Dominguez Reymundo, Zitting Madison, Liu Qinghai, Patel Arati, Babadjouni Robin, Hodis Drew M, Chow Robert H, Mack William J
Zilkha Neurogenetic Institute, Keck School of Medicine, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California.
Zilkha Neurogenetic Institute, Keck School of Medicine, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California.
J Stroke Cerebrovasc Dis. 2018 Jul;27(7):1743-1751. doi: 10.1016/j.jstrokecerebrovasdis.2018.01.030. Epub 2018 Mar 27.
Estradiol is a sex steroid hormone known to protect the brain against damage related to transient and global cerebral ischemia. In the present study, we leverage an experimental murine model of bilateral carotid artery stenosis (BCAS) to examine the putative effects of estradiol therapy on chronic cerebral hypoperfusion. We hypothesize that long-term estradiol therapy protects against white matter injury and declarative memory deficits associated with chronic cerebral hypoperfusion.
Adult male C57BL/6J mice underwent either surgical BCAS or sham procedures. Two days after surgery, the mice were given oral estradiol (Sham+E, BCAS+E) or placebo (Sham+P, BCAS+P) treatments daily for 31-34 days. All mice underwent Novel Object Recognition (NOR) testing 31-34 days after the start of oral treatments. Following sacrifice, blood was collected and brains fixed, sliced, and prepared for histological examination of white matter injury and extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) expression.
Animals receiving long-term oral estradiol therapy (BCAS-E2 and Sham-E2) had higher plasma estradiol levels than those receiving placebo treatment (BCAS-P and Sham-P). BCAS-E2 mice demonstrated less white matter injury (Klüver-Barrera staining) and performed better on the NOR task compared to BCAS-P mice. ERK expression in the brain was increased in the BCAS compared to sham cohorts. Among the BCAS mice, the BCAS-E2 cohort had a greater number of ERK + cells.
This study demonstrates a potentially protective role for oral estradiol therapy in the setting of white matter injury and declarative memory deficits secondary to murine chronic cerebral hypoperfusion.
雌二醇是一种性甾体激素,已知其可保护大脑免受与短暂性全脑缺血相关的损伤。在本研究中,我们利用双侧颈动脉狭窄(BCAS)的实验性小鼠模型来研究雌二醇治疗对慢性脑灌注不足的假定影响。我们假设长期雌二醇治疗可预防与慢性脑灌注不足相关的白质损伤和陈述性记忆缺陷。
成年雄性C57BL/6J小鼠接受手术性BCAS或假手术。手术后两天,小鼠每天接受口服雌二醇(假手术+雌二醇,BCAS+雌二醇)或安慰剂(假手术+安慰剂,BCAS+安慰剂)治疗,持续31 - 34天。在口服治疗开始后31 - 34天,所有小鼠均接受新物体识别(NOR)测试。处死后,采集血液,固定大脑,切片,并准备用于白质损伤和细胞外信号调节激酶(ERK)表达的组织学检查。
接受长期口服雌二醇治疗的动物(BCAS - E2和假手术 - E2)的血浆雌二醇水平高于接受安慰剂治疗的动物(BCAS - P和假手术 - P)。与BCAS - P小鼠相比,BCAS - E2小鼠的白质损伤较少(Klüver - Barrera染色),并且在NOR任务中表现更好。与假手术组相比,BCAS组大脑中的ERK表达增加。在BCAS小鼠中,BCAS - E2组的ERK +细胞数量更多。
本研究证明口服雌二醇治疗在小鼠慢性脑灌注不足继发的白质损伤和陈述性记忆缺陷方面具有潜在保护作用。