Irish
Albanian
Arabic
Armenian
Azerbaijani
Belarusian
Bengali
Bosnian
Catalan
Czech
Danish
Deutsch
Dutch
English
Estonian
Finnish
Français
Greek
Haitian Creole
Hebrew
Hindi
Hungarian
Icelandic
Indonesian
Irish
Italian
Japanese
Korean
Latvian
Lithuanian
Macedonian
Mongolian
Norwegian
Persian
Polish
Portuguese
Romanian
Russian
Serbian
Slovak
Slovenian
Spanish
Swahili
Swedish
Turkish
Ukrainian
Vietnamese
Български
中文(简体)
中文(繁體)
Experimental Neurology 2008-Nov

The role of p53 in brain edema after 24 h of experimental subarachnoid hemorrhage in a rat model.

Ní féidir ach le húsáideoirí cláraithe ailt a aistriú
Logáil Isteach / Cláraigh
Sábháiltear an nasc chuig an gearrthaisce
Junhao Yan
Chunhua Chen
Qing Hu
Xiaomei Yang
Jiliang Lei
Lei Yang
Ke Wang
Lihua Qin
Hongyun Huang
Changman Zhou

Keywords

Coimriú

Our previous study demonstrated that p53 plays an orchestrating role in the vasospasm and apoptotic cell death after subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH). We now hypothesize that p53 also plays an important role in brain edema by up-regulating the expression of MMP-9 via the NF-kappaB molecular signaling pathway. Adult male rats (300-350 g) were divided into five groups (n=20 each): Sham, SAH treatment with DMSO or PFT-alpha (0.2 mg/kg and 2.0 mg/kg), intraperitoneally. The monofilament puncture model was used to induce SAH and animals were subsequently sacrificed at 24 h. The blood-brain barrier (BBB) disruption, brain water content, MMP-9 activity, immunohistochemistry, treble fluorescence labeling, Western blot, and ultra-structural observations were performed. Evans blue extravagation, BBB diffuse leakage of IgG protein and brain water content were significantly reduced by PFT-alpha treatment; and the expression of p53, NF-kappaB and MMP-9 were significantly increased. The tight junction protein (Occludin) in endothelia cells and Collage IV in basal lamina were decreased in the brain of SAH rats, and were also modified by PFT-alpha treatment. Ultra-structural changes included disruption of endothelial tight junction and widening of the inter-endothelial spaces. Treble labeling showed p53 colocalized with NF-kappaB and MMP-9 in cerebral endothelia cells. We thus conclude that the level of p53 in cerebral microvasculature significantly affects the BBB permeability and brain edema after 24 h of SAH in rats. This can be at least partially ascribed to p53 inducing a significant up-regulation of MMP-9 via NF-kappaB in the endothelium, which in turn opened the tight junction by degrading Occludin and disrupting the basal lamina by degrading collagen IV.

Bí ar ár
leathanach facebook

An bunachar luibheanna míochaine is iomláine le tacaíocht ón eolaíocht

  • Oibreacha i 55 teanga
  • Leigheasanna luibhe le tacaíocht ón eolaíocht
  • Aitheantas luibheanna de réir íomhá
  • Léarscáil GPS idirghníomhach - clibeáil luibheanna ar an láthair (ag teacht go luath)
  • Léigh foilseacháin eolaíochta a bhaineann le do chuardach
  • Cuardaigh luibheanna míochaine de réir a n-éifeachtaí
  • Eagraigh do chuid spéiseanna agus fanacht suas chun dáta leis an taighde nuachta, trialacha cliniciúla agus paitinní

Clóscríobh symptom nó galar agus léigh faoi luibheanna a d’fhéadfadh cabhrú, luibh a chlóscríobh agus galair agus comharthaí a úsáidtear ina choinne a fheiceáil.
* Tá an fhaisnéis uile bunaithe ar thaighde eolaíoch foilsithe

Google Play badgeApp Store badge