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Tissue-type plasminogen activator is a neuroprotectant in the mouse hippocampus
Ramiro Echeverry, … , Johanna Guzman, Manuel Yepes
Ramiro Echeverry, … , Johanna Guzman, Manuel Yepes
Published May 3, 2010
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2010;120(6):2194-2205. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI41722.
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Research Article Neuroscience

Tissue-type plasminogen activator is a neuroprotectant in the mouse hippocampus

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Abstract

The best-known function of the serine protease tissue-type plasminogen activator (tPA) is as a thrombolytic enzyme. However, it is also found in structures of the brain that are highly vulnerable to hypoxia-induced cell death, where its association with neuronal survival is poorly understood. Here, we have demonstrated that hippocampal areas of the mouse brain lacking tPA activity are more vulnerable to neuronal death following an ischemic insult. We found that sublethal hypoxia, which elicits tolerance to subsequent lethal hypoxic/ischemic injury in a natural process known as ischemic preconditioning (IPC), induced a rapid release of neuronal tPA. Treatment of hippocampal neurons with tPA induced tolerance against a lethal hypoxic insult applied either immediately following insult (early IPC) or 24 hours later (delayed IPC). tPA-induced early IPC was independent of the proteolytic activity of tPA and required the engagement of a member of the LDL receptor family. In contrast, tPA-induced delayed IPC required the proteolytic activity of tPA and was mediated by plasmin, the NMDA receptor, and PKB phosphorylation. We also found that IPC in vivo increased tPA activity in the cornu ammonis area 1 (CA1) layer and Akt phosphorylation in the hippocampus, as well as ischemic tolerance in wild-type but not tPA- or plasminogen-deficient mice. These data show that tPA can act as an endogenous neuroprotectant in the murine hippocampus.

Authors

Ramiro Echeverry, Jialing Wu, Woldeab B. Haile, Johanna Guzman, Manuel Yepes

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Figure 2

Time-dependent effect of hypoxia on neuronal death.

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Time-dependent effect of hypoxia on neuronal death.
Hippocampal (A–C) an...
Hippocampal (A–C) and cortical neurons (D–F) were exposed to OGD conditions during 0, 15, 30, and 60 minutes, followed by quantification of cell death at each time point by fluorometry (LIVE/DEAD Viability assay; A and D) or Trypan blue staining (C and F) and determination of cell survival with the MTT assay (B and E). Values in A, C, D, and F are given as percentage of dead cells relative to the total number of cells per field. Values in B and E are given as percentage compared with cell survival in neurons maintained under normoxic conditions. Error bars denote SD. *P < 0.05 compared with cells maintained under OGD for 0–30 minutes. n = 6–12 observations for each experiment.

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