AI Article Synopsis

  • Stroke is a significant cause of disability and death, impacting immune responses by causing a loss of peripheral blood T-cells and leading to infections.
  • Researchers analyzed T cells from 93 stroke patients to understand their activation and functionality compared to healthy individuals.
  • Findings indicated that stroke patients exhibited heightened activation markers on T cells, with increased levels of proinflammatory cytokines and evidence suggesting catecholamines may inhibit certain T cell regulation mechanisms.

Article Abstract

Stroke is a major cause of disability and leading cause of death in the northern hemisphere. Only recently it became evident that cerebral ischemia not only leads to brain tissue damage and subsequent local inflammation but also to a dramatic loss of peripheral blood T-cells with subsequent infections. However, only scarce information is available on the activation status of surviving T cells. This study therefore addressed the functional consequences of immunological changes induced by stroke in humans. For this purpose peripheral blood T-cells were isolated from 93 stroke patients and the expression of activation makers was determined. In addition ex vivo stimulation assays were applied to asses the functionality of T cells derived from blood of stroke patients. Compared to healthy controls, stroke patients demonstrated an enhanced surface expression of HLA-DR (p<0.0001) and CD25 (p = 0.02) on T cells, revealing that stroke leads to T cell activation, while CTLA-4 remained undetectable. In vitro studies revealed that catecholamines inhibit CTLA-4 upregulation in activated T cells. Ex vivo, T cells of stroke patients proliferated unimpaired and released increased amounts of the proinflammatory cytokine TNF-alpha (p<0.01) and IL-6 (p<0.05). Also, in sera of stroke patients HMGB1 concentrations were increased (p = 0.0002). The data demonstrate that surviving T cells in stroke patients remain fully functional and are primed towards a TH1 response, in addition we provide evidence that catecholamine mediated inhibition of CTLA-4 expression and serum HMGB1 release are possible mediators in stroke induced activation of T cells.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2806837PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0008718PLOS

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