1. Monomeric C-Reactive Protein Aggravates Secondary Degeneration after Intracerebral Haemorrhagic Stroke and May Function as a Sensor for Systemic Inflammation
- Author
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Baoqiang Guo, Mario Di Napoli, Bogdan Capitanescu, Yasmin Zeinolabediny, Mark Slevin, Peter Olah, Coral Sanfeliu, Aurel Popa-Wagner, Elisa Garcia-Lara E, Daniel Pirici, Raid Al-Baradie, National Authority for Scientific Research (Romania), and Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España)
- Subjects
Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,mCRP ,haemorrhagic stroke ,neuroinflammation ,hypothalamus ,micro-circulatory system ,lcsh:Medicine ,Hippocampus ,Inflammation ,Systemic inflammation ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Parenchyma ,medicine ,Neuroinflammation ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,business.industry ,lcsh:R ,General Medicine ,Aquaporin 4 ,Immunohistochemistry ,medicine.symptom ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Immunostaining - Abstract
Background: We previously identified increased tissue localization of monomeric C-reactive protein (mCRP) in the infarcted cortical brain tissue of patients following ischaemic stroke. Here, we investigated the relationship of mCRP expression in haemorrhagic stroke, and additionally examined the capacity of mCRP to travel to or appear at other locations within the brain that might account for later chronic neuroinflammatory or neurodegenerative effects. Methods: Immunohistochemistry was performed on Formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded archived brain tissue blocks obtained at autopsy from stroke patients and age-matched controls. We modelled mCRP migration into the brain after haemorrhagic stroke by infusing mCRP (3.5 µg) into the hippocampus of mice and localized mCRP with histological and immunohistochemistry methods. Results: On human tissue in the early stages of haemorrhage, there was no staining of mCRP. However, with increasing post-stroke survival time, mCRP immunostaining was associated with some parenchymal brain cells, some stroke-affected neurons in the surrounding areas and the lumen of large blood vessels as well as brain capillaries. Further from the peri-haematoma region, however, mCRP was detected in the lumen of micro-vessels expressing aquaporin 4 (AQP4). In the hypothalamus, we detected clusters of neurons loaded with mCRP along with scattered lipofuscin-like deposits. In the peri-haematoma region of patients, mCRP was abundantly seen adjacent to AQP4 immunoreactivity. When we stereotactically injected mCRP into the hippocampus of mice, we also observed strong expression in distant neurones of the hypothalamus as well as cortical capillaries. Conclusions: mCRP is abundantly expressed in the brain after haemorrhagic stroke, directly impacting the pathophysiological development of the haematoma. In addition, it may have indirect effects, where the microcirculatory system appears to be able to carry it throughout the cortex as far as the hypothalamus, allowing for long-distance effects and damage through its capacity to induce inflammation and degenerate neuronal perivascular compartments., This work was supported by a grant of the Romanian National Authority for Science Research and Innovation, CNCS—UEFISCDI, project number TE-41/2020 and from a grant from the Competitiveness Operational Programme 2014-2020: C-reactive protein therapy for stroke-associated dementia: ID_P_37_674, My SMIS code: 103432 contract 51/05.09.2016, and also and a grant from the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation SAF2016-77703 to CS. This research was also supported by the Stroke Chair-(project number R-1441-164).
- Published
- 2020