Advanced Science (Feb 2020)
Spatiotemporal Distribution of Agrin after Intrathecal Injection and Its Protective Role in Cerebral Ischemia/Reperfusion Injury
Abstract
Abstract Intrathecal injection, drugs transporting along perivascular spaces, represents an important route for maintaining blood–brain barrier (BBB) integrity after cerebral ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) injury. However, after being directly injected into cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), the temporal and spatial changes in the distribution of therapeutic protein drugs have remained unknown. Here, with positron emission tomography (PET) imaging, the uptake of 89Zr‐agrin is noninvasively and dynamically monitored. These data demonstrate the time–activity curve of drugs in the brain subregions and their spatial distribution in different organs after intrathecal administration. Furthermore, agrin treatment effectively inhibits BBB disruption by reducing the loss of tight‐junctional proteins. Importantly, the infarct volume is reduced; the number of apoptotic neurons is decreased; and neurological function is improved in mouse I/R injury models. Thus, intrathecal injection of agrin provides the basis for a new strategy to research and develop protein drugs for reducing the aggravation of I/R injury.
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