Matrix Metalloproteinase-8 Inhibition Prevents Disruption of Blood–Spinal Cord Barrier and Attenuates Inflammation in Rat Model of Spinal Cord Injury

被引:0
|
作者
Hemant Kumar
Min-Jae Jo
Hyemin Choi
Manjunatha S. Muttigi
Seil Shon
Byung-Joo Kim
Soo-Hong Lee
In-Bo Han
机构
[1] CHA University,Department of Neurosurgery, CHA Bundang Medical Center
[2] CHA University,Department of Biomedical Science
[3] Chung-Ang University,School of Integrative Engineering
来源
Molecular Neurobiology | 2018年 / 55卷
关键词
MMP-8; Spinal cord injury; Tight junctions; Occludin; Neuroinflammation; Blood–spinal cord barrier;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
After spinal cord injury (SCI), tight junction (TJ) protein degradation increases permeability and disrupts the blood–spinal cord barrier (BSCB). The BSCB is primarily formed of endothelial cell, which forms a specialized tight seal due to the presence of TJs. BSCB disruption after SCI allows neutrophil infiltration. Matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-8 is believed to be mainly expressed by neutrophils and is quickly released upon neutrophil activation. Here, we determined whether MMP-8 is involved in the TJ protein degradation in endothelial cells and also determined its role in the neuroinflammation after SCI. MMP-8 recombinant protein treatment increases the TNF-α expression and decreased the TJ (occludin and zonula occludens-1) protein expression in the endothelial cells. Likewise, specific MMP-8 inhibitor (MMP-8I) significantly prevented the TNF-α-induced decrease in the expression of TJ protein in endothelial cells. Furthermore, MMP-8 expression was significantly increased 1 and 3 days after moderate compression (35 g for 5 min at T10 level) SCI, whereas TJ protein levels decreased as determined qRT-PCR, western blotting, and immunohistochemistry. MMP-8 was inhibited directly using a MMP-8I (5 mg/kg) and indirectly by reducing neutrophil infiltration with sivelestat sodium (50 mg/kg) or using the antioxidant N-acetyl-l-cysteine (100 mg/kg). The MMP-8I significantly decreased TNF-α expression, IL-6, and iNOS expression and increased TJ protein expression after SCI. In addition, MMP-8I significantly lessens the amount of Evans blue dye extravasation observed after injury. Thus, our result suggests that MMP-8 plays an imperative role in inflammation and degradation of TJ proteins. Increased MMP-8 expression was associated with the early inflammatory phase of SCI. Inhibiting MMP-8 significantly attenuated SCI-induced inflammation, BSCB breakdown, and cell injury.
引用
收藏
页码:2577 / 2590
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Matrix Metalloproteinase-8 Inhibition Prevents Disruption of Blood-Spinal Cord Barrier and Attenuates Inflammation in Rat Model of Spinal Cord Injury
    Kumar, Hemant
    Jo, Min-Jae
    Choi, Hyemin
    Muttigi, Manjunatha S.
    Shon, Seil
    Kim, Byung-Joo
    Lee, Soo-Hong
    Han, In-Bo
    MOLECULAR NEUROBIOLOGY, 2018, 55 (03) : 2577 - 2590
  • [2] Fluoxetine inhibits matrix metalloprotease activation and prevents disruption of blood-spinal cord barrier after spinal cord injury
    Lee, Jee Y.
    Kim, Hwang S.
    Choi, Hye Y.
    Oh, Tae H.
    Yune, Tae Y.
    BRAIN, 2012, 135 : 2375 - 2389
  • [3] Dexmedetomidine Attenuates Blood-Spinal Cord Barrier Disruption Induced by Spinal Cord Ischemia Reperfusion Injury in Rats
    Fang, Bo
    Li, Xiao-Qian
    Bi, Bo
    Tan, Wen-Fei
    Liu, Gang
    Zhang, Ying
    Ma, Hong
    CELLULAR PHYSIOLOGY AND BIOCHEMISTRY, 2015, 36 (01) : 373 - 383
  • [4] Phenylbutyrate prevents disruption of blood-spinal cord barrier by inhibiting endoplasmic reticulum stress after spinal cord injury
    Zhou, Yulong
    Ye, Libing
    Zheng, Binbin
    Zhu, Sipin
    Shi, Hongxue
    Zhang, Hongyu
    Wang, Zhouguang
    Wei, Xiaojie
    Chen, Daqing
    Li, Xiaokun
    Xu, Huazi
    Xiao, Jian
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF TRANSLATIONAL RESEARCH, 2016, 8 (04): : 1864 - 1875
  • [5] Asiaticoside Attenuates Blood–Spinal Cord Barrier Disruption by Inhibiting Endoplasmic Reticulum Stress in Pericytes After Spinal Cord Injury
    Zhenxin Hu
    Tingting Wu
    Ziheng Zhou
    Yu Zhang
    Qiyue Chen
    Hanbing Yao
    Mengchu Ji
    Ge Shen
    Chenling Dong
    Chengge Shi
    Zhixian Huang
    Nizhou Jiang
    Nan Han
    Xiliang Tian
    Molecular Neurobiology, 2024, 61 : 678 - 692
  • [6] Water treadmill training attenuates blood-spinal cord barrier disruption in rats by promoting angiogenesis and inhibiting matrix metalloproteinase-2/9 expression following spinal cord injury
    Xinwang Ying
    Qingfeng Xie
    Shengcun Li
    Xiaolan Yu
    Kecheng Zhou
    Jingjing Yue
    Xiaolong Chen
    Wenzhan Tu
    Guanhu Yang
    Songhe Jiang
    Fluids and Barriers of the CNS, 17
  • [7] Water treadmill training attenuates blood-spinal cord barrier disruption in rats by promoting angiogenesis and inhibiting matrix metalloproteinase-2/9 expression following spinal cord injury
    Ying, Xinwang
    Xie, Qingfeng
    Li, Shengcun
    Yu, Xiaolan
    Zhou, Kecheng
    Yue, Jingjing
    Chen, Xiaolong
    Tu, Wenzhan
    Yang, Guanhu
    Jiang, Songhe
    FLUIDS AND BARRIERS OF THE CNS, 2020, 17 (01)
  • [8] Vagus Nerve Stimulation Prevents Endothelial Necroptosis to Alleviate Blood-Spinal Cord Barrier Disruption After Spinal Cord Injury
    Hui Chen
    Zhou Feng
    Lingxia Min
    Mingliang Tan
    Dongyun Zhang
    Qiuwen Gong
    Hongliang Liu
    Jingming Hou
    Molecular Neurobiology, 2023, 60 : 6466 - 6475
  • [9] Vagus Nerve Stimulation Prevents Endothelial Necroptosis to Alleviate Blood-Spinal Cord Barrier Disruption After Spinal Cord Injury
    Chen, Hui
    Feng, Zhou
    Min, Lingxia
    Tan, Mingliang
    Zhang, Dongyun
    Gong, Qiuwen
    Liu, Hongliang
    Hou, Jingming
    MOLECULAR NEUROBIOLOGY, 2023, 60 (11) : 6466 - 6475
  • [10] Asiaticoside Attenuates Blood-Spinal Cord Barrier Disruption by Inhibiting Endoplasmic Reticulum Stress in Pericytes After Spinal Cord Injury
    Hu, Zhenxin
    Wu, Tingting
    Zhou, Ziheng
    Zhang, Yu
    Chen, Qiyue
    Yao, Hanbing
    Ji, Mengchu
    Shen, Ge
    Dong, Chenling
    Shi, Chengge
    Huang, Zhixian
    Jiang, Nizhou
    Han, Nan
    Tian, Xiliang
    MOLECULAR NEUROBIOLOGY, 2024, 61 (02) : 678 - 692