Intracellular and extracellular expression of the major inducible 70kDa heat shock protein in experimental ischemia-reperfusion injury of the spinal cord.

TitleIntracellular and extracellular expression of the major inducible 70kDa heat shock protein in experimental ischemia-reperfusion injury of the spinal cord.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2008
AuthorsAwad H, Suntres Z, Heijmans J, Smeak D, Bergdall-Costell V, Christofi FL, Magro C, Oglesbee M
JournalExp Neurol
Volume212
Issue2
Pagination275-84
Date Published2008 Aug
ISSN1090-2430
KeywordsAnimals, Disease Models, Animal, Dogs, Gene Expression, Gene Expression Regulation, Granulocyte Colony-Stimulating Factor, HSP70 Heat-Shock Proteins, Interleukin-3, Lipid Peroxides, Motor Neurons, Recombinant Fusion Proteins, Recombinant Proteins, Reperfusion Injury, Spinal Cord, Spinal Cord Ischemia, Thromboxane B2, Time Factors
Abstract

Inflammatory responses exacerbate ischemia-reperfusion (IR) injury of spinal cord, although understanding of mediators is incomplete. The major inducible 70kDa heat shock protein (hsp70) is induced by ischemia and extracellular hsp70 (e-hsp70) can modulate inflammatory responses, but there is no published information regarding e-hsp70 levels in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) or serum as part of any neurological disease state save trauma. The present work addresses this deficiency by examining e-hsp70 in serum and CSF of dogs in an experimental model of spinal cord IR injury. IR injury of spinal cord caused hind limb paraplegia within 2-3 h that was correlated to lumbosacral poliomalacia with T cell infiltrates at 3 d post-ischemia. In this context, we showed a 5.2-fold elevation of e-hsp70 in CSF that was induced by ischemia and was sustained for the following 3 d observation interval. Plasma e-hsp70 levels were unaffected by IR injury, indicating e-hsp70 release from within the central nervous system. A putative source of this e-hsp70 was ependymal cells in the ischemic penumbra, based upon elevated i-hsp70 levels detected within these cells. Results warrant further investigation of e-hsp70's potential to modulate spinal cord IR injury.

DOI10.1016/j.expneurol.2008.03.024
Alternate JournalExp Neurol
PubMed ID18511046
Related Faculty: 
Cynthia M. Magro, M.D.

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