| Literature DB >> 30842488 |
Axel Forsse1,2, Troels Halfeld Nielsen3,4, Kevin Heebøll Nygaard3,4, Carl-Henrik Nordström3,4, Jan Bert Gramsbergen4,5, Frantz Rom Poulsen3,4.
Abstract
Cerebral microdialysis can be used to detect mitochondrial dysfunction, a potential target of neuroprotective treatment. Cyclosporin A (CsA) is a mitochondrial stabiliser that in a recent clinical stroke trial showed protective potential in patients with successful recanalisation. To investigate specific metabolic effects of CsA during reperfusion, and hypothesising that microdialysis values can be used as a proxy outcome measure, we assessed the temporal patterns of cerebral energy substrates related to oxidative metabolism in a model of transient focal ischaemia. Transient ischaemia was induced by intracerebral microinjection of endothelin-1 (150 pmol/15 µL) through stereotaxically implanted guide cannulas in awake, freely moving rats. This was immediately followed by an intravenous injection of CsA (NeuroSTAT; 15 mg/kg) or placebo solution during continuous microdialysis monitoring. After reperfusion, the lactate/pyruvate ratio (LPR) was significantly lower in the CsA group vs placebo (n = 17, 60.6 ± 24.3%, p = 0.013). Total and striatal infarct volumes (mm3) were reduced in the treatment group (n = 31, 61.8 ± 6.0 vs 80.6 ± 6.7, p = 0.047 and 29.9 ± 3.5 vs 41.5 ± 3.9, p = 0.033). CsA treatment thus ameliorated cerebral reperfusion metabolism and infarct size. Cerebral microdialysis may be useful in evaluating putative neuroprotectants in ischaemic stroke.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30842488 PMCID: PMC6403404 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-40245-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Experiment timeline. Schematic timeline of the 3-day experiment reiterated with two animals per trial. On Day 1, 34 adult Sprague Dawley rats were stereotaxically implanted with two cerebral guides in the left hemisphere and a femoral vein access. On Day 2, the awake and freely moving rats were equipped with microinjection and microdialysis probes and attached to a balanced swivel. Continuous cerebral microdialysis was commenced, and dialysates were analysed every 15 min. When baseline values had stabilised, focal transient ischaemia was induced through intracerebral ET-1 microinjection followed by a randomised i.v. dose of CsA (15 mg/kg NeuroSTAT) or placebo solution. Microdialysis was continued for 5 hours, and after 24 hours rats were sacrificed for histological infarct volume estimation. CsA = cyclosporin A, ET-1 = endothelin-1.
Mean metabolite concentrations ± SEM of continuous cerebral microdialysis in the endothelin-1 rat model for animals treated with cyclosporin A (CsA) or placebo. Baseline concentrations of glucose, lactate, pyruvate and lactate/pyruvate ratio (LPR) and their mean percentage change from normalised baseline ± SEM (mixed effects regression model analysis) after reperfusion (time period 3–5 hours in Fig. 2). Dialysis perfusion flowrate −1 µl/min, 3 mm membrane length.
| Baseline | Glucose mmol/L | Lactate mmol/L | Pyruvate µmol/L | LPR ratio |
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| CsA ( | 0.30 ± 0.04 | 0.21 ± 0.02 | 27.5 ± 3.8 | 8.2 ± 0.8 |
| Placebo ( | 0.34 ± 0.05 | 0.19 ± 0.02 | 30.8 ± 5.2 | 7.0 ± 1.1 |
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| CsA ( | 113.7 ± 18.4 | 125.4 ± 24.5 | 100.5 ± 15.9 | 126.2 ± 24.3* |
| Placebo ( | 106.8 ± 14.3 | 168.9 ± 18.5 | 92.8 ± 12.0 | 186.8 ± 18.4 |
*Statistical significance compared to placebo (p = 0.013).
Figure 2Temporal patterns of microdialysis metabolite concentrations – treatment vs placebo. Timeline graphs with normalised baselines showing the dynamic changes of brain interstitial mean (±SEM) concentrations of main intermediate metabolites of the redox-state in CsA (n = 10) and placebo (n = 7) specimens. At 1 hour, transient cerebral ischaemia was induced through intracerebral microinjection of ET-1. (A) Glucose levels showed similar patterns of transient ischaemia/reperfusion in both groups. (B) Lactate levels were very similar in the two groups, with low variance and a tendency to lower post-ischaemic values in the treatment group. (C) Pyruvate levels with the characteristic dip and overshoot pattern of this model, with CsA-treated animals showing slightly higher values. (D) The primary outcome variable LPR showed a significant point difference of 60.6 ± 24.3% at 3–5 hours (p = 0.013, mixed effect regression analysis). CsA = cyclosporin A, ET-1 = endothelin-1, LPR = lactate/pyruvate ratio.
Figure 324-hour total and striatal infarct volumes – treatment vs placebo. Scatterplot with mean (±SEM) infarct volumes (mm3 in CsA (n = 17) and placebo (n = 14) groups. The two left columns show total infarct volume, the two right columns show the striatal infarct volumes alone. The infarct volume difference is significant for both total volume (61.8 ± 6.0 vs 80.6 ± 6.7, p = 0.047) and striatal volume (29.9 ± 3.5 vs 41.5 ± 3.9, p = 0.033).
Figure 4Representative micrographs of toluidine-stained rat brain sections – microdialysis and endothelin-1 probe placement. Representative toluidine blue-stained 30 µm rat brain sections with visible striatal and cortical infarcts and 5 mm scale bars. Arrows indicate the location of the microdialysis probe canal in the centre striatum (A) and the endothelin-1 probe canal in the piriform cortex (B).