4.5 Article

Expression of fractalkine and its receptor, CX3CR1, in response to ischaemia-reperfusion brain injury in the rat

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 15, Issue 10, Pages 1663-1668

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1046/j.1460-9568.2002.02007.x

Keywords

immunohistochemistry; in situ hybridization; neurodegeneration; neuroinflammation

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Fractalkine is a neuronally expressed chemokine that acts through its G-protein-coupled receptor CX3 CR1, localized on microglial and immune cells. Fractalkine might be involved in neuroinflammatory processes secondary to neuronal damage, which normally occur in a time frame of days after ischaemia. We evaluated by in situ hybridization and immunohistochemistry the expression of fractalkine and CX3 CR1 in the rat brain, after a transient occlusion of the middle cerebral artery. We found that at 12 h after ischaemia neuronal fractalkine expression was transiently increased in scattered necrotic neurons of the cortex and lost from the ischaemic striatum. At 24 and 48 h after ischaemia, fractalkine immunoreactivity was strongly increased in morphologically intact cortical neurons of the ischaemic penumbra where also the stress-inducible HSP-72 was strongly up-regulated. The intensity of fractalkine immunoreactivity of neurons in the penumbra returned to basal levels at 7 days after ischaemia. Fractalkine synthesis was also induced in endothelial cells of the infarcted area, at 48 h and 7 days after ischaemia. CX3 CR1 expression was detected in the activated microglial cells of the ischaemic tissue 24 and 48 h after ischaemia, and became strongly up-regulated in macrophages/phagocytic microglia inside the infarcted tissue 7 days after ischaemia. These data suggest that fractalkine may participate in the activation and chemoattraction of microglia into the infarcted tissue, and contribute to the control of leucocyte trafficking from blood vessels into the injured area.

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