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SDF1-A Facilitates Lin−/Sca1+ Cell Homing following Murine Experimental Cerebral Ischemia

BACKGROUND: Hematopoietic stem cells mobilize to the peripheral circulation in response to stroke. However, the mechanism by which the brain initiates this mobilization is uncharacterized. METHODS: Animals underwent a murine intraluminal filament model of focal cerebral ischemia and the SDF1-A pathw...

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Autores principales: Mocco, J., Afzal, Aqeela, Ansari, Saeed, Wolfe, Annemarie, Caldwell, Kenneth, Connolly, E S., Scott, Edward W.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3896412/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24465621
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0085615
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author Mocco, J.
Afzal, Aqeela
Ansari, Saeed
Wolfe, Annemarie
Caldwell, Kenneth
Connolly, E S.
Scott, Edward W.
author_facet Mocco, J.
Afzal, Aqeela
Ansari, Saeed
Wolfe, Annemarie
Caldwell, Kenneth
Connolly, E S.
Scott, Edward W.
author_sort Mocco, J.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Hematopoietic stem cells mobilize to the peripheral circulation in response to stroke. However, the mechanism by which the brain initiates this mobilization is uncharacterized. METHODS: Animals underwent a murine intraluminal filament model of focal cerebral ischemia and the SDF1-A pathway was evaluated in a blinded manner via serum and brain SDF1-A level assessment, Lin−/Sca1+ cell mobilization quantification, and exogenous cell migration confirmation; all with or without SDF1-A blockade. RESULTS: Bone marrow demonstrated a significant increase in Lin−/Sca1+ cell counts at 24 hrs (272±60%; P<0.05 vs sham). Mobilization of Lin−/Sca1+ cells to blood was significantly elevated at 24 hrs (607±159%; P<0.05). Serum SDF1-A levels were significant at 24 hrs (Sham (103±14), 4 hrs (94±20%, p = NS) and 24 hrs (130±17; p<0.05)). Brain SDF1-A levels were significantly elevated at both 4 hrs and 24 hrs (113±7 pg/ml and 112±10 pg/ml, respectively; p<0.05 versus sham 76±11 pg/ml). Following administration of an SDF1-A antibody, Lin−/Sca1+ cells failed to mobilize to peripheral blood following stroke, despite continued up regulation in bone marrow (stroke bone marrow cell count: 536±65, blood cell count: 127±24; p<0.05 versus placebo). Exogenously administered Lin−/Sca1+ cells resulted in a significant reduction in infarct volume: 42±5% (stroke alone), versus 21±15% (Stroke+Lin−/Sca1+ cells), and administration of an SDF1-A antibody concomitant to exogenous administration of the Lin−/Sca1+ cells prevented this reduction. Following stroke, exogenously administered Lin−/Sca1+ FISH positive cells were significantly reduced when administered concomitant to an SDF1-A antibody as compared to without SDF1-A antibody (10±4 vs 0.7±1, p<0.05). CONCLUSIONS: SDF1-A appears to play a critical role in modulating Lin−/Sca1+ cell migration to ischemic brain.
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spelling pubmed-38964122014-01-24 SDF1-A Facilitates Lin−/Sca1+ Cell Homing following Murine Experimental Cerebral Ischemia Mocco, J. Afzal, Aqeela Ansari, Saeed Wolfe, Annemarie Caldwell, Kenneth Connolly, E S. Scott, Edward W. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Hematopoietic stem cells mobilize to the peripheral circulation in response to stroke. However, the mechanism by which the brain initiates this mobilization is uncharacterized. METHODS: Animals underwent a murine intraluminal filament model of focal cerebral ischemia and the SDF1-A pathway was evaluated in a blinded manner via serum and brain SDF1-A level assessment, Lin−/Sca1+ cell mobilization quantification, and exogenous cell migration confirmation; all with or without SDF1-A blockade. RESULTS: Bone marrow demonstrated a significant increase in Lin−/Sca1+ cell counts at 24 hrs (272±60%; P<0.05 vs sham). Mobilization of Lin−/Sca1+ cells to blood was significantly elevated at 24 hrs (607±159%; P<0.05). Serum SDF1-A levels were significant at 24 hrs (Sham (103±14), 4 hrs (94±20%, p = NS) and 24 hrs (130±17; p<0.05)). Brain SDF1-A levels were significantly elevated at both 4 hrs and 24 hrs (113±7 pg/ml and 112±10 pg/ml, respectively; p<0.05 versus sham 76±11 pg/ml). Following administration of an SDF1-A antibody, Lin−/Sca1+ cells failed to mobilize to peripheral blood following stroke, despite continued up regulation in bone marrow (stroke bone marrow cell count: 536±65, blood cell count: 127±24; p<0.05 versus placebo). Exogenously administered Lin−/Sca1+ cells resulted in a significant reduction in infarct volume: 42±5% (stroke alone), versus 21±15% (Stroke+Lin−/Sca1+ cells), and administration of an SDF1-A antibody concomitant to exogenous administration of the Lin−/Sca1+ cells prevented this reduction. Following stroke, exogenously administered Lin−/Sca1+ FISH positive cells were significantly reduced when administered concomitant to an SDF1-A antibody as compared to without SDF1-A antibody (10±4 vs 0.7±1, p<0.05). CONCLUSIONS: SDF1-A appears to play a critical role in modulating Lin−/Sca1+ cell migration to ischemic brain. Public Library of Science 2014-01-20 /pmc/articles/PMC3896412/ /pubmed/24465621 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0085615 Text en © 2014 Mocco et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Mocco, J.
Afzal, Aqeela
Ansari, Saeed
Wolfe, Annemarie
Caldwell, Kenneth
Connolly, E S.
Scott, Edward W.
SDF1-A Facilitates Lin−/Sca1+ Cell Homing following Murine Experimental Cerebral Ischemia
title SDF1-A Facilitates Lin−/Sca1+ Cell Homing following Murine Experimental Cerebral Ischemia
title_full SDF1-A Facilitates Lin−/Sca1+ Cell Homing following Murine Experimental Cerebral Ischemia
title_fullStr SDF1-A Facilitates Lin−/Sca1+ Cell Homing following Murine Experimental Cerebral Ischemia
title_full_unstemmed SDF1-A Facilitates Lin−/Sca1+ Cell Homing following Murine Experimental Cerebral Ischemia
title_short SDF1-A Facilitates Lin−/Sca1+ Cell Homing following Murine Experimental Cerebral Ischemia
title_sort sdf1-a facilitates lin−/sca1+ cell homing following murine experimental cerebral ischemia
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3896412/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24465621
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0085615
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