Background: α-Syn (alpha-synuclein) increases and oligomerization contributes to ischemic brain damage. Nevertheless, the exact mechanisms of ischemia-induced α-Syn pathology after stroke are understudied. In this exploratory and hypothesis-testing study, we specifically investigated how ischemia-induced α-Syn pathology impacts vascular inflammation and angiogenesis. Methods: Transient focal cerebral ischemia was induced in C57BL/6J wild-type and C57BL/6S mice with spontaneous deletion of α-Syn. In total, 72 mice were randomized to receive sham (12) or ischemia (60), with 1:1 allocation to genotype. Ischemic mice were included if presenting ≥3 intraischemic focal deficits. Experimental end points were 48 hours (acute phase) and 7 days (subacute phase) of reperfusion. Sensorimotor assessment, elevated plus maze, and survival analysis were stroke outcome readouts. Brain samples were collected for quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction, Western blot, and immunohistochemistry. In vitro ischemia in brain microvascular endothelial cells was used to investigate the direct effect of extracellular α-Syn. Results: In vivo, cerebral ischemia induced α-Syn 2.5-fold change gene expression, 2.7- to 3.2-fold-change protein oligomerization with apparent localization around cortical ischemic vessels. Improved subacute functional recovery linked to better survival was observed in C57BL/6S α-Syn null (87% to end point) versus C57BL/6J (45%) ischemic mice. The α-Syn null mice had reduced expression of ICAM-1, MMP-9, and vascular permeability factors, associated with less infiltrating leukocytes and juxta-vascular microglia in the acute phase. In the subacute phase, they showed upregulated proangiogenic factors (VEGF-A, VEGFR-2, Angpt-2, and IL-6) and angiogenic vessels. In vitro, brain microvascular endothelial cells upregulated ICAM-1, IL-6, and VEGFR-2 expression when exposed to recombinant α-Syn at the beginning of ischemia and to a larger extent when α-Syn was preconditioned for 18 hours in hypoxia. Conclusions: These findings indicate that ischemia-triggered pathological α-Syn leads to worse outcome in stroke mice by promoting endothelial inflammatory response and immune cell infiltration during the acute phase and by limiting angiogenesis in the subacute phase.

Experimental Ischemic Stroke-Induced Alpha-Synuclein Pathology Enhances Endothelial Inflammatory Response and Impairs Angiogenesis

Bogale, Tizibt Ashine;Faustini, Gaia;Longhena, Francesca;Mitola, Stefania;Bellucci, Arianna;Pizzi, Marina
2025-01-01

Abstract

Background: α-Syn (alpha-synuclein) increases and oligomerization contributes to ischemic brain damage. Nevertheless, the exact mechanisms of ischemia-induced α-Syn pathology after stroke are understudied. In this exploratory and hypothesis-testing study, we specifically investigated how ischemia-induced α-Syn pathology impacts vascular inflammation and angiogenesis. Methods: Transient focal cerebral ischemia was induced in C57BL/6J wild-type and C57BL/6S mice with spontaneous deletion of α-Syn. In total, 72 mice were randomized to receive sham (12) or ischemia (60), with 1:1 allocation to genotype. Ischemic mice were included if presenting ≥3 intraischemic focal deficits. Experimental end points were 48 hours (acute phase) and 7 days (subacute phase) of reperfusion. Sensorimotor assessment, elevated plus maze, and survival analysis were stroke outcome readouts. Brain samples were collected for quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction, Western blot, and immunohistochemistry. In vitro ischemia in brain microvascular endothelial cells was used to investigate the direct effect of extracellular α-Syn. Results: In vivo, cerebral ischemia induced α-Syn 2.5-fold change gene expression, 2.7- to 3.2-fold-change protein oligomerization with apparent localization around cortical ischemic vessels. Improved subacute functional recovery linked to better survival was observed in C57BL/6S α-Syn null (87% to end point) versus C57BL/6J (45%) ischemic mice. The α-Syn null mice had reduced expression of ICAM-1, MMP-9, and vascular permeability factors, associated with less infiltrating leukocytes and juxta-vascular microglia in the acute phase. In the subacute phase, they showed upregulated proangiogenic factors (VEGF-A, VEGFR-2, Angpt-2, and IL-6) and angiogenic vessels. In vitro, brain microvascular endothelial cells upregulated ICAM-1, IL-6, and VEGFR-2 expression when exposed to recombinant α-Syn at the beginning of ischemia and to a larger extent when α-Syn was preconditioned for 18 hours in hypoxia. Conclusions: These findings indicate that ischemia-triggered pathological α-Syn leads to worse outcome in stroke mice by promoting endothelial inflammatory response and immune cell infiltration during the acute phase and by limiting angiogenesis in the subacute phase.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11379/634965
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