Activation of PDGF-CC by tissue plasminogen activator impairs blood-brain barrier integrity during ischemic stroke

EJ Su, L Fredriksson, M Geyer, E Folestad, J Cale… - Nature medicine, 2008 - nature.com
EJ Su, L Fredriksson, M Geyer, E Folestad, J Cale, J Andrae, Y Gao, K Pietras, K Mann…
Nature medicine, 2008nature.com
Thrombolytic treatment of ischemic stroke with tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) is
markedly limited owing to concerns about hemorrhagic complications and the requirement
that tPA be administered within 3 h of symptoms. Here we report that tPA activation of latent
platelet-derived growth factor-CC (PDGF-CC) may explain these limitations. Intraventricular
injection of tPA or active PDGF-CC, in the absence of ischemia, leads to significant
increases in cerebrovascular permeability. In contrast, co-injection of neutralizing antibodies …
Abstract
Thrombolytic treatment of ischemic stroke with tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) is markedly limited owing to concerns about hemorrhagic complications and the requirement that tPA be administered within 3 h of symptoms. Here we report that tPA activation of latent platelet-derived growth factor-CC (PDGF-CC) may explain these limitations. Intraventricular injection of tPA or active PDGF-CC, in the absence of ischemia, leads to significant increases in cerebrovascular permeability. In contrast, co-injection of neutralizing antibodies to PDGF-CC with tPA blocks this increased permeability, indicating that PDGF-CC is a downstream substrate of tPA within the neurovascular unit. These effects are mediated through activation of PDGF-α receptors (PDGFR-α) on perivascular astrocytes, and treatment of mice with the PDGFR-α antagonist imatinib after ischemic stroke reduces both cerebrovascular permeability and hemorrhagic complications associated with late administration of thrombolytic tPA. These data demonstrate that PDGF signaling regulates blood-brain barrier permeability and suggest potential new strategies for stroke treatment.
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