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Expression and cell distribution of leukotriene B4 receptor 1 in the rat brain cortex after experimental subarachnoid hemorrhage

Authors :
Zi-Huan Zhang
Jing-Peng Liu
Qiang Chen
Wei Li
Zhen-Nan Ye
Meng-Liang Zhou
Zong Zhuang
Ling-Yun Wu
Xiaoliang Wang
Chun-Hua Hang
Xiang-Sheng Zhang
Source :
Brain research. 1652
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Convincing evidence supports that nuclear factor kappa B (NF-κB)-meditated inflammation contributes to the adverse prognosis of aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH), and pathologic neutrophil accumulation after SAH in the brain parenchyma enhances the inflammatory process. Leukotriene B4 (LTB4) is a highly potent lipid chemoattractant of neutrophils, and its biological effects are mediated primarily through the high-affinity LTB4 receptor 1 (BLT1). It is verified that NF-κB-dependent BLT1 mediates LTB4 signaling and LTB4 stimulates NF-κB-dependent inflammation via BLT1. This study aimed to determine the expression and cell distribution of BLT1 in the brain cortex after SAH and investigate the potential relationship between protein expressions of BLT1 and NF-κB. Male Sprague-Dawley rats were randomly assigned into sham group and SAH groups at 6h, 12h and on day 1, day 2 and day 3 (n=6 for each subgroup). SAH groups suffered experimental SAH by injecting 0.3ml autologous blood into the prechiasmatic cistern. BLT1 expression was measured by real-time PCR, western blot, immunohistochemistry and immunofluorescence. Nuclear expression of p65 protein, the major subunit of NF-κB, was also detected by western blot. Our data showed that the expression levels of BLT1 and nuclear p65 protein were both markedly increased after SAH. Moreover, there was a significant positive correlation between BLT1 and nuclear p65 protein expressions in the same specific time course. Double immunofluorescence staining showed that BLT1 were mainly expressed in neurons, microglia and endothelial cells rather than astrocytes after SAH. These results suggest that BLT1 may participate in the NF-κB-mediated inflammatory response after SAH, and there might be important implications for further studies using specific BLT1 antagonists to attenuate the NF-κB-mediated inflammation after SAH.

Details

ISSN :
18726240
Volume :
1652
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Brain research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b452dcab2127867ac8ac151b32852a96