1. Age-specific transcriptional response to stroke.
- Author
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Sieber MW, Guenther M, Jaenisch N, Albrecht-Eckardt D, Kohl M, Witte OW, and Frahm C
- Subjects
- Aging immunology, Animals, Brain immunology, Brain physiopathology, Cell Cycle genetics, DNA Repair genetics, Depressive Disorder genetics, Disease Models, Animal, Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental genetics, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Humans, Inflammation genetics, Male, Mice, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Molecular Targeted Therapy, Nerve Regeneration, Neuronal Plasticity genetics, Oxidative Stress genetics, Risk Factors, Stroke drug therapy, Stroke physiopathology, Synapses physiology, Aging genetics, Stroke genetics, Transcription, Genetic genetics
- Abstract
Increased age is a major risk factor for stroke incidence and post-ischemic mortality. To develop age-adjusted therapeutic interventions, a clear understanding of the complexity of age-related post-ischemic mechanisms is essential. Transient occlusion of the middle cerebral artery--a model that closely resembles human stroke--was used to induce cerebral infarction in mice of 4 different ages (2, 9, 15, 24 months). By using Illumina cDNA microarrays and quantitative PCR we detected a distinct age-dependent response to stroke involving 350 differentially expressed genes. Our analyses also identified 327 differentially expressed genes that responded to stroke in an age-independent manner. These genes are involved in different aspects of the inflammatory and immune response, oxidative stress, cell cycle activation and/or DNA repair, apoptosis, cytoskeleton reorganization and/or astrogliosis, synaptic plasticity and/or neurotransmission, and depressive disorders and/or dopamine-, serotonin-, GABA-signaling. In agreement with our earlier work, aged brains displayed an attenuated inflammatory and immune response (Sieber et al., 2011) and a reduced impairment of post-stroke synaptic plasticity. Our data also revealed a distinct age-related susceptibility for post-ischemic depression, the most common neuropsychiatric consequence of stroke, which has a major influence on functional outcome., (Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
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