Stroke and Vascular Neurology ()

Bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cell ameliorates post-stroke enterobacterial translocation through liver-gut axis

  • Zhengqi Lu,
  • Lei Wei,
  • Wei Cai,
  • Shisi Wang,
  • Yuge Wang,
  • Yuxin Liu,
  • Bingjun Zhang,
  • Xiaotao Su,
  • Tiemei Li,
  • Banghao Jian,
  • Xinmei Kang,
  • Mengyan Hu,
  • Chunyi Li,
  • Danli Lu,
  • Shishi Shen,
  • Huipeng Huang,
  • Xiaohui Deng

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/svn-2024-003494

Abstract

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Background Enterobacterial translocation is a leading contributor to fatal infection among patients with acute ischaemic stroke (AIS). Accumulative evidence suggests that mesenchymal stem cell (MSC) effectively ameliorates stroke outcomes. Whether MSC could inhibit post-stroke enterobacterial translocation remains elusive.Methods Patients with AIS and healthy individuals were enrolled in the study. Mice subjected to transient middle cerebral artery occlusion were treated with bone marrow-derived MSC (BM-MSC) right after reperfusion. Enterobacterial translocation was evaluated with Stroke Dysbiosis Index and circulating endotoxin. Thickness of mucus was assessed with Alcian blue staining. Hepatic glucocorticoid (GC) metabolism was analysed with expression of HSD11B2, HSD11B1 and SRD5A1.Results We report that the gut mucus layer was attenuated after the stroke leading to pronounced enterobacterial translocation. The attenuation of the gut mucus was attributed to diminished mucin production by goblet cells in response to the elevated systemic GC after cerebral ischaemia. Transferred-BM-MSC restored the mucus thickness, thus preserving gut microbiota homeostasis and preventing enterobacterial invasion. Mechanistically, the transferred-BM-MSC stationed in the liver and enhanced peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor γ signalling in hepatocytes. Consequently, expression of HSD11B2 and SRD5A1 was increased while HSD11B1 expression was downregulated which promoted GC catabolism and subsequently restored mucin production.Conclusions Our findings reveal that MSC transfer improves post-stroke gut barrier integrity and inhibits enterobacterial translocation by enhancing the hepatic GC metabolism thus representing a protective modulator of the liver-gut-brain axis in AIS.