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Alcohol exposure–induced neurovascular inflammatory priming impacts ischemic stroke and is linked with brain perivascular macrophages
Antoine Drieu, … , Denis Vivien, Marina Rubio
Antoine Drieu, … , Denis Vivien, Marina Rubio
Published January 28, 2020
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2020;5(4):e129226. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.129226.
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Research Article Inflammation Neuroscience

Alcohol exposure–induced neurovascular inflammatory priming impacts ischemic stroke and is linked with brain perivascular macrophages

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Abstract

Alcohol abuse is a major public health problem worldwide, causing a wide range of preventable morbidity and mortality. In this translational study, we show that heavy drinking (HD) (≥6 standard drinks/day) is independently associated with a worse outcome for ischemic stroke patients. To study the underlying mechanisms of this deleterious effect of HD, we performed an extensive analysis of the brain inflammatory responses of mice chronically exposed or not to 10% alcohol before and after ischemic stroke. Inflammatory responses were analyzed at the parenchymal, perivascular, and vascular levels by using transcriptomic, immunohistochemical, in vivo 2-photon microscopy and molecular MRI analyses. Alcohol-exposed mice show, in the absence of any other insult, a neurovascular inflammatory priming (i.e., an abnormal inflammatory status including an increase in brain perivascular macrophages [PVM]) associated with exacerbated inflammatory responses after a secondary insult (ischemic stroke or LPS challenge). Similar to our clinical data, alcohol-exposed mice showed larger ischemic lesions. We show here that PVM are key players on this aggravating effect of alcohol, since their specific depletion blocks the alcohol-induced aggravation of ischemic lesions. This study opens potentially new therapeutic avenues aiming at blocking alcohol-induced exacerbation of the neurovascular inflammatory responses triggered after ischemic stroke.

Authors

Antoine Drieu, Anastasia Lanquetin, Damien Levard, Martina Glavan, Francisco Campos, Aurélien Quenault, Eloïse Lemarchand, Mikaël Naveau, Anne Lise Pitel, José Castillo, Denis Vivien, Marina Rubio

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Figure 8

PVM modulate inflammatory responses to stroke in naive mice but not in alcohol-exposed mice.

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PVM modulate inflammatory responses to stroke in naive mice but not in a...
(A) Representative photomicrographs of different subsets of microglia/macrophages 24 hours after stroke onset at the core of the lesion. Scale bar: 50 μm. (B) Quantification of Iba1+ cells. (C) Representative photomicrographs of Ly6G+ neutrophils at the core of the lesion. Scale bar: 50 μm. (D) Quantification of neutrophil numbers. (E) Representative photomicrographs of P-selectin staining 24 hours after stroke onset. Scale bar: 20 μm. (F) Quantification of P-selectin+ blood vessels. (G) Representative photomicrograph of VCAM1+ blood vessel 24 hours after stroke onset. Scale bar: 20 μm. (H) Quantification of VCAM1+ blood vessels. (I) Representative photomicrographs obtained by 2-photon microscopy of leukocytes (in magenta, Rhodamine-6G) in PBS- and CLO-treated mice (not exposed to alcohol) 24 hours after stroke onset. Scale bars: 50 μm. (J) Quantification of adherent leukocytes. (K) Quantification of circulating/rolling leukocytes. (L) Representative photomicrographs obtained by 2-photon microscopy of leukocytes (in magenta, Rhodamine-6G) in PBS- and CLO-treated mice (exposed to alcohol) 24 hours after stroke onset. Scale bars: 50 μm. (M) Quantification of adherent leukocytes. (N) Quantification of circulating/rolling leukocytes. n = 4 mice per group, *P < 0.05 versus PBS; #P < 0.05 versus control PBS (B, D, H) and versus alcohol PBS (F). Mann-Whitney U test.

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