| Literature DB >> 33496918 |
Carolin Beuker1, Jan-Kolja Strecker1, Rajesh Rawal2, Antje Schmidt-Pogoda1, Tobias Ruck1, Heinz Wiendl1, Luisa Klotz1, Wolf-Rüdiger Schäbitz3, Clemens J Sommer4, Heike Minnerup2, Sven G Meuth1, Jens Minnerup5.
Abstract
Although several studies have suggested that anti-inflammatory strategies reduce secondary infarct growth in animal stroke models, clinical studies have not yet demonstrated a clear benefit of immune modulation in patients. Potential reasons include systematic differences of post-ischemic neuroinflammation between humans and rodents. We here performed a systematic review and meta-analysis to summarize and compare the spatial and temporal distribution of immune cell infiltration in human and rodent stroke. Data on spatiotemporal distribution of immune cells (T cells, macrophages, and neutrophils) and infarct volume were extracted. Data from all rodent studies were pooled by means of a random-effect meta-analysis. Overall, 20 human and 188 rodent stroke studies were included in our analyses. In both patients and rodents, the infiltration of macrophages and neutrophils preceded the lymphocytic influx. Macrophages and neutrophils were the predominant immune cells within 72 h after infarction. Although highly heterogeneously across studies, the temporal profile of the poststroke immune response was comparable between patients and rodents. In rodent stroke, the extent of the immune cell infiltration depended on the duration and location of vessel occlusion and on the species. The density of infiltrating immune cells correlated with the infarct volume. In summary, we provide the first systematic analysis and comparison of human and rodent post-ischemic neuroinflammation. Our data suggest that the inflammatory response in rodent stroke models is comparable to that in patients with stroke. However, the overall heterogeneity of the post-ischemic immune response might contribute to the translational failure in stroke research.Entities:
Keywords: Immune cell infiltration; Inflammation; Ischemic stroke; Meta-analysis
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33496918 PMCID: PMC8557159 DOI: 10.1007/s12975-021-00887-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transl Stroke Res ISSN: 1868-4483 Impact factor: 6.829
Baseline characteristics of included human stroke studies
| Study | Brain tissue source | Onset of stroke to death mean (range) | Assessed region | Evaluated cells (assessment method) | Age (years) mean ± SD (range) | % female | Vascular territory | Stroke etiology | Cause of death | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sörnäs [ | 5 | Autopsy | 4,4 days (2–6 days) | Infarcted area | Neutrophils (hematoxylin-eosin staining) | 77 (69–85) | NS | NS | NS | NS |
| Barcikowska-Litwin et al. [ | 17 | Autopsy | 83 days (5 days–> 3 years) | Infarcted area | Macrophages NS | 78 (50–87) | 60 | NS | NS | Pulmonary embolism ( |
| Esiri and Morris [ | 3 | Autopsy | Recent or old | Lesion core and | Macrophages (Mac387 IHC, KP1 IHC) | NS (NS) | NS | NS | NS | NS |
| Chuaqui and Tapia [ | 30 | Autopsy | 8,7 days (16 h–27 days) | Perilesional area | Macrophages, neutrophils NS | 65 (44–83) | 67 | ACM ( | Embolic ( | NS |
| Krupinski et al. [ | 10 | Autopsy | NS (3 days–17 days) | Lesion core and | Macrophages (CD68 IHC) | NS (51–81) | NS | Left MCA | NS | NS |
| Lindsberg et al. [ | 11 | Autopsy | 6 days (15 h–18 days) | Perilesional area | Neutrophils (CD15 IHC) | 67 (46–79) | 45 | ACI ( | NS | Stroke-related events (i.e., severe brain edema; |
| Postler et al. [ | 18 | Autopsy | NS (<24 h–months) | Perilesional area | Macrophages (CD68 IHC) | 66 ± 15,1 (52–86) | 67 | MCA ( | NS | NS |
| Schwab et al. [ | 20 | Autopsy | NS (1 day–months) | Infarcted area | Macrophages, neutrophils (NS) | 79 (52–87) | 60 | MCA ( | NS | NS |
| Beschorner et al. [ | 18 | Autopsy | NS (1 day–months) | Lesion core and perilesional area | Microglia/macrophages (CD14 IHC) | 70 (52–87) | 61 | MCA ( | NS | NS |
| Mena et al. [ | 137 | Autopsy or surgical material | NS (1 day–53 years) | Infarcted area | Macrophages, neutrophils (NS) | 67 (7–93) | 24 | Cerebral ( | NS | NS |
| Mărgăritescu et al. [ | 22 | Autopsy | NS (1 day–53 years) | Infarcted area | Macrophages, neutrophils (CD68 IHC) | 62 (27–91) | 32 | Left MCA ( | NS | NS |
| Yilmaz et al. [ | 29 | Autopsy | NS (< 24 h–> 4 h) | Infarcted area | Lymphocytes (CD3 IHC) | NS (NS) | NS | NS | NS | NS |
| Arsene et al. [ | 21 | Autopsy | 35,4 h (6 h–11,7 days) | Lesion core and | Lymphocytes, macrophages, neutrophils (CD20/L26 IHC, UCHL-1 ICH, CD68 IHC, CD15 IHC) | 74 ± 14,4 (18–86) | 48 | MCA ( | Large vessel thrombosis or cardioembolic mechanism | NS |
| Holfelder et al. [ | 30 | Autopsy | NS (6 h–2,6 years) | Perilesional area | Microglia/macrophages (CD163 IHC) | 68 (32–86) | 63 | NS | NS | NS |
| Enzmann et al. [ | 25 | Autopsy or surgical material | NS (< 48 h -chronic stage stroke) | Infarcted area | Macrophages, neutrophils (CD68 IHC, CD15 + MPO + chloroacetate esterase IHC) | 65 (45–86) | 52 | NS | NS | Cerebral infarction ( |
| Perez-de-Puig et al. [ | 3 | Autopsy | NS (1 day–5 days) | Lesion core and perilesional area | Neutrophils (neutrophil elastase staining) | 85 (79–89) | 67 | Left MCA ( | Cardioembolic ( | NS |
| Nguyen et al. [ | 7 | Autopsy | Stage of liquefactive necrosis | Infarcted area | Lymphocytes (CD4 IHC, CD8 IHC, CD20 IHC) | 87 (77–106) | NS | NS | NS | NS |
| Feng et al. [ | 5 | Autopsy | NS (7 days–14 days) | Infarcted area | Lymphocytes (CD4 ICH, CD8 ICH) | 76,2 | 60 | NS | NS | NS |
| Li et al. [ | 6 | Autopsy | NS (3 days–7 days) | Perilesional area | Lymphocytes (CD8 IHC) | 82 ± 9(SEM) | 33 | MCA ( | NS | NS |
| Zrzavy et al. [ | 16 | Autopsy | NS (1 day–240 days) | Lesion core and perilesional area | Lymphocytes, macrophages, neutrophils (CD3 IHC, CD68 IHC, p22phox IHC) | 81,06 ± 10,1 (66–97) | 56 | NS | Small-vessel occlusion ( | Cardiac arrest ( |
ACA, anterior cerebral artery; ACI, internal carotid artery; MCA, middle cerebral artery; OLA, occipital lobe artery; PCA, posterior cerebral artery; BA, basilar artery; IHC, immunohistochemistry, SD, standard deviation; NS, not specified
Spatiotemporal distribution of immune cells in human stroke studies
| Study | Analyzed region | Days after stroke onset | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 7–14 | 14–28 | > 28 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Measure | Cell quantification or description of immune cell infiltration (number of analyzed patients, | |||||||||||
| Feng et al. [ | Infarcted area | Mean ± SEM (cells/mm2) | 26,16 ± 4a, n = 5 | |||||||||
| Feng et al. [ | Infarcted area | Mean ± SEM (cells/mm2) | 57,46 ± 8,03b, n = 5 | |||||||||
| Li et al. [ | Peri-infarct region | Mean ± SEM (cells/mm2) | 112,644 ± 36,18a, n = 6 | |||||||||
| Zrzavy et al. [ | Infarcted area | Median (cells/mm2) | 3,73d, n = 9 | |||||||||
| Nguyen et al. [ | Infarcted area | Mean ± SEM (cells/mm2) | 4,03 ± 3,04a, n = 7 | |||||||||
| Nguyen et al. [ | Infarcted area | Mean ± SEM (cells/mm2) | 1,71 ± 1,16b, n = 7 | |||||||||
| Nguyen et al. [ | Infarcted area | Mean ± SEM (cells/mm2) | 1,43 ± 2,21c, n = 7 | |||||||||
| Yilmaz et al. [ | Infarcted area | Mean ± SEM (cells/mm2) | 54,4 ± 10,48d, | 30,36 ± 6,12d, n = 12 | ||||||||
| Arsene et al. [ | No lymphocytes accumulated adjacent to the infarcted area or remote to it, n = 21 | |||||||||||
| Krupinski et al. [ | Numerous single lymphocytes accumulate around blood vessels, n = 10 | |||||||||||
| Zrzavy et al. [ | Ischemic core | Median (cells/mm2) | 30,65, n = 9 | |||||||||
| Zrzavy et al. [ | Peri-infarct region | Median (cells/mm2) | 211,58, n = 9 | |||||||||
| Perez-de-Puig et al. [ | Ischemic core, perivascular | Mean ± SEM (cells per area in brain sections) | 0,13 ± 0,13, n = 3 | |||||||||
| Perez-de-Puig et al. [ | Penumbra, perivascular | Mean ± SEM (cells per area in brain sections) | 0, n = 3 | |||||||||
| Perez-de-Puig et al. [ | Ischemic core, extravascular | Mean ± SEM (cells per area in brain sections) | 0,16 ± 0,12, n = 3 | |||||||||
| Perez-de-Puig et al. [ | Penumbra, extravascular | Mean ± SEM (positive cells per area in brain sections) | 0,23 ± 0,12, n = 3 | |||||||||
| Lindsberg et al. [ | Ischemic core | Mean (cells/mm2) | 5,32, n = 1 | 51,48, n = 3 | 2,15, n = 1 | 14,53, n = 1 | 0, n = 1 | 3,14, n = 1 | 2,41, n = 1 | |||
| Lindsberg et al. [ | Peri-infarct region | Mean (cells/mm2) | 11,61, n = 1 | 42,5, n = 3 | 106,98, n = 1 | 9,2, n = 1 | 29,79, n = 1 | 0,25, n = 1 | 4,84, n = 1 | |||
| Mărgăritescu et al. [ | Infarcted area | Positive cases | 1, n = 2 | 4, n = 20 | ||||||||
| Mena et al. [ | Infarcted area | Positive cases | 6, n = 11 | 25, n = 126 | ||||||||
| Chuaqui and Tapia [ | Ischemic core and peri-infarct region | Median (range), degree of infiltration: none (−), mild (+), moderate (++), strong (+++)) | + (0 to ++), n = 3 | +++ (++ bis +++), n = 2 | ++ (++ to +++), n = 3 | + (+ to ++), n = 3 | ++ (+ to ++), n = 2 | + (+), n = 1 | + (+), n = 2 | 0 (0 to +), n = 9 | 0 (0), n = 6 | |
| Sörnäs [ | Brain parenchyma | Median (range), degree of infiltration: none (−), mild (+), moderate (++), strong (+++)) | + (+), n = 1 | + (+), n = 1 | ++ (+ to ++), n = 2 | ++ (++), n = 1 | ||||||
| Enzmann et al. [ | Infarcted area | Descriptive | Very few in early infarct stages and at stages of resorption, majority localized within the lumen of blood vessels or in the perivascular space, no neutrophils in the inner cortical layers or in the infarct center and border zones, neutrophils remained confined to vessel lumina, n = 25 | |||||||||
| Arsene et al. [ | Peri-infarct region | Descriptive | No polymorphonuclear cells accumulated adjacent to the infarcted area or remote to it, n = 21 | |||||||||
| Schwab et al. [ | Infarcted area | Descriptive | Rare, n = 1 | Rare, n = 2 Moderate, n = 1 | Moderate, n = 1 | Moderate, n = 1 | ||||||
| Krupinski et al. [ | Infarcted area | Descriptive | Numerous neutrophils accumulate around blood vessels, n = 10 | |||||||||
| Zrzavy et al. [ | Ischemic core | Median (cells/mm2) | 71,13, n = 9 | |||||||||
| Zrzavy et al. [ | Peri-infarct region | Median (cells/mm2) | 11,63, n = 9 | |||||||||
| Holfelder et al. [ | Ischemic core | Median (cells/mm2) | 1,65, n = 5 | 39,39, n = 10 | 968,21, n = 8 | |||||||
| Holfelder et al. [ | Peri-infarct region | Median (cells/mm2) | 6,56, n = 5 | 12,58, n = 10 | 227,55, n = 8 | |||||||
| Beschorner et al. [ | Ischemic core | Mean ± SEM (cells/mm2) | 43,2 ± 6,4, n = 18 | |||||||||
| Beschorner et al. [ | Peri-infarct region | Mean ± SEM (cells/mm2) | 11,2 ± 1,6, n = 18 | |||||||||
| Mărgăritescu et al. [ | Infarcted area | Positive cases | 0, n = 2 | 16, n = 20 | ||||||||
| Mena et al. [ | Infarcted area | Positive cases | 0, n = 11 | 103, n = 126 | ||||||||
| Postler et al. [ | Peri-infarct region | Mean ± SD (cells/mm2) | 54 ± 28,8, n = 10 | 92,4 ± 27,2, n = 8 | ||||||||
| Chuaqui and Tapia [ | Ischemic core and peri-infarct region | Median (range): slight (+), moderate (++), intense (+++) | 0 (0), n = 3 | 0 (0), n = 2 | 0 (0), n = 3 | 0, n = 3 | ++, + bis ++, n = 2 | + (+), n = 1 | + (+), n = 2 | ++ (++ bis +++), n = 9 | ++ (++ bis +++), n = 6 | |
| Esiri and Morris [ | Ischemic core and peri-infarct region | Median (range): 1 = rare; 2 = few; 3 = many; 4 = numerous, recent or old (= several weeks) lesion | 2 (2–4), n = 2 | 2 (1–3), n = 1 | ||||||||
| Barcikowska-Litwin et al. [ | Infarcted area | Median (range): small (+), moderate (++), severe number (+++) | + (+), n = 1 | ++ (0 to +++), n = 6 | ++ (+ to +++), n = 6 | + (0 to +++), n = 4 | ||||||
| Enzmann et al. [ | Infarcted area | Descriptive | Mainly in the perivascular space or brain parenchyma, low amount of extravasated cells, n = 8 | |||||||||
| Arsene et al. [ | Ischemic core and peri-infarct region | Descriptive | Present in large number in the necrotic areas or immediately adjacent to these in long standing stroke cases higher amount in the penumbra than in the contralateral symmetric or remote, unaffected areas, n = 21 | |||||||||
| Schwab et al. [ | Infarcted area | Descriptive | Macrophages, n = 1 | Macrophages, n = 3 | Dense/moderate density, n = 4 | |||||||
| Krupinski et al. [ | Infarcted area | Descriptive | In the core of the infarct and the surrounding area, in the infarcted area numerous macrophages accumulate around blood vessels, n = 10 | |||||||||
SD, standard deviation; SEM, standard error of the mean. aCD8+ lymphocytes; bCD4+ lymphocytes; cCD20+ lymphocytes ; dCD3+ lymphocytes
Fig. 1Temporal and quantitative characterization of immune cell infiltration in rodent stroke at days 1–7 after induction of ischemia. Flow cytometric analysis of the ipsilateral brain hemisphere (a) and histological analysis (b infarct core, c penumbra) showing the absolute numbers (bare circles) of infiltrating immune cells (macrophages, neutrophils, and T cells) in the ischemic hemisphere in rats (blue) and mice (green). Meta-analyzed data are shown as mean with higher and lower 95% confidence interval. In case of negative confidence intervals, lower confidence limits are not shown. For clarity, data are shown as data of 10 (logarithmic scale)
Fig. 2Immune cell infiltration in relation to animal stroke model at days 1–7 after induction of ischemia. Flow cytometric analysis of the ipsilateral brain hemisphere (a) and histological analysis (b infarct core, c penumbra) showing the absolute numbers of infiltrating immune cells (macrophages, neutrophils, and T cells) in the ischemic hemisphere for each type of ischemia: distal permanent (bare triangle), proximal transient (bare circle), distal transient (bare square), and proximal permanent (bare rhombus). Meta-analyzed data are shown as mean with higher and lower 95% confidence interval (red). In case of negative confidence intervals, lower confidence limits are not shown
Fig. 3Meta-regression analysis of the association between immune cell density of macrophages/microglia, neutrophils, or T cells and infarct volume 1–42 days after induction of ischemia. Due to the significant difference in infarct size, values for mice (a) and rats (b) are calculated separately. Values represent numbers of immune cells/mm3 in the infarct core and infarct volume in mm3
Fig. 4Schematics of temporal profile of immune cell infiltration in rodent (a, b, c) and human (b) stroke. Curves are created from data obtained from this study. In rodent stroke, numbers of immune cells are graphically calculated from the original data of histological (cells/mm3; a, b) and of FACS analysis (cells per ischemic hemisphere; c)