Cold stress protein RBM3 responds to hypothermia and is associated with good stroke outcome.
Paulo Ávila-GómezAlba Vieites-PradoAntonio Dopico-LópezSaima BashirHéctor Fernández-SusavilaCarme GubernMaría Pérez-MatoClara Correa-PazRamón Iglesias-ReyTomás SobrinoAlejandro BustamanteSven WellmannJoan MontanerJoaquín SerenaJosé CastilloPablo HervellaFrancisco CamposPublished in: Brain communications (2020)
RNA-binding motif protein 3 is a molecular marker of hypothermia that has proved neuroprotective in neurodegenerative disease models. However, its relationship to the well-recognized therapeutic effect of hypothermia in ischaemic stroke had not been studied. In this work, the expression of RNA-binding motif protein 3 was investigated in ischaemic animal models subjected to systemic and focal brain hypothermia, specifically the effects of RNA-binding motif protein 3 silencing and overexpression on ischaemic lesions. Moreover, the association of RNA-binding motif protein 3 levels with body temperature and clinical outcome was evaluated in two independent cohorts of acute ischaemic stroke patients (n = 215); these levels were also determined in a third cohort of 31 patients derived from the phase III EuroHYP-1 trial of therapeutic cooling in ischaemic stroke. The preclinical data confirmed the increase of brain RNA-binding motif protein 3 levels in ischaemic animals subjected to systemic and focal hypothermia; this increase was selectively higher in the cooled hemisphere of animals undergoing focal brain hypothermia, thus confirming the direct effect of hypothermia on RNA-binding motif protein 3 expression, while RNA-binding motif protein 3 up-regulation in ischaemic brain regions led to functional recovery. Clinically, patients with body temperature <37.5°C in the first two cohorts had higher RNA-binding motif protein 3 values at 24 h and good outcome at 3 months post-ischaemic stroke, while RNA-binding motif protein 3 levels in the cooled third cohort tended to exceed those in placebo-treated patients. These results make RNA-binding motif protein 3 a molecular marker associated with the effect of hypothermia in ischaemic stroke and suggest its potential application as a promising protective target.
Keyphrases
- binding protein
- cardiac arrest
- protein protein
- phase iii
- brain injury
- end stage renal disease
- chronic kidney disease
- dna binding
- newly diagnosed
- ejection fraction
- clinical trial
- atrial fibrillation
- white matter
- machine learning
- small molecule
- liver failure
- prognostic factors
- mass spectrometry
- cell proliferation
- study protocol
- electronic health record
- bone marrow
- stress induced
- acute respiratory distress syndrome
- mesenchymal stem cells
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- extracorporeal membrane oxygenation
- respiratory failure