AI Article Synopsis

  • Leukocyte and platelet buildup in the brain during ischemia can worsen damage, but the enzyme CD39 on endothelial cells helps lessen platelet accumulation by breaking down ADP.
  • This study reveals that CD39 on leukocytes (specifically monocytes and neutrophils) also plays a crucial role in regulating their movement into damaged brain tissue by breaking down nucleotides released from injured cells.
  • By reducing ATP levels, CD39 decreases the activation of certain receptors, which in turn lessens inflammation and the potential for blood clot formation, highlighting the protective role of CD39 in brain ischemia.

Article Abstract

Leukocyte and platelet accumulation at sites of cerebral ischemia exacerbate cerebral damage. The ectoenzyme CD39 on the plasmalemma of endothelial cells metabolizes ADP to suppress platelet accumulation in the ischemic brain. However, the role of leukocyte surface CD39 in regulating monocyte and neutrophil trafficking in this setting is not known. Here we have demonstrated in mice what we believe to be a novel mechanism by which CD39 on monocytes and neutrophils regulates their own sequestration into ischemic cerebral tissue, by catabolizing nucleotides released by injured cells, thereby inhibiting their chemotaxis, adhesion, and transmigration. Bone marrow reconstitution and provision of an apyrase, an enzyme that hydrolyzes nucleoside tri- and diphosphates, each normalized ischemic leukosequestration and cerebral infarction in CD39-deficient mice. Leukocytes purified from Cd39-/- mice had a markedly diminished capacity to phosphohydrolyze adenine nucleotides and regulate platelet reactivity, suggesting that leukocyte ectoapyrases modulate the ambient vascular nucleotide milieu. Dissipation of ATP by CD39 reduced P2X7 receptor stimulation and thereby suppressed baseline leukocyte alphaMbeta2-integrin expression. As alphaMbeta2-integrin blockade reversed the postischemic, inflammatory phenotype of Cd39-/- mice, these data suggest that phosphohydrolytic activity on the leukocyte surface suppresses cell-cell interactions that would otherwise promote thrombosis or inflammation. These studies indicate that CD39 on both endothelial cells and leukocytes reduces inflammatory cell trafficking and platelet reactivity, with a consequent reduction in tissue injury following cerebral ischemic challenge.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2673847PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1172/JCI36433DOI Listing

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