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(S)-roscovitine, a CDK inhibitor, decreases cerebral edema and modulates AQP4 and α1-syntrophin interaction on a pre-clinical model of acute ischemic stroke.

Authors :
Moëlo C
Quillévéré A
Le Roy L
Timsit S
Source :
Glia [Glia] 2024 Feb; Vol. 72 (2), pp. 322-337. Date of Electronic Publication: 2023 Oct 13.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Cerebral edema is one of the deadliest complications of ischemic stroke for which there is currently no pharmaceutical treatment. Aquaporin-4 (AQP4), a water-channel polarized at the astrocyte endfoot, is known to be highly implicated in cerebral edema. We previously showed in randomized studies that (S)-roscovitine, a cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor, reduced cerebral edema 48 h after induction of focal transient ischemia, but its mechanisms of action were unclear. In our recent blind randomized study, we confirmed that (S)-roscovitine was able to reduce cerebral edema by 65% at 24 h post-stroke (t test, p = .006). Immunofluorescence analysis of AQP4 distribution in astrocytes revealed that (S)-roscovitine decreased the non-perivascular pool of AQP4 by 53% and drastically increased AQP4 clusters in astrocyte perivascular end-feet (671%, t test p = .005) compared to vehicle. Non-perivascular and clustered AQP4 compartments were negatively correlated (R = -0.78; p < .0001), suggesting a communicating vessels effect between the two compartments. α1-syntrophin, AQP4 anchoring protein, was colocalized with AQP4 in astrocyte endfeet, and this colocalization was maintained in ischemic area as observed on confocal microscopy. Moreover, (S)-roscovitine increased AQP4/α1-syntrophin interaction (40%, MW p = .0083) as quantified by proximity ligation assay. The quantified interaction was negatively correlated with brain edema in both treated and placebo groups (R = -.57; p = .0074). We showed for the first time, that a kinase inhibitor modulated AQP4/α1-syntrophin interaction, and was implicated in the reduction of cerebral edema. These findings suggest that (S)-roscovitine may hold promise as a potential treatment for cerebral edema in ischemic stroke and as modulator of AQP4 function in other neurological diseases.<br /> (© 2023 The Authors. GLIA published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1098-1136
Volume :
72
Issue :
2
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Glia
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
37828900
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/glia.24477