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Post-injury Nose-to-Brain Delivery of Activin A and SerpinB2 Reduces Brain Damage in a Mouse Stroke Model

Authors :
Hilmar Bading
Ursula Weiss
Bettina Buchthal
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
American Society of Gene & Cell Therapy, 2018.

Abstract

Synaptic NMDA receptors activating nuclear calcium-driven adaptogenomics control a potent body-own neuroprotective mechanism, referred to as acquired neuroprotection. Viral vector-mediated gene transfer in conjunction with stereotactic surgery has previously demonstrated the proficiency of several nuclear calcium-regulated genes to protect in vivo against brain damage caused by toxic extrasynaptic NMDA receptor signaling following seizures or stroke. Here we used noninvasive nose-to-brain administration of Activin A and SerpinB2, two secreted nuclear calcium-regulated neuroprotectants, for post-injury treatment of brain damage following middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAO) in C57BL/6N mice. The observed reduction of the infarct volume was comparable to the protection obtained by intracerebroventricular injection of recombinant Activin A or SerpinB2 or by stereotactic delivery 3 weeks prior to the injury of a recombinant adeno-associated virus containing an expression cassette for the potent neuroprotective transcription factor Npas4. These results establish post-injury, nose-to-brain delivery of Activin A and SerpinB2 as effective and possibly clinically applicable treatments of acute and chronic neurodegenerative conditions.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....86f14e4390513e854d121d0890f6bd01