Microglia-derived TNF-α mediates endothelial necroptosis aggravating blood brain–barrier disruption after ischemic stroke

An‐Qi Chen(Union Hospital), Zhi Fang(Union Hospital), Xiao-Lu Chen(Union Hospital), Shuai Yang(Union Hospital), Yifan Zhou(Union Hospital), Ling Mao(Union Hospital), Yuanpeng Xia(Union Hospital), Huijuan Jin(Union Hospital), Yanan Li(Union Hospital), Mingfeng You(Union Hospital), Xuxia Wang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Hao Lei(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Quanwei He(Union Hospital), Bo Hu(Union Hospital)
Cell Death and Disease
June 20, 2019
Cited by 552Open Access
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Abstract

Endothelium (EC) is a key component of blood-brain barrier (BBB), and has an important position in the neurovascular unit. Its dysfunction and death after cerebral ischemic/reperfusion (I/R) injury not only promote evolution of neuroinflammation and brain edema, but also increase the risk of intracerebral hemorrhage of thrombolytic therapies. However, the mechanism and specific interventions of EC death after I/R injury are poorly understood. Here we showed that necroptosis was a mechanism underlying EC death, which promoted BBB breakdown after I/R injury. Treatment of rats with receptor interacting protein kinase 1 (RIPK1)-inhibitor, necrostatin-1 reduced endothelial necroptosis and BBB leakage. We furthermore showed that perivascular M1-like microglia-induced endothelial necroptosis leading to BBB disruption requires tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α) secreted by M1 type microglia and its receptor, TNF receptor 1 (TNFR1), on endothelium as the primary mediators of these effects. More importantly, anti-TNFα (infliximab, a potent clinically used drug) treatment significantly ameliorate endothelial necroptosis, BBB destruction and improve stroke outcomes. Our data identify a previously unexplored role for endothelial necroptosis in BBB disruption and suggest infliximab might serve as a potential drug for stroke therapy.


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