Improvement of functional recovery by chronic metformin treatment is associated with enhanced altern

作者:发布时间:2014-10-20浏览次数:1827

 贾佳副教授在Brain, Behavior, and Immunity上发表题为Improvement of functional  recovery by chronic metformin treatment is associated with enhanced  alternative activation of microglia/macrophages and increased  angiogenesis and neurogenesis following experimental stroke的论文。

Abstract: Acute AMPK activation exacerbates ischemic brain damage  experimentally. Paradoxically, the clinical use of an AMPK activator  metformin reduces the incidence of stroke. We investigated whether  post-stroke chronic metformin treatment promotes functional recovery and  tissue repair via an M2-polarization mechanism following experimental  stroke. Mice were randomly divided to receive metformin or vehicle daily  beginning at 24 h after middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAO).  Neurological deficits were monitored for 30 days following MCAO. To  characterize the polarization of the microglia and infiltrating  macrophages, the expression of the M1 and M2 signature genes was  analyzed with qPCR, ELISA and immunohistochemistry. Post-MCAO  angiogenesis and neurogenesis were examined immunohistochemically. An in  vitro angiogenesis model was employed to examine whether metformin  promoted angiogenesis in a M2 polarization-dependent manner. Post-stroke  chronic metformin treatment had no impact on acute infarction but  enhanced cerebral AMPK activation, promoted functional recovery and  skewed the microglia/macrophages toward an M2 phenotype following MCAO.  Metformin also significantly increased angiogenesis and neurogenesis in  the ischemic brain. Consistently, metformin-induced M2 polarization of  BV2 microglial cells depended on AMPK activation in vitro. Furthermore,  treatment of brain endothelial cells with conditioned media collected  from metformin-polarized BV2 cells promoted angiogenesis in vitro. In  conclusion, post-stroke chronic metformin treatment improved functional  recovery following MCAO via AMPK-dependent M2 polarization. Modulation  of microglia/macrophage polarization represents a novel therapeutic  strategy for stroke.