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Endothelial cell Pannexin1 modulates severity of ischemic stroke by regulating cerebral inflammation and myogenic tone
Miranda E Good, Stephanie A. Eucker, Jun Li, Hannah M. Bacon, Susan M. Lang, Joshua T. Butcher, Tyler J. Johnson, Ronald P. Gaykema, Manoj K. Patel, Zhiyi Zuo, Brant E. Isakson
Miranda E Good, Stephanie A. Eucker, Jun Li, Hannah M. Bacon, Susan M. Lang, Joshua T. Butcher, Tyler J. Johnson, Ronald P. Gaykema, Manoj K. Patel, Zhiyi Zuo, Brant E. Isakson
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Research Article Neuroscience

Endothelial cell Pannexin1 modulates severity of ischemic stroke by regulating cerebral inflammation and myogenic tone

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Abstract

Ischemic stroke is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality in the US; however, there currently exists only one effective acute pharmacological therapeutic intervention. Purinergic signaling has been shown to regulate vascular function and pathological processes, including inflammation and arterial myogenic reactivity, and plays a role in ischemic stroke outcome. Purinergic signaling requires extracellular purines; however, the mechanism of purine release from cells is unclear. Pannexin1 (Panx1) channels are potentially novel purine release channels expressed throughout the vascular tree that couples regulated purine release with purinergic signaling. Therefore, we examined the role of smooth muscle and endothelial cell Panx1, using conditional cell type–specific transgenic mice, in cerebral ischemia/reperfusion injury outcomes. Deletion of endothelial cell Panx1, but not smooth muscle cell Panx1, significantly reduced cerebral infarct volume after ischemia/reperfusion. Infiltration of leukocytes into brain tissue and development of cerebral myogenic tone were both significantly reduced when mice lacked endothelial Panx1. Panx1 regulation of myogenic tone was unique to the cerebral circulation, as mesenteric myogenic reactivity and blood pressure were independent of endothelial Panx1. Overall, deletion of endothelial Panx1 mitigated cerebral ischemic injury by reducing inflammation and myogenic tone development, indicating that endothelial Panx1 is a possible novel target for therapeutic intervention of ischemic stroke.

Authors

Miranda E Good, Stephanie A. Eucker, Jun Li, Hannah M. Bacon, Susan M. Lang, Joshua T. Butcher, Tyler J. Johnson, Ronald P. Gaykema, Manoj K. Patel, Zhiyi Zuo, Brant E. Isakson

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Figure 3

Brain tissue infiltration of leukocytes is significantly reduced in EC Panx1 Δ/Δ mice following stroke.

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Brain tissue infiltration of leukocytes is significantly reduced in EC P...
Following a 90-minute MCAO and 24-hour reperfusion, ischemic and contralateral hemispheres were perfused and isolated from EC Panx1 fl/fl and EC Panx1 Δ/Δ mice and stained for leukocyte markers for flow cytometry analysis. Differences in the percentages of total infiltrated leukocytes (CD45hi), neutrophils (CD45hi/Ly6G+), or monocytes (CD45hi/CD11b+/Ly6C+) between the ischemic and contralateral hemispheres were calculated (A–C). Representative flow cytometry graphs of the contralateral (D) and ischemic (E) hemispheres of an EC Panx1 fl/fl mouse are shown, along with gating strategies. Live cells (red box) were further analyzed for expression of CD45. Intermediate expression of CD45 is indicative of microglia cells (black box), while cells expressing high levels of CD45 (green box), indicative of infiltrated leukocytes, were further subdivided into Ly6G-positive or CD11b and Ly6C double-positive cells. EC Panx1 fl/fl, n = 6 mice; EC Panx1 Δ/Δ, n = 5 mice. *P < 0.05; Student’s t test.

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