4.5 Article

Sphingomyelinase and ceramide analogs induce vasoconstriction and leukocyte-endothelial interactions in cerebral venules in the intact rat brain: Insight into mechanisms and possible relation to brain injury and stroke

Journal

BRAIN RESEARCH BULLETIN
Volume 58, Issue 3, Pages 271-278

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/S0361-9230(02)00772-4

Keywords

sphingomyelinase; ceramides; cerebrovasospasm; brain microcirculation; NF-kappa B; leukocyte-endothelial interactions; brain inflammation

Categories

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study was designed to test the hypothesis that the sphingomyelin-ceramide signaling pathway may be important in proinflammatory-like responses in the intact brain. Effects of neutral sphingomyelinase (N-SMase), ceramide analogs, phosphorylcholine and ceramide metabolites were studied on rat brain cerebral (cortical) venule lumen sizes, leukocyte rolling, velocity and endothelial cell wall adhesion, microvessel permeability, microvessel rupture and focal hemorrhages using in vivo high resolution TV microscopy. Perivascular and close intra-arterial administration of N-SMase, C-2-, C-8-, and C-16-ceramide, but not either phosphorylcholine, C-6-ceramide, nervonic (C-24:1) ceramide, lignoceric (C-24:0) ceramide, C-8-ceramide-1-phosphate, glucosylceramide or 1-0-acylceramide, resulted in potent, concentration-dependent constriction (and spasm) of cortical venules, followed by increased leukocyte rolling, decreased leukocyte velocities, increased leukocyte-enclothelial wall adhesion, increased venular wall permeability, postcapillary venule rupture and, often, micro-hemorrhaging at high concentrations; angiotensin 11, serotonin and PGF(2alpha), didn't demonstrate these characteristics. Pretreatment with either one of three different antioxidants, including inhibitors of NF-(kappaB) activation, or two different Ca2+ channel blockers either prevented or attenuated the adverse venular effects of N-SMase and the ceramides. Likewise, pretreatment with either a PKCalpha-beta antagonist or a MAP kinase antagonist also attenuated the adverse venular effects. These results suggest that N-SMase and several ceramides can result in potent venular cerebrovasospasm, leukocyte-endothelial chemoattraction, and microvessel wall permeability changes in the intact rat brain. These proinflammatory-like actions suggest that N-SMase and ceramides could produce brain-vascular damage by reperfusion injury triggering lipid peroxidation release of reactive oxygen species and activation of diverse signaling pathways: PKCalpha-beta isozymes, MAP kinase and NF-kappaB. (C) 2002 Elsevier Science Inc. All rights reserved.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available