Genomics of Preconditioning
- 1 November 2004
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Stroke
- Vol. 35 (11_suppl_1) , 2683-2686
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.str.0000143735.89281.bb
Abstract
Brief episodes of ischemia can protect against subsequent damaging ischemic events; however, the molecular mechanisms responsible for protection are poorly understood. Identifying genes involved in this process could provide insight into cell survival and treatment of stroke. We developed a murine model of ischemic preconditioning and subsequent stroke and used gene expression profiling to identify genes that may be involved in neuroprotective pathways. Middle cerebral artery occlusions were performed in mice for 15 minutes. (preconditioning), 60 minutes (stroke), or 15 minutes, followed 72 hours later with 60 minutes (preconditioning plus stroke) of middle cerebral artery occlusions. RNA from a region of cortex that is protected by ischemic preconditioning was hybridized to oligonucleotide microarrays. Follow-up experiments used patch clamp to examine cell conductance in cultured neurons exposed to oxygen–glucose deprivation. Stroke, ischemic preconditioning, and ischemic preconditioning plus stroke all induced gene changes that overlapped little among conditions. Stroke induced robust upregulation of gene expression whereas preconditioning followed by stroke resulted in a marked downregulation. Genes upregulated by stroke suggested activation of stress/inflammatory pathways and increased metabolism and ion channel function. Preconditioning tended to decrease genes involved in these pathways. Follow-up experiments show that preconditioning decreased voltage-gated potassium currents in vitro and increased bleeding time. Preconditioning reprograms the response to ischemic injury via transcriptional changes that may suppress metabolic pathways and immune responses, reduce ion channel activity, and decrease blood coagulation. These changes resemble evolutionarily conserved responses to decreased blood flow and oxygen availability that occur during hibernation.Keywords
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- Ischemic Preconditioning From Transient Ischemic Attacks?Stroke, 2004
- Transient Ischemic Attacks Before Ischemic Stroke: Preconditioning the Human Brain?Stroke, 2004
- Effect of ischaemic preconditioning on genomic response to cerebral ischaemia: similarity to neuroprotective strategies in hibernation and hypoxia-tolerant statesThe Lancet, 2003
- Neuroprotective adaptations in hibernation: therapeutic implications for ischemia-reperfusion, traumatic brain injury and neurodegenerative diseasesFree Radical Biology & Medicine, 2001
- Gene Ontology: tool for the unification of biologyNature Genetics, 2000
- Temporal modulation of cytokine expression following focal cerebral ischemia in miceBrain Research, 1999
- Unifying theory of hypoxia tolerance: molecular/metabolic defense and rescue mechanisms for surviving oxygen lack.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1996
- Local Cerebral Blood Flow during Hibernation, a Model of Natural Tolerance to “Cerebral Ischemia”Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow & Metabolism, 1994
- Prior ischemic stress protects against experimental strokeNeuroscience Letters, 1993
- Metabolic Rate Depression and Biochemical Adaptation in Anaerobiosis, Hibernation and EstivationThe Quarterly Review of Biology, 1990