4.8 Article

Ras-like Gem GTPase induced by Npas4 promotes activity-dependent neuronal tolerance for ischemic stroke

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2018850118

Keywords

neural activity-dependent; neuroprotection; neuroplasticity; ischemic stroke; Npas4

Funding

  1. Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science, and Technology, Japan
  2. Agency for Medical Research and Development, Japan
  3. Japanese Applied Enzymology Foundation
  4. Smoking Science Research Foundation
  5. Takeda Science Foundation for Collaborative Research Projects, Japan
  6. Takeda Science Foundation
  7. Terumo Life Science Foundation
  8. Koyanagi Foundation
  9. Naito Foundation, Japan

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The study demonstrates that the collaborative action of activity-dependent transcription factor Npas4 and Gem gene can promote neuroprotection, reduce neuronal cell death after stroke, and serve as a potential new drug target.
Ischemic stroke, which results in loss of neurological function, initiates a complex cascade of pathological events in the brain, largely driven by excitotoxic Ca2+ influx in neurons. This leads to cortical spreading depolarization, which induces expression of genes involved in both neuronal death and survival; yet, the func-tions of these genes remain poorly understood. Here, we profiled gene expression changes that are common to ischemia (modeled by middle cerebral artery occlusion [MCAO]) and to experience-dependent activation (modeled by exposure to an enriched environ-ment [EE]), which also induces Ca2+ transients that trigger transcrip-tional programs. We found that the activity-dependent transcription factor Npas4 was up-regulated under MCAO and EE conditions and that transient activation of cortical neurons in the healthy brain by the EE decreased cell death after stroke. Furthermore, both MCAO in vivo and oxygen-glucose deprivation in vitro revealed that Npas4 is necessary and sufficient for neuroprotection. We also found that this protection involves the inhibition of L-type voltage-gated Ca2+ channels (VGCCs). Next, our systematic search for Npas4-downstream genes identified Gem, which encodes a Ras-related small GTPase that medi-ates neuroprotective effects of Npas4. Gem suppresses the membrane localization of L-type VGCCs to inhibit excess Ca2+ influx, thereby pro-tecting neurons from excitotoxic death after in vitro and in vivo ische-mia. Collectively, our findings indicate that Gem expression via Npas4 is necessary and sufficient to promote neuroprotection in the injured brain. Importantly, Gem is also induced in human cerebral organoids cultured under an ischemic condition, revealing Gem as a new target for drug discovery.

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