4.6 Article

Ischemic nitric oxide and poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase-1 in cerebral ischemia: male toxicity, female protection

Journal

JOURNAL OF CEREBRAL BLOOD FLOW AND METABOLISM
Volume 25, Issue 4, Pages 502-512

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1038/sj.jcbfm.9600059

Keywords

gender; stroke; neuronal nitric oxide synthase; neuroprotection; estrogen

Funding

  1. NINDS NIH HHS [NS33668] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NINR NIH HHS [NR03521] Funding Source: Medline

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It is well established that tissue damage and functional outcome after experimental or clinical stroke are shaped by biologic sex. We investigated the novel hypothesis that ischemic cell death from neuronally derived nitric oxide (NO) or poly-ADP ribose polymerase (PARP-1) activation is sexually dimorphic and that interruption of these molecular death pathways benefits only the male brain. Female neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) knockout (nNOS-/-) mice exhibited exacerbated histological injury after middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAO) relative to wild-type (WT) females, unlike the protection observed in male nNOS-/- littermates. Similarly, treatment with the nNOS inhibitor (7-nitroindozole, 25 mg/kg) increased infarction in female C57B16 WT mice, but protected male mice. The mechanism for this sexually specific response is not mediated through changes in protein expression of endothelial NOS or inducible NOS, or differences in intraischemic cerebral blood flow. Unlike male PARP-1 knockouts (PARP1-/-), female PARP1-/- littermates sustained grossly increased ischemic damage relative to sex-matched WT mice. Treatment with a PARP inhibitor (PJ-34, 10mg/kg) resulted in identical results. Loss of PARP-1 resulted in reversal of the neuroprotective activity by the female sex steroid, 17 beta estradiol. These data suggest that the previously described cell death pathways involving NO and PARP ischemic neurotoxicity may be operant solely in male brain and that the integrity of nNO/PARP-1 signaling is paradoxically protective in the female.

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