4.5 Article

Inactivation of astroglial NF-κB promotes survival of retinal neurons following ischemic injury

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 30, Issue 2, Pages 175-185

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1460-9568.2009.06814.x

Keywords

astrocytes; inflammation; ischemia; retinal pathology; transgenic mice

Categories

Funding

  1. AHA Scientist Development Award [0735014B]
  2. NIH [EY017991, NS051709, P30 EY014801]
  3. Career Development Award
  4. University of Miami Department of Ophthalmology

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Reactive astrocytes have been implicated in neuronal loss following ischemic stroke. However, the molecular mechanisms associated with this process are yet to be fully elucidated. In this work, we tested the hypothesis that astroglial NF-kappa B, a key regulator of inflammatory responses, is a contributor to neuronal death following ischemic injury. We compared neuronal survival in the ganglion cell layer (GCL) after retinal ischemia-reperfusion in wild-type (WT) and in GFAP-I kappa B alpha-dn transgenic mice, where the NF-kappa B classical pathway is suppressed specifically in astrocytes. The GFAP-I kappa B alpha-dn mice showed significantly increased survival of neurons in the GCL following ischemic injury as compared with WT littermates. Neuroprotection was associated with significantly reduced expression of pro-inflammatory genes, encoding Tnf-alpha, Ccl2 (Mcp1), Cxcl10 (IP10), Icam1, Vcam1, several subunits of NADPH oxidase and NO-synthase in the retinas of GFAP-I kappa B alpha-dn mice. These data suggest that certain NF-kappa B-regulated pro-inflammatory and redox-active pathways are central to glial neurotoxicity induced by ischemic injury. The inhibition of these pathways in astrocytes may represent a feasible neuroprotective strategy for retinal ischemia and stroke.

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