Tenascin-C induction exacerbates post-stroke brain damage.
Bharath ChelluboinaAnil K ChokkallaSuresh L MehtaKahlilia C Morris-BlancoSaivenkateshkomal BathulaSneha SankarJin Soo ParkRaghavendar ChandranPublished in: Journal of cerebral blood flow and metabolism : official journal of the International Society of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism (2021)
The role of tenascin-C (TNC) in ischemic stroke pathology is not known despite its prognostic association with cerebrovascular diseases. Here, we investigated the effect of TNC knockdown on post-stroke brain damage and its putative mechanism of action in adult mice of both sexes. Male and female C57BL/6 mice were subjected to transient middle cerebral artery occlusion and injected (i.v.) with either TNC siRNA or a negative (non-targeting) siRNA at 5 min after reperfusion. Motor function (beam walk and rotarod tests) was assessed between days 1 and 14 of reperfusion. Infarct volume (T2-MRI), BBB damage (T1-MRI with contrast), and inflammatory markers were measured at 3 days of reperfusion. The TNC siRNA treated cohort showed significantly curtailed post-stroke TNC protein expression, motor dysfunction, infarction, BBB damage, and inflammation compared to the sex-matched negative siRNA treated cohort. These results demonstrate that the induction of TNC during the acute period after stroke might be a mediator of post-ischemic inflammation and secondary brain damage independent of sex.
Keyphrases
- cerebral ischemia
- oxidative stress
- blood brain barrier
- cancer therapy
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- middle cerebral artery
- acute myocardial infarction
- brain injury
- resting state
- magnetic resonance imaging
- white matter
- contrast enhanced
- ischemia reperfusion injury
- acute ischemic stroke
- magnetic resonance
- drug delivery
- heart failure
- metabolic syndrome
- functional connectivity
- high fat diet induced
- internal carotid artery
- percutaneous coronary intervention
- multiple sclerosis
- coronary artery disease
- skeletal muscle
- computed tomography
- drug induced
- left ventricular
- liver failure
- acute coronary syndrome
- mass spectrometry
- diffusion weighted imaging
- intensive care unit
- single molecule
- hepatitis b virus