Neurobiology of Disease (Oct 2013)

Role of HIF-1α-activated Epac1 on HSC-mediated neuroplasticity in stroke model

  • Chen-Huan Lin,
  • Hsu-Tung Lee,
  • Shin-Da Lee,
  • Wei Lee,
  • Chin-Wen Chental Cho,
  • Shinn-Zong Lin,
  • Hsiao-Jung Wang,
  • Hideyuki Okano,
  • Ching-Yuan Su,
  • Yung-Luen Yu,
  • Chung-Y Hsu,
  • Woei-Cherng Shyu

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 58
pp. 76 – 91

Abstract

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Exchange protein activated by cAMP-1 (Epac1) plays an important role in cell proliferation, cell survival and neuronal signaling, and activation of Epac1 in endothelial progenitor cells increases their homing to ischemic muscles and promotes neovascularization in a model of hind limb ischemia. Moreover, upregulation of Epac1 occurs during organ development and in diseases such as myocardial hypertrophy, diabetes, and Alzheimer's disease. We report here that hypoxia upregulated Epac1 through HIF-1α induction in the CD34-immunosorted human umbilical cord blood hematopoietic stem cells (hUCB34). Importantly, implantation of hUCB34 subjected to hypoxia-preconditioning (HP-hUCB34) improved stroke outcome, more than did implantation of untreated hUCB34, in rodents subjected to cerebral ischemia, and this required Epac1-to-matrix metalloprotease (MMP) signaling. This improved therapeutic efficacy correlated with better engraftment and differentiation of these cells in the ischemic host brain. In addition, more than did implantation of untreated HP-hUCB34, implantation of HP-hUCB34 improved cerebral blood flow into the ischemic brain via induction of angiogenesis, facilitated proliferation/recruitment of endogenous neural progenitor cells in the ischemic brain, and promoted neurite outgrowth following cerebral ischemia. Consistent with our proposed role of Epac1-to-MMP signaling in hypoxia-preconditioning, the above mentioned effects of implanting HP-hUCB34 could be abolished by pharmacological inhibition and genetic disruption/deletion of Epac1 or MMPs. We have discovered a HIF-1α-to-Epac1-to-MMP signaling pathway that is required for the improved therapeutic efficacy resulting from hypoxia preconditioning of hUCB34 in vitro prior to their implantation into the host brain in vivo.

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