4.8 Article

Cortical spreading depression activates and upregulates MMP-9

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL INVESTIGATION
Volume 113, Issue 10, Pages 1447-1455

Publisher

AMER SOC CLINICAL INVESTIGATION INC
DOI: 10.1172/JCI200421227

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NINDS NIH HHS [R01 NS21169-11, NS10828, F32 NS010828, P50 NS010828, P01 NS010828] Funding Source: Medline

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Cortical spreading depression (CSD) is a propagating wave of neuronal and glial depolarization and has been implicated in disorders of neurovascular regulation such as stroke, head trauma, and migraine. In this study, we found that CSD alters blood-brain barrier (BBB) permeability by activating brain MMPs. Beginning at 3-6 hours, MMP-9 levels increased within cortex ipsilateral to the CSD, reaching a maximum at 24 hours and persisting for at least 48 hours. Gelatinolytic activity was detected earliest within the matrix of cortical blood vessels and later within neurons and pia arachnoid ( 3 hours), particularly within piriform cortex; this activity was suppressed by injection of the metalloprotease inhibitor GM6001 or in vitro by the addition of a zinc chelator (1,10-phenanthroline). At 3-24 hours, immunoreactive laminin, endothelial barrier antigen, and zona occludens-1 diminished in the ipsilateral cortex, suggesting that CSD altered proteins critical to the integrity of the BBB. At 3 hours after CSD, plasma protein leakage and brain edema developed contemporaneously. Albumin leakage was suppressed by the administration of GM6001. Protein leakage was not detected in MMP-9-null mice, implicating the MMP-9 isoform in barrier disruption. We conclude that intense neuronal and glial. depolarization initiates a cascade that disrupts the BBB via an MMP-9-dependent mechanism.

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