4.7 Article

Increased 20-HETE Synthesis Explains Reduced Cerebral Blood Flow But Not Impaired Neurovascular Coupling after Cortical Spreading Depression in Rat Cerebral Cortex

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 33, Issue 6, Pages 2562-2570

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2308-12.2013

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Funding

  1. Danish Council for Independent Research: Medical Sciences
  2. Lundbeck Foundation via the Lundbeck Foundation Centre for Neurovascular Signalling
  3. NOVO Nordisk Foundation
  4. NORDEA Foundation for Center for Healthy Aging
  5. Canadian Institutes for Health Research
  6. Canadian Stroke Network
  7. Fondation Leducq

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Cortical spreading depression (CSD) is associated with release of arachidonic acid, impaired neurovascular coupling, and reduced cerebral blood flow (CBF), caused by cortical vasoconstriction. We tested the hypothesis that the released arachidonic acid is metabolized by the cytochrome P450 enzyme to produce the vasoconstrictor 20-hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid (20-HETE), and that this mechanism explains cortical vasoconstriction and vascular dysfunction after CSD. CSD was induced in the frontal cortex of rats and the cortical electrical activity and local field potentials recorded by glass microelectrodes, CBF by laser Doppler flowmetry, and tissue oxygen tension (tpO(2)) using polarographic microelectrodes. 20-HETE synthesis was measured in parallel experiments in cortical brain slices exposed to CSD. We used the specific inhibitor HET0016 (N-hydroxy-N'-(4-n-butyl-2-methylphenyl)formamidine) to block 20-HETE synthesis. CSD increased 20-HETE synthesis in brain slices for 120 min, and the time course of the increase in 20-HETE paralleled the reduction in CBF after CSD in vivo. HET0016 blocked the CSD-induced increase in 20-HETE synthesis and ameliorated the persistent reduction in CBF, but not the impaired neurovascular coupling after CSD. These findings suggest that CSD-induced increments in 20-HETE cause the reduction in CBF after CSD and that the attenuation of stimulation-induced CBF responses after CSD has a different mechanism. We suggest that blockade of 20-HETE synthesis may be clinically relevant to ameliorate reduced CBF in patients with migraine and acute brain cortex injuries.

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