Neurobiology of Disease (Apr 2009)

TAT-Bcl-xL improves survival of neuronal precursor cells in the lesioned striatum after focal cerebral ischemia

  • Thorsten R. Doeppner,
  • Gunnar P.H. Dietz,
  • Mimount El Aanbouri,
  • Joachim Gerber,
  • Otto W. Witte,
  • Mathias Bähr,
  • Jens Weise

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 34, no. 1
pp. 87 – 94

Abstract

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Cerebral ischemia activates endogenous neurogenesis in the subventricular zone (SVZ) and the dentate gyrus. Consecutively, SVZ-derived neural precursors migrate towards ischemic lesions. However, functional relevance of activated neurogenesis is limited by poor survival of new-born precursors. We therefore employed the HI-virus-derived fusion protein TAT-Bcl-xL to study the effects of acute anti-apoptotic treatment on endogenous neurogenesis and functional outcome after transient cerebral ischemia in mice. TAT-Bcl-xL treatment led to significantly reduced acute ischemic cell death (128±23 vs. 305±65 TUNEL+ cells/mm2 in controls) and infarct volumes resulting in less motor deficits and improved spatial learning. It significantly increased survival of doublecortin (Dcx)-positive neuronal precursors (389±96 vs. 213±97 Dcx+ cells in controls) but did not enhance overall post-ischemic cell proliferation or lesion-specific neuronal differentiation 28 days after ischemia. Our data demonstrate that post-stroke TAT-Bcl-xL-treatment results in acute neuroprotection, improved functional outcome, and enhanced survival of lesion-specific neuronal precursor cells after cerebral ischemia in mice.

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