4.6 Article

EMMPRIN/CD147 plays a detrimental role in clinical and experimental ischemic stroke

Journal

AGING-US
Volume 12, Issue 6, Pages 5121-5139

Publisher

IMPACT JOURNALS LLC
DOI: 10.18632/aging.102935

Keywords

stroke; middle cerebral artery occlusion; CD147; EMMPRIN; aging

Funding

  1. [R21 NSO82906]
  2. [RO1 NS094543]
  3. [TL1TR000369]

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Background: Ischemic stroke is a devastating disease, often resulting in death or permanent neurological deficits. EMMPRIN/CD147 is a plasma membrane protein that induces the production of matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs), which contribute to secondary damage after stroke by disrupting the blood brain barrier (BBB) and facilitating peripheral leukocyte infiltration into the brain. Results: CD147 surface expression increased significantly after stroke on infiltrating leukocytes, astrocytes and endothelial cells, but not on resident microglia. Inhibition of CD147 reduced MMP levels, decreased ischemic damage, and improved functional, cognitive and histological outcomes after experimental ischemic stroke in both young and aged mice. In stroke patients, high levels of serum CD147 24 hours after stroke predicted poor functional outcome at 12 months. Brain CD147 levels were correlated with MMP-9 and secondary hemorrhage in post-mortem samples from stroke patients. Conclusions: Acute inhibition of CD147 decreases levels of MMP-9, limits tissue loss, and improve long-term cognitive outcomes following experimental stroke in aged mice. High serum CD147 correlate with poor outcomes in stroke patients. This study identifies CD147 as a novel, clinically relevant target in ischemic stroke.

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