| Literature DB >> 30276309 |
Olena Y Glushakova1, Andriy A Glushakov2, Dayanjan S Wijesinghe3, Alex B Valadka1, Ronald L Hayes1,4, Alexander V Glushakov5.
Abstract
Acute brain injuries, including ischemic and hemorrhagic stroke, as well as traumatic brain injury (TBI), are major worldwide health concerns with very limited options for effective diagnosis and treatment. Stroke and TBI pose an increased risk for the development of chronic neurodegenerative diseases, notably chronic traumatic encephalopathy, Alzheimer's disease, and Parkinson's disease. The existence of premorbid neurodegenerative diseases can exacerbate the severity and prognosis of acute brain injuries. Apoptosis involving caspase-3 is one of the most common mechanisms involved in the etiopathology of both acute and chronic neurological and neurodegenerative diseases, suggesting a relationship between these disorders. Over the past two decades, several clinical biomarkers of apoptosis have been identified in cerebrospinal fluid and peripheral blood following ischemic stroke, intracerebral and subarachnoid hemorrhage, and TBI. These biomarkers include selected caspases, notably caspase-3 and its specific cleavage products such as caspase-cleaved cytokeratin-18, caspase-cleaved tau, and a caspase-specific 120 kDa αII-spectrin breakdown product. The levels of these biomarkers might be a valuable tool for the identification of pathological pathways such as apoptosis and inflammation involved in injury progression, assessment of injury severity, and prediction of clinical outcomes. This review focuses on clinical studies involving biomarkers of caspase-3-mediated pathways, following stroke and TBI. The review further examines their prospective diagnostic utility, as well as clinical utility for improved personalized treatment of stroke and TBI patients and the development of prophylactic treatment chronic neurodegenerative disease.Entities:
Keywords: Caspase-3; caspase-cleaved cytokeratin-18; caspase-cleaved tau; stroke; traumatic brain injury; αII-spectrin breakdown products
Year: 2017 PMID: 30276309 PMCID: PMC6126261 DOI: 10.4103/bc.bc_27_16
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Circ ISSN: 2394-8108
Figure 1Cell death pathways following brain injury
Expression of apoptotic biomarkers following acute brain injuries
| Clinical study | Biomarker | Time points | Subjects, group size, and age | Matrix/levels | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ischemic stroke and ischemia-reperfusion injury[ | Caspase-3 (activated) | 12 h to 9 days | 11 patients with atherothrombotic brain infarct | Brain tissue (postmortem) (IHC) | Caspase-3 upregulation in macrophages/microglia and limited upregulation in neurons |
| Ischemic stroke[ | Caspase-3 | 4, 8, 16, 24, 48, 72, 130, 192 h | 48 patients (40-70 years, average age 60.8 years) | Brain tissue (postmortem) ( | Time-dependent caspase3 upregulation in hippocampus (CA1) |
| Ischemic stroke[ | Caspase-3 (activated) | 2-37 days | 18 patients (51-86 years) | Brain tissue (postmortem and ipsi- and contra-lateral) (Western blot and IHC) | Activated caspase-3 upregulation in neurons in the infarct area |
| Ischemic stroke[ | Caspase-3 (activated) | 15 h to 18 days | 13 patients | Brain tissue (postmortem, peri-infarct area) (IHC) | Cytoplasmic activated caspase-3 immunopositivity correlated with death receptor Fas |
| Ischemic stroke[ | Caspase-3 | 12 and 24 h from stroke onset and 2 h after tPA | 116 tPA-treated stroke patients (mean age 71.8±11.3 years) | Blood plasma | Plasma caspase-3 levels were higher in stroke patients versus the control group throughout the acute phase of stroke |
| Ischemic stroke[ | Caspase-3/7 activity | Acute | 7 patients | Blood plasma | Relative caspase-3/7 activity in plasma was significantly correlated with the soluble TNF-α levels but not with the membrane-associated TNF-α levels or density of plasma DNA |
| Ischemic Stroke[ | Caspase-3 expression | Acute | 60 patients (55-70 years, mean age 57.9±10.2 years) | Blood plasma Platelets (Western blot and qRT-PCR) | Stroke patients had significantly increased in plasma TNF-α and platelet levels of annexin-V, CD62p, cytochrome-c, and caspase3 gene expression as compared to the controls |
| Stroke[ | Caspase-3 | 18 h-several month | 35 patients (46-95 years) | Brain tissue (postmortem) (IHC) | Caspase-3 upregulation in neurons during the first 2 days after stroke |
| Stroke and stroke mimics[ | Caspase-3 | 24 h from symptom onset | 915 stroke (mean age 72.63±12.46 years) | Blood plasma >1.96 ng/mL | The best combination of biomarkers in the model predictive probability of stroke was caspase-3 and d-dimer as compared to combinations of RAGE, MMP-9, S100B, brain natriuretic peptide, neurotrophin-3, and chimeric secretagogin |
| Stroke[ | Caspase-3 Caspase-8 | >6 months | 40 patients (average age 63±2.1 years) | Blood plasma | Caspase-3 and caspase-8 levels were significantly higher in stroke patients as compared to controls |
| Stroke[ | Caspase-3 Caspase-8 | Days after stroke | 9 subjects with two stroke events (average age 75±9 years) | Brain tissue (postmortem) | Expression of cleaved caspase-8 and caspase-3 in CD68-positive cells could only be found in the area of second stroke |
| Stroke[ | Caspase - cleaved tau | Admission, 1 and 7 days | 19 patients (average age 61±13 years) | Serum | Significant difference in caspase-cleaved tau levels between patients with a good outcome (NIHSS ≤5) and patients with a poor outcome (NIHSS ≥6) |
| Multiple cerebral infarcts and AD[ | Caspase-8 | Postmortem | 3 stroke patients | Brain tissue (postmortem) (IHC) | Activated caspase-8 protein and Fas-positive neurons were found only in the AD brains and not in the other groups |
| Transient cerebral ischemia[ | Caspase-3 | Cardiac arrest or severe hypotension | 23 patients with a history of transient hypoxic attacks | Brain tissue (postmortem) | Upregulation of caspase-3 and redistribution cytochrome c in a region-specific manner with marked activation in the selectively vulnerable hippocampal areas |
| Perinatal hypoxic-ischemic brain injury[ | Caspase-3 | Postmortem | 6 patients | Brain tissue (postmortem) (IHC) | Ccaspase-3 activation and apoptosis in pontosubicular neuron necrosis |
| Perinatal hypoxic-ischemic brain injury[ | Caspase-3 | Postmortem | 16 patients (0.5 h to 20 days) | Brain tissue (postmortem) (IHC, immunoblot) | Caspase-3 activation and upregulation of apoptotic markers (TUNEL, Bcl-2, Bcl-x) in pontosubicular neuron necrosis |
| Focal ischemia[ | Caspase-3 | <24, 2472, >72 h | 19 patients (1.5 week to 16 years) | Brain tissue (postmortem) | Cell death (TUNEL) continues to occur for >3 days postischemic insult |
| Neurologic injury in infants with complex congenital heart disease[ | SBDP120 | N/A | 14 patients (infants) with open- and closed-heart surgery | Serum | Peak SBDP120 and SBDP150 significantly increased following open heart surgery as compared to closed heart surgery with different temporal profiles |
| Intracerebral hemorrhage[ | CCCK-18 | 5.3±2.1 h | 102 patients | Serum | NIHSS score and hematoma volume were independent predictors of high CCCK-18 levels |
| Cerebral aneurysm[ | Caspase-1 | Acute | 36 patients (19 ruptured and 17 unruptured) | Aneurysmal domes (surgically removed) | Differential caspase-1 expression in ruptured and unruptured aneurysms |
| SAH (aneurysmal)[ | Caspase-3 | Admission, 1, 2, 3, 5 and 7 days | 118 patients | Serum | Serum caspase-3 activity was transiently increased (peaked at day 3) after aneurysmal SAH and was substantially higher in patients than in controls |
| SAH (aneurysmal)[ | CCCK-18 | Admission | 128 patients | Blood plasma | CCCK-18 levels were markedly higher in patients with an unfavorable outcome (WFNS and modified Fisher scores) and nonsurvivors |
| SAH (aneurysmal)[ | SBDP120 | Every 6 h (up to 72 h) | 20 patients | CSF | SBDP120 and calpain-mediated SBDPs were significantly increased in patients suffering aneurysmal SAH |
| TBI (severe)[ | Caspase-1 | 0-10 days | 67 patients (0.1-16, median age 6 years) | CSF | Caspase-1 and Fas were increased in CSF after TBI |
| TBI[ | Caspase-1 (cleaved) Caspase-3 (cleaved) | Acute phase of TBI | 8 patients (21-57 years, average age 35.9±4.4 years) | Brain tissue (TBI, surgically removed) Brain tissue (control, postmortem) | Cleavage of caspase-1, up-regulation and cleavage of caspase-3, evidence for DNA fragmentation with both apoptotic and necrotic morphologies and an increase in Bcl-2 but not Bcl-xL or Bax were found in tissue from TBI patients compared with controls |
| TBI[ | Caspase-3 | 54±49 h 82±56 h 109±95 h | 29 patients | Brain tissue (TBI peri-ischemic zone, surgically removed) | Significant caspase-3 upregulation in patients who died (GOS score 1, |
| TBI[ | Caspase-3 | 0, 12, 24, 48, 72, 168, 264, and 480 h | 39 patients (dead from TBI) | Brain tissue (postmortem) (IHC) | Marked caspase-3 upregulation in every injured group compared to controls |
| TBI[ | Caspase-3 | Few minutes to 126 days | 56 patients (14-86 years, average age 47.3 years) | Brain tissue (postmortem) (IHC and | Caspase-3 upregulation in cortical neurons was detectable 80 min after TBI |
| TBI[ | Caspase-3 | 0-96 h | 12 patients (18-81 years, mean age 42 years) | Brain tissue (postmortem) (RT-PCR) | Significant increase in caspase-3 and TrkB in the cerebellum of patients with short survival times as compared to controls |
| TBI[ | Caspase-3 (activated) | 1-14 days | 27 patients (average age 36.1±12.9 years) | CSF | Caspase-3 activity was detected in 31 (27.4%) CSF samples with highest values (>5.5 µM/min) at day 2-5 after TBI |
| TBI (severe)[ | Caspase-3 | 1, 2, 3, 5, 7, and 10 days | 14 patients (5-69 years, mean age 25.3±15.4 years) | CSF | Caspase-3 and Bcl-2 activities significantly increased in CSF of patients |
| TBI (severe)[ | Caspase-3 (activated) | 1 day | 112 patients | Serum | Multiple logistic regression analysis showed that serum caspase-3 levels >0.20 ng/mL were associated with mortality at 30 days in TBI patients controlling for Marshall CT classification, age and GCS (OR=7.99; 95% CI=2.116-36.744; |
| TBI[ | Caspase-7 | Acute | 16 patients (mean age 40.4±10.1 years) | Brain tissue (postmortem) (Western blot and IHC) | Significant increases in pro-caspase-7 and 20 kD proteolytic fragment in TBI patients compared to controls |
| TBI (severe)[ | Caspase-8 | Acute phase of TBI | 17 patients (16-64 years, mean age 40±17 years) | Brain tissue (TBI, surgically removed) Brain tissue (control, postmortem) | Significant increases in caspase-8 mRNA and protein in TBI patients as compared to controls |
| TBI (severe)[ | Caspase-9 | 2-26 h (catheter placement) 24, 48 and 72 h (intervals) | 9 patients (18-62 years; median age, 40 years) | CSF (ELISA) | Cytochrome c was detected in 18 (51.4%) samples (0.44±0.632, mean±SD) |
| TBI (severe)[ | CCCK-18 | Admission | 100 patients | Serum >201 u/L | CCCK-18 levels are associated with 30-day mortality |
| TBI (severe)[ | SBDP120 | Acute | 12 TBI patients | CSF (ventricular) | Nonerythroid αII-spectrin and SBDPs occurred more frequently and their level was significantly higher in the CSF of TBI patients than in other pathological conditions associated with raised ICP |
| TBI (severe)[ | SBDP120 | 6, 12, 24, 48, 72, 96, and 120 h | 41 patients (18-67 years, mean age 38 years) | CSF | Calpain and caspase-3 mediated SBDP levels in CSF were significantly increased in TBI patients at several time points after injury as compared to control subjects. The time course of calpain-mediated SBDP150 and SBDP145 differed from that of caspase-3 mediated SBDP120 during the postinjury period examined. Mean SBDP densitometry values measured early after injury correlated with severity of injury, CT findings, and 6-month outcome |
| TBI (severe)[ | SBDP120 | Admission and every 6 h up to 7 days | 40 patients (18-82 years, mean age 41.5±3.17 years) | CSF >17.55 ng/mL | SBDP120 release was more accurate 24 h after injury. Within 24 h after injury, SBDP145 CSF concentrations significantly correlated with GCS scores, while SBDP120 levels correlated with age. SBDP levels were significantly higher in patients who died than in those who survived. SBDP145 levels (>6 ng/mL) and SBDP120 levels (>17.55 ng/mL) strongly predicted death |
| TBI (sport concussion)[ | Caspase - cleaved tau | 1, 12, 36 and 144 h | 288 adult ice hockey players (35 concussion) | Serum | Serum levels of caspase - cleaved tau were significantly higher in postconcussion samples compared with preseason |
IHC: Immunohistochemistry, PARP: Poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase, TUNEL: Transferase-mediated dUTP-digoxigenin nick end-labeling, p-JNK: Phosphorylated c-Jun N-terminal kinases, tPA: Tissue plasminogen activator, TNF-α: Tumor necrosis factor-alpha, qRT-PCR: Quantitative reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction, PKCS: Protein kinase catalytic subunit, MMP: Metalloproteinase, NIHSS: National Institute Health Stroke Scale, AD: Alzheimer's disease, SBDPs: Spectrin breakdown products, N/A: Not available, CCCK: Caspase-cleaved cytokeratin, IL-1β: Interleukin 1 beta, GOS: Glasgow Outcome Scale, WFNS: World Federation of Neurological Surgeon, CSF: Cerebrospinal fluid, SAH: Subarachnoid hemorrhage, TBI: Traumatic brain injury, GCS: Glasgow Coma Scale, NF-κB: Nuclear factor kappa B, OR: Odds ratio, CT: Computed tomography, SD: Standard deviation, IQRs: Interquartile ranges, ICP: Intracranial pressure, CI: Confidence interval, IVH: Intraventricular hemorrhage, RAGE: Receptor for advanced glycation end products, MAP-2: microtubule associated protein-2