Publications by authors named "Ruetzler C"

Thirteen-lined ground squirrels (Ictidomys tridecemlineatus) have an extraordinary capacity to withstand prolonged and profound reductions in blood flow and oxygen delivery to the brain without incurring any cellular damage. As such, the hibernation torpor of I. tridecemlineatus provides a valuable model of tolerance to ischemic stress.

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Toll-like receptor (TLR) signaling plays an important role in cerebral ischemia, but downstream signaling events, which can be organ-specific, are incompletely understood. We thereby investigated involvement of the MyD88-dependent (MyD88) and MyD88-independent (TRIF) TLR signaling pathways in 2 in vitro and 2 in vivo models of cerebral ischemia. For in vitro studies, we used a model of oxygen-glucose deprivation (OGD) followed by flow cytometric analysis to determine:1) viability of PC12 cells following knock-down with MyD88 siRNA compared to negative control siRNA and 2) viability, apoptosis and necrosis of cortical neurons from MyD88 null (-/-) , TRIF mutant, and wild type (WT) mice.

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In this study, we examined the relationship between tissue and blood levels of matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-2 and MMP-9 through gelatin zymography at multiple time points after experimental stroke. We additionally investigated the association between these levels and the evidence of blood-cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) barrier (BCSFB) and blood-brain barrier (BBB) disruption on post-contrast fluid-attenuated inversion-recovery (FLAIR) imaging. Increased plasma MMP-9 was associated with BCSFB disruption at 1h post-reperfusion.

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At this time, the pathophysiology of macrophage involvement and their role in stroke progression are poorly understood. Recently, T2- and T2*-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), after intravenous administration of iron-oxide particles, have been used to understand the inflammatory cascade. Earlier studies report that image enhancement after stroke is from iron-laden macrophages; however, they do not account for potential blood-brain barrier disruption and nonspecific contrast enhancement.

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Neuroblasts in the subventricular zone (SVZ) proliferate markedly after brain ischemia, and migrate to the site of injury along with blood vessels. However, a large fraction of stroke-generated neuroblasts die shortly after being born, in part, because of local inflammation. In spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHRs) subjected to permanent middle cerebral artery occlusion, we primed E-selectin-specific regulatory T cells (Tregs) by repetitive intranasal administration of recombinant E-selectin to target local secretion of immunomodulating, antiinflammatory cytokines to activating blood vessel segments.

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Vascular cognitive impairment (VCI) is the second most prevalent type of dementia in the world. The white matter damage that characterizes the common subcortical ischemic form of VCI can be modeled by ligating both common carotid arteries in the Wistar rat to induce protracted cerebral hypoperfusion. In this model, we find that repetitive intranasal administration of recombinant E-selectin to induce mucosal tolerance and to target immunomodulation to activating blood vessels potently suppresses both white matter (and possibly gray matter) damage and markers of vessel activation (tumor necrosis factor and E-selectin); it also preserves behavioral function in T-maze spontaneous alternation, T-maze spatial discrimination memory retention, and object recognition tests.

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Evidence that inflammatory and immune mechanisms may have a critical role in the development of vasospasm after subarachnoid hemorrhage is accumulating. We examined, therefore, whether induction of immunological tolerance to the adhesion molecule that is uniquely expressed on activated endothelium, E-selectin, could inhibit the vasospasm provoked by subarachnoid blood in a rat subarachnoid hemorrhage model. We found that intranasal instillation of E-selectin every other day for 10 days on a mucosal tolerization schedule suppressed delayed type hypersensitivity to E-selectin confirming tolerance to that molecule and markedly suppressed basilar artery spasm after subarachnoid hemorrhage.

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Peripheral benzodiazepine receptors (PBRs) are upregulated on activated microglia. We recently developed a promising positron emission tomography (PET) ligand, [11C]PBR28, with high affinity and excellent ratio of specific to nonspecific binding. We assessed the ability of [11C]PBR28 PET to localize PBRs in a rat permanent middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAO) model of neuroinflammation.

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Although ischemic tolerance has been described in a variety of primary cell culture systems, no similar in vitro models have been reported with any cell line. A model of ischemic preconditioning in the rat pheochromocytoma PC12 cell line is described here. When compared to nonpreconditioned cells, preexposure of PC12 cells to 6 hours of oxygen and glucose deprivation (OGD) significantly increased cell viability after 15 hours of OGD 24 hours later.

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We have demonstrated that induction of mucosal tolerance to E-selectin, a cytokine-inducible adhesion molecule restricted to activating blood vessels, prevents ischemic and hemorrhagic stroke in spontaneously hypertensive, genetically stroke-prone (SHR-SP) rats. We now examine whether mucosal tolerance to E-selectin has protective effects in ischemic brain damage after permanent middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAO) in SHR-SP rats and whether these effects are related to generation of regulatory T cells. Rats were exposed to intranasal administration of E-selectin every other day for 10 days (single tolerization group) or on two tolerization schedules separated by 11 days (booster tolerization group).

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Brain cells produce cytokines and chemokines during the inflammatory process after stroke both in animal models and in patients. Monocyte chemoattractant protein 1 (MCP-1), one of the proinflammatory chemokines, can attract monocytes to the tissue where MCP-1 is overexpressed. However, the role of MCP-1 elevation in stroke has not been explored in detail.

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Background And Purpose: Inflammatory and immune mechanisms can precipitate cerebrovascular thrombosis and hemorrhage. Immunologic tolerance can be induced to a specific antigen by intranasal instillation of that antigen. Lymphocytes tolerized in this way provide local immunosuppression on restimulation with the same antigen.

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Background And Purpose: Enlimomab, a murine monoclonal anti-human intercellular adhesion molecule (ICAM)-1 antibody, had a negative outcome in a multicenter acute-stroke trial. We did a bedside-to-bench study in standardized rat stroke models to explore mechanisms for these untoward results.

Methods: After focal brain ischemia in Wistar rats and spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR), we administered murine anti-rat ICAM-1 antibody (1A29), subclass-matched murine immunoglobulin (IgG1), or vehicle intravenously.

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Background And Purpose: The presence of Chlamydia pneumoniae has been reported in carotid atheroma, but its causative effect in the activation of an atherosclerotic plaque to a prothrombotic state remains unproved. Antigen- mediated activation of T lymphocytes within plaque may represent a mechanism by which infection can result in plaque conversion. The goal of the present study was to characterize the T-cell subtype profile related to the presence of C pneumoniae in patients with symptomatic versus asymptomatic carotid atherosclerosis.

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Background: We have proposed that an increased interaction between monocyte/macrophages and blood vessel endothelium predisposes subjects to strokes. The effect of chronic monocyte activation on the development of cerebral infarcts was thus studied in rats after provocation of a modified local Swartzman reaction, in brain vasculature.

Materials And Methods: Two weeks after an IV bolus of bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG), we studied spontaneous superoxide production, integrin expression, endothelial adhesion of monocytes and the neurological symptoms, brain histology, and cytokine immunoreactivity after a provocative dose of LPS (30-300 microg/rat i.

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Studies of vascular biology during the past decade have identified an expanding list of agonists and antagonists that regulate local hemostasis, inflammation, and reactivity in blood vessels. Interactions at the blood-endothelial interface are intricate and complex and have been postulated to play a role in the initiation of stroke and the progression of brain injury during early hours of ischemia, particularly in conjunction with reperfusion injury (Hallenbeck, 1996). In the current study of normal and activated vessels in rat brain, immunoreactive tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1), and manganese superoxide dismutase (MnSOD) exhibit concentric perivascular rings involving vessel wall and surrounding parenchyma that appear to coincide with one another in serial sections.

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Intravenous administration of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) (0.9 mg/kg) has been shown to induce ischemic tolerance in spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR). TNF-alpha is believed to play a crucial role in preconditioning as its inhibition with TNF-alpha-binding protein abolished tolerance.

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Protective effects of cortical spreading depression (CSD) against ischemic damage have been demonstrated in cortex when elicited at either 24 h or 3 days prior to ischemia. The present study was carried out to investigate possible mechanisms of neuroprotection following CSD. In Sprague-Dawley rats, 5 M KCl, 5 M NaCl, or physiological saline was applied to the cortex for 1 h.

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A functional interrelation between nitric oxide (NO), the endothelial-derived vasodilating factor, and endothelin 1 (ET-1), the potent vasoconstrictive peptide, was investigated in microvascular endothelium of human brain. Nor-1 dose-dependently decreased the ET-1-stimulated mobilization of Ca2+. This response was mimicked with cGMP and abrogated by inhibitors of guanylyl cyclase or cGMP-dependent protein kinase G.

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Immune mechanisms contribute to cerebral ischemic injury. Therapeutic immunosuppressive options are limited due to systemic side effects. We attempted to achieve immunosuppression in the brain through oral tolerance to myelin basic protein (MBP).

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Cytokines are recognized to play an important role in acute stroke. Tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF) is one of the pro-inflammatory cytokines and is expressed in ischemic brain. We hypothesized that TNF might play a role in the regulation of tolerance to ischemia when administered prior to the ischemic episode.

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Microcirculatory impairments have theoretically been proposed as a potential factor in the development of ischemic injury, but few attempts have been made to directly assess microvascular patency following stroke. To address this issue we investigated the temporal changes in microvascular perfusion induced by permanent focal ischemia. Halothane-anesthetized spontaneously hypertensive rats were subjected to middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAO) of 5 min to 4 h duration.

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Ischemic tolerance was induced in spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) by injection of a single dose of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) (0.9 mg/kg, i.v.

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A series of experiments was performed to determine the role of interleukin (IL)-1 in the induction of tolerance to global ischemia in Mongolian gerbils. In Group I, a 2-min "preconditioning" ischemia protected CA1 hippocampal neurons in gerbils subjected to 3.5 min ischemia 3 days later.

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