Cargando…

A labeling strategy for the three-dimensional recognition and analysis of microvascular obstruction in ischemic stroke

Rationale: Large vessel recanalization in ischemic stroke does not always go along with tissue reperfusion, a phenomenon called “no-reflow”. However, knowledge of the mechanism of no-reflow is limited because identifying microvascular obstruction across the cortex and subcortex both in clinical and...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Li, Yusha, Xu, Jianyi, Yu, Tingting, Zhu, Jingtan, Xuan, Ang, Liu, Xiaomei, Wang, Pingfu, Li, Dongyu, Zhu, Dan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Ivyspring International Publisher 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9800741/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36593967
http://dx.doi.org/10.7150/thno.76879
_version_ 1784861349064474624
author Li, Yusha
Xu, Jianyi
Yu, Tingting
Zhu, Jingtan
Xuan, Ang
Liu, Xiaomei
Wang, Pingfu
Li, Dongyu
Zhu, Dan
author_facet Li, Yusha
Xu, Jianyi
Yu, Tingting
Zhu, Jingtan
Xuan, Ang
Liu, Xiaomei
Wang, Pingfu
Li, Dongyu
Zhu, Dan
author_sort Li, Yusha
collection PubMed
description Rationale: Large vessel recanalization in ischemic stroke does not always go along with tissue reperfusion, a phenomenon called “no-reflow”. However, knowledge of the mechanism of no-reflow is limited because identifying microvascular obstruction across the cortex and subcortex both in clinical and experimental models is challenging. In this study, we developed a smart three-dimensional recognition pipeline for microvascular obstruction during post-ischemia reperfusion to examine the underlying mechanism of no-reflow. Methods: Transient (60 min) occlusion of the middle cerebral artery (tMCAo) in mice was induced using a filament. Two different fluorophore-conjugated tomato lectins were injected into mice via the tail vein before and after ischemia/reperfusion (I/R), respectively, one to label all blood vessels and the other to label functional blood vessels. Post-I/R microvascular obstruction was visualized using combined iDISCO+-based tissue clearing and optical imaging. Arterioles and capillaries were distinguished using whole-mount immunolabeling with an anti-αSMA antibody. Circulating neutrophils were depleted utilizing an anti-Ly6G antibody. Brain slices were immunostained with the anti-Ly6G antibody to identify co-localized blockage points and neutrophils. MATLAB software was used to quantify the capillary diameters in the ipsilateral brain from the normal and tMCAo mice. Results: Microcirculatory reperfusion deficit worsened over time after I/R. Microvascular obstruction occurred not only in arterioles but also in capillaries, with capillary obstruction associated with local capillary lumen narrowing. In addition, the depletion of circulating neutrophils mitigated reperfusion deficit to a large extent after I/R. The co-localization of blockage points and neutrophils revealed that some neutrophils plugged capillaries with coexisting capillary lumen narrowing and that no neutrophil was trapped in heaps of blockage points. Quantification of the capillary diameter showed that capillary lumen shrunk after I/R but returned to typical measurements when intravascular neutrophils were depleted. Conclusions: According to our findings, both vascular lumen narrowing and neutrophil trapping in cerebral microcirculation are the key causes of microvascular obstruction after I/R. Also, the primary contribution by neutrophils to microvascular obstruction does not occur through microemboli plugging but rather via the exacerbation of capillary lumen narrowing. Our proposed method will help monitor microcirculatory reperfusion deficit, explore the mechanism of no-reflow, and evaluate the curative effect of drugs targeting no-reflow.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9800741
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher Ivyspring International Publisher
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-98007412023-01-01 A labeling strategy for the three-dimensional recognition and analysis of microvascular obstruction in ischemic stroke Li, Yusha Xu, Jianyi Yu, Tingting Zhu, Jingtan Xuan, Ang Liu, Xiaomei Wang, Pingfu Li, Dongyu Zhu, Dan Theranostics Research Paper Rationale: Large vessel recanalization in ischemic stroke does not always go along with tissue reperfusion, a phenomenon called “no-reflow”. However, knowledge of the mechanism of no-reflow is limited because identifying microvascular obstruction across the cortex and subcortex both in clinical and experimental models is challenging. In this study, we developed a smart three-dimensional recognition pipeline for microvascular obstruction during post-ischemia reperfusion to examine the underlying mechanism of no-reflow. Methods: Transient (60 min) occlusion of the middle cerebral artery (tMCAo) in mice was induced using a filament. Two different fluorophore-conjugated tomato lectins were injected into mice via the tail vein before and after ischemia/reperfusion (I/R), respectively, one to label all blood vessels and the other to label functional blood vessels. Post-I/R microvascular obstruction was visualized using combined iDISCO+-based tissue clearing and optical imaging. Arterioles and capillaries were distinguished using whole-mount immunolabeling with an anti-αSMA antibody. Circulating neutrophils were depleted utilizing an anti-Ly6G antibody. Brain slices were immunostained with the anti-Ly6G antibody to identify co-localized blockage points and neutrophils. MATLAB software was used to quantify the capillary diameters in the ipsilateral brain from the normal and tMCAo mice. Results: Microcirculatory reperfusion deficit worsened over time after I/R. Microvascular obstruction occurred not only in arterioles but also in capillaries, with capillary obstruction associated with local capillary lumen narrowing. In addition, the depletion of circulating neutrophils mitigated reperfusion deficit to a large extent after I/R. The co-localization of blockage points and neutrophils revealed that some neutrophils plugged capillaries with coexisting capillary lumen narrowing and that no neutrophil was trapped in heaps of blockage points. Quantification of the capillary diameter showed that capillary lumen shrunk after I/R but returned to typical measurements when intravascular neutrophils were depleted. Conclusions: According to our findings, both vascular lumen narrowing and neutrophil trapping in cerebral microcirculation are the key causes of microvascular obstruction after I/R. Also, the primary contribution by neutrophils to microvascular obstruction does not occur through microemboli plugging but rather via the exacerbation of capillary lumen narrowing. Our proposed method will help monitor microcirculatory reperfusion deficit, explore the mechanism of no-reflow, and evaluate the curative effect of drugs targeting no-reflow. Ivyspring International Publisher 2023-01-01 /pmc/articles/PMC9800741/ /pubmed/36593967 http://dx.doi.org/10.7150/thno.76879 Text en © The author(s) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). See http://ivyspring.com/terms for full terms and conditions.
spellingShingle Research Paper
Li, Yusha
Xu, Jianyi
Yu, Tingting
Zhu, Jingtan
Xuan, Ang
Liu, Xiaomei
Wang, Pingfu
Li, Dongyu
Zhu, Dan
A labeling strategy for the three-dimensional recognition and analysis of microvascular obstruction in ischemic stroke
title A labeling strategy for the three-dimensional recognition and analysis of microvascular obstruction in ischemic stroke
title_full A labeling strategy for the three-dimensional recognition and analysis of microvascular obstruction in ischemic stroke
title_fullStr A labeling strategy for the three-dimensional recognition and analysis of microvascular obstruction in ischemic stroke
title_full_unstemmed A labeling strategy for the three-dimensional recognition and analysis of microvascular obstruction in ischemic stroke
title_short A labeling strategy for the three-dimensional recognition and analysis of microvascular obstruction in ischemic stroke
title_sort labeling strategy for the three-dimensional recognition and analysis of microvascular obstruction in ischemic stroke
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9800741/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36593967
http://dx.doi.org/10.7150/thno.76879
work_keys_str_mv AT liyusha alabelingstrategyforthethreedimensionalrecognitionandanalysisofmicrovascularobstructioninischemicstroke
AT xujianyi alabelingstrategyforthethreedimensionalrecognitionandanalysisofmicrovascularobstructioninischemicstroke
AT yutingting alabelingstrategyforthethreedimensionalrecognitionandanalysisofmicrovascularobstructioninischemicstroke
AT zhujingtan alabelingstrategyforthethreedimensionalrecognitionandanalysisofmicrovascularobstructioninischemicstroke
AT xuanang alabelingstrategyforthethreedimensionalrecognitionandanalysisofmicrovascularobstructioninischemicstroke
AT liuxiaomei alabelingstrategyforthethreedimensionalrecognitionandanalysisofmicrovascularobstructioninischemicstroke
AT wangpingfu alabelingstrategyforthethreedimensionalrecognitionandanalysisofmicrovascularobstructioninischemicstroke
AT lidongyu alabelingstrategyforthethreedimensionalrecognitionandanalysisofmicrovascularobstructioninischemicstroke
AT zhudan alabelingstrategyforthethreedimensionalrecognitionandanalysisofmicrovascularobstructioninischemicstroke
AT liyusha labelingstrategyforthethreedimensionalrecognitionandanalysisofmicrovascularobstructioninischemicstroke
AT xujianyi labelingstrategyforthethreedimensionalrecognitionandanalysisofmicrovascularobstructioninischemicstroke
AT yutingting labelingstrategyforthethreedimensionalrecognitionandanalysisofmicrovascularobstructioninischemicstroke
AT zhujingtan labelingstrategyforthethreedimensionalrecognitionandanalysisofmicrovascularobstructioninischemicstroke
AT xuanang labelingstrategyforthethreedimensionalrecognitionandanalysisofmicrovascularobstructioninischemicstroke
AT liuxiaomei labelingstrategyforthethreedimensionalrecognitionandanalysisofmicrovascularobstructioninischemicstroke
AT wangpingfu labelingstrategyforthethreedimensionalrecognitionandanalysisofmicrovascularobstructioninischemicstroke
AT lidongyu labelingstrategyforthethreedimensionalrecognitionandanalysisofmicrovascularobstructioninischemicstroke
AT zhudan labelingstrategyforthethreedimensionalrecognitionandanalysisofmicrovascularobstructioninischemicstroke