley | ( |
| Atorvastatin | Collagenase | Atorvastatin treatment leads to both dose-dependent increases in IL-10 and decreases in TNFα | Sprague-Dawley | ( |
| CD36−/− | Autologous | CD36 deficiency leads to decreased perihematoma IL-10 levels | C57BL/6 | ( |
LPS, lipopolysaccharide; TGFβ, transforming growth factor-β; TNFα, tumor necrosis factor alpha; IL-10, interleukin-10.
Summary of IL-10 intracerebral hemorrhage clinical studies.
| Study modality | Population | Outcomes | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| ELISA | Japanese | Higher plasma IL-10 levels in ICH patients with poor 1 month old mRS outcomes | ( |
| ELISA | Taiwanese | Higher plasma IL-10 level on admission associated with hematoma expansion and worse 1 month old outcome | ( |
| ELISA | Polish | Admission IL-10 levels negatively correlate with GCS, IL-10 correlates with IL-6 levels | ( |
| ELISA | Polish | Systemic IL-10 at 2 days is higher in left hemisphere hemorrhages compared to right hemisphere hemorrhages | ( |
| ELISPOT | Swedish | IL-10-secreting MNCs are elevated compared to healthy controls | ( |
ELISA, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay; ELISPOT, enzyme-linked immunospot assay; GCS, Glasgow Coma Scale; HPLC, high-performance liquid chromatography; MNCs, mononuclear cells; mRS, modified Rankin scale; IL-10, interleukin-10.
Summary of IL-10 traumatic brain injury preclinical studies.
| Experimental paradigm | Model | Outcomes | Animals | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| – | Weight Drop | IL-10 mRNA increases immediately post-injury, IL-10 protein elevated at 2 h | Sprague-Dawley | ( |
| IL-10 Gelfoam | Corticectomy | Local IL-10 administration reduces reactive astrocytes and TNFα at 4 days | CD1 | ( |
| IL10−/− and SQ IL-10 | CCI | IL-10 treatment at 1 h reduces lesion volume, edema, and improves motor and cognitive function at 5d | C57BL/6 | ( |
| IP IL-10 | CCI | IL-10 treatment reduces inflammation at 5 h, but does not affect cognitive or motor function | Sprague-Dawley | ( |
| IP Triptolide | CCI | Triptolide treatment increases brain IL-10 levels at 1d and improves anatomical and neurobehavioral outcomes | Sprague-Dawley | ( |
| – | Repetitive mTBI | IL-10 lower at days 1, 3, 7, 14, and 30 compared to single mTBI | Sprague-Dawley | ( |
| IL10−/− and HBOT | CCI | HBOT increases serum and ipsilateral cortex IL-10 levels, reduced lesion volume, and improved outcome in WT mice | C57BL/6 | ( |
| HBOT | Fluid Percussion | HBOT increases IL-10 level at 4 days and stimulates angiogenesis and neurogenesis | Sprague-Dawley | ( |
| IV, SQ, SCV IL-10 | Fluid Percussion | IL-10 treatment (SQ and IV) improves neurological recovery | Sprague-Dawley | ( |
CCI, controlled cortical impact; HBOT, hyperbaric oxygen therapy; ICV, intracerebroventricular; IP, intraperitoneal; IV, intravenous; mTBI, mild traumatic brain injury; SQ, subcutaneous; TNFα, tumor necrosis factor alpha; IL-10, interleukin-10.
Summary of IL-10 traumatic brain injury clinical studies.
| Study modality | Population | Outcomes | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Multi-analyte assay | British | Plasma IL-10 levels peak between days 5 and 6 | ( |
| Multiplex bead array assay | American | IL-10 elevated compared to controls, no correlation with initial GCS, age, gender, or outcome | ( |
| Multiplex bead array assay | Brazilian | Elevated serum IL-10 levels correlates with GCS and hospital mortality in severe TBI patients | ( |
| Multiplex bead array assay | American | Plasma IL-10 levels elevated at 6 months old and correlate with GOS at 6 and 12 months old | ( |
| Multiplex bead array assay | American | Serum IL-10 levels elevated in trauma patient with and without TBI | ( |
| ELISA | German | Plasma IL-10 levels peak within 3 h | ( |
| ELISA | German | Plasma IL-10 levels elevated within 3 h | ( |
| ELISA | Swiss | IL-10 levels elevated up to 22 days post-injury and second peak in concentration seen | ( |
| ELISA | Japanese | CSF IL-10 elevated for 24 h post-injury before declining | ( |
| ELISA | American | IL-10 elevated in pediatric TBI relative to controls at days 1–3 and predicts mortality, no correlation with GCS | ( |
| ELISA | Swedish | Temporal IL-10 pattern has no initial peak and no gradual decrease from 2 to 7 days | ( |
| ELISA | Japanese | CSF IL-10 is better predictor of outcomes after TBI with extracranial injuries compared to serum IL-10 levels | ( |
| ELISA | Polish | Isolated head injury vs. those with accompanying injury results in no difference in serum IL-10 level | ( |
| ELISA | German | No correlation between BBB disruption in TBI and serum or CSF IL-10 level | ( |
| Immulite | German | High initial CSF IL-10 that decreases over time and serum IL-10 that increases over time predicts mortality | ( |
GCS, Glasgow Coma Scale; GOS, Glasgow Outcome Scale; ELISA, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay; IL-10, interleukin-10; TBI, traumatic brain injury; BBB, blood–brain barrier.
Summary of clinical ischemic stroke studies investigating IL-10 genetic polymorphisms.
| Reference SNP ID | Population | Outcomes | Study modality | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| rs1800896 | South Indian | Increased risk of IS | ARMS PCR | ( |
| rs1800896 | Chinese, Chinese, Chinese, Indian, Palermo | Increased risk of IS | Meta-analysis | ( |
| rs1800896 | Chinese | Increased risk of IS | ARMS PCR | ( |
| rs1800896 | Turkish | Increased risk of IS | RT-PCR | ( |
| rs1800896 | Chinese | Increased risk of IS, particularly in smokers | PCR-RFLP | ( |
| rs1800896 | Greek | Not associated with IS risk, but GG genotype predicts early stroke progression | RT-PCR | ( |
| rs1800896 | Meta-analysis | Not associated with IS risk, but associated with IS subtypes | Meta-analysis | ( |
| rs1800872 | Chinese | Increased risk of IS, lower serum levels of IL-10 | ELISA, PCR-RFLP | ( |
| rs3021094 | Chinese | Increased risk of IS, lower serum levels of IL-10 | ELISA, LDR | ( |
| rs1554286 | Chinese | Increased risk of IS, lower serum levels of IL-10 | ELISA, LDR | ( |
| rs1554286 | Korean | Increased risk of hypertension, contributed to increased risk for IS | PCR | ( |
| rs1518111 | Korean | Increased risk of hypertension, contributed to increased risk for IS | PCR | ( |
| rs1800871 | Chinese, Chinese, Chinese, Palermo | Not associated with IS risk | Meta-analysis | ( |
| 627*C/*C | Russian | Associated with protection against hypertension | PCR | ( |
| Promoter [ATA] Haplotype | Caucasian | Associated with lower serum IL-10 and risk of postoperative cardiovascular events in PAD | PCR | ( |
ARMS, amplification refractory mutation system; ELISA, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay; LDR, ligase detection reaction; PAD, peripheral artery disease; PCR, polymerase chain reaction; PCR-RFLP, polymerase chain reaction–restriction fragment length polymorphism; RT-PCR, real-time polymerase chain reaction; IL-10, interleukin-10; IS, ischemic stroke.