Department of Integrative Physiology and Cardiovascular Research Institute, University of North Texas Health Science Center, Fort Worth, TX 76107-2699.
Department of Integrative Physiology and Cardiovascular Research Institute, University of North Texas Health Science Center, Fort Worth, TX 76107-2699
Exp Biol Med (Maywood). 2014 Nov;239(11):1461-75. doi: 10.1177/1535370214523703. Epub 2014 Mar 4.
Ischemic brain injury inflicted by stroke and cardiac arrest ranks among the leading causes of death and long-term disability in the United States. The brain consumes large amounts of metabolic substrates and oxygen to sustain its energy requirements. Consequently, the brain is exquisitely sensitive to interruptions in its blood supply, and suffers irreversible damage after 10-15 min of severe ischemia. Effective treatments to protect the brain from stroke and cardiac arrest have proven elusive, due to the complexities of the injury cascades ignited by ischemia and reperfusion. Although recombinant tissue plasminogen activator and therapeutic hypothermia have proven efficacious for stroke and cardiac arrest, respectively, these treatments are constrained by narrow therapeutic windows, potentially detrimental side-effects and the limited availability of hypothermia equipment. Mounting evidence demonstrates the cytokine hormone erythropoietin (EPO) to be a powerful neuroprotective agent and a potential adjuvant to established therapies. Classically, EPO originating primarily in the kidneys promotes erythrocyte production by suppressing apoptosis of proerythroid progenitors in bone marrow. However, the brain is capable of producing EPO, and EPO's membrane receptors and signaling components also are expressed in neurons and astrocytes. EPO activates signaling cascades that increase the brain's resistance to ischemia-reperfusion stress by stabilizing mitochondrial membranes, limiting formation of reactive oxygen and nitrogen intermediates, and suppressing pro-inflammatory cytokine production and neutrophil infiltration. Collectively, these mechanisms preserve functional brain tissue and, thus, improve neurocognitive recovery from brain ischemia. This article reviews the mechanisms mediating EPO-induced brain protection, critiques the clinical utility of exogenous EPO to preserve brain threatened by ischemic stroke and cardiac arrest, and discusses the prospects for induction of EPO production within the brain by the intermediary metabolite, pyruvate.
由中风和心脏骤停引起的缺血性脑损伤是美国主要的死亡和长期残疾原因之一。大脑消耗大量代谢底物和氧气来维持其能量需求。因此,大脑对血液供应中断非常敏感,在严重缺血 10-15 分钟后会遭受不可逆转的损伤。由于缺血和再灌注引发的损伤级联反应的复杂性,有效的治疗方法难以保护大脑免受中风和心脏骤停的影响。尽管重组组织纤溶酶原激活剂和治疗性低温对中风和心脏骤停分别有效,但这些治疗方法受到治疗窗口狭窄、潜在的有害副作用和低温设备有限的限制。越来越多的证据表明细胞因子激素促红细胞生成素(EPO)是一种强大的神经保护剂,也是现有治疗方法的潜在辅助剂。经典上,EPO 主要来源于肾脏,通过抑制骨髓中原始红细胞祖细胞的凋亡来促进红细胞生成。然而,大脑能够产生 EPO,EPO 的膜受体和信号成分也在神经元和星形胶质细胞中表达。EPO 激活信号级联反应,通过稳定线粒体膜、限制活性氧和氮中间体的形成以及抑制促炎细胞因子的产生和中性粒细胞浸润,增加大脑对缺血再灌注应激的抵抗力。这些机制共同保护功能性脑组织,从而改善脑缺血后的神经认知恢复。本文综述了 EPO 诱导脑保护的机制,评价了外源性 EPO 对缺血性中风和心脏骤停威胁的大脑的临床应用价值,并讨论了通过中间代谢产物丙酮酸诱导大脑内 EPO 产生的前景。