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Query: UMLS:C0038454 (
stroke
)
147,016
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Focal brain ischemia induces inflammation, extracellular matrix remodeling, gliosis, and neovascularization.
Osteopontin
(
OPN
) is a secreted glycoprotein that has been implicated in vascular injury by promoting cell adhesion, migration, and chemotaxis. To investigate the possible involvement of
OPN
in brain matrix remodeling after focal
stroke
, we examined the expression of
OPN
in ischemic cortex after permanent or temporary occlusion of the middle cerebral artery (MCAO) of the rat.
OPN
mRNA and protein levels in nonischemic cortex were not detected consistently, although significant induction of
OPN
was observed in the ischemic cortex.
OPN
mRNA increased 3.5-fold at 12 hr and reached peak levels 5 d (49.5-fold; p < 0.001) after permanent MCAO. The profile of
OPN
mRNA induction after transient MCAO (160 min) with reperfusion was essentially the same as that of permanent MCAO. In situ hybridization and immunohistochemical studies demonstrated strong induction of
OPN
in the ischemic cortex, which was localized primarily in a subset of ED-1-positive macrophages that accumulated in the ischemic zone. Moreover,
OPN
immunoreactivity was detected in the matrix of ischemic brain, suggesting a functional role of the newly deposited matrix protein in cell-matrix interactions and remodeling. Indeed, using a modified Boyden chamber, we demonstrated a dose-dependent chemotactic activity of
OPN
in C6 astroglia cells and normal human astrocytes. Taken together, these data suggest that the upregulation of
OPN
after focal brain ischemia may play a role in cellular (glia, macrophage) migration/activation and matrix remodeling that provides for new matrix-cell interaction.
...
PMID:Delayed expression of osteopontin after focal stroke in the rat. 948 94
Following an ischemic insult to the central nervous system a reorganization of cells and tissue takes place as the surrounding cells attempt to limit the injury, repair the damage, and restore normal architecture of the brain. This tissue remodeling requires de novo synthesis of genes and proteins which enables cells to actively change their relationship with the existing extracellular matrix and with other cells to reorganize the damaged tissue. We have identified two key molecular components of the matrix remodeling process after focal ischemia:
osteopontin
(
OPN
) and its integrin receptor alpha v beta 3 (alpha v beta 3).
OPN
is initially expressed by activated macrophages and microglia in the periinfarct region (24-48 hr) and at later times (5-15 days) in the core infarct. After focal
stroke
the alpha v beta 3 was upregulated by astrocytes in the periinfarct region. Spatial and temporal analyses demonstrated that at 5 days after injury the alpha v beta 3-positive astrocytes were at a distance from the
osteopontin
-expressing macrophages; by 15 days the alpha v beta 3-expressing astrocytes were localized within an
osteopontin
-rich matrix. In vitro
OPN
was shown to induce migration of astrocytes in a Boyden chamber system. These data suggest that
OPN
derived from microglia at the infarct border zone (and possible macrophages in the infarct core) may serve as an "astrokine" (suggested term for astrocyte chemoattractant) to organize the astrocyte scar after focal
stroke
. Our data demonstrate profound changes in brain matrix remodeling after focal ischemic
stroke
, including the synthesis and release of matrix proteins alien to the normal brain, the expression of integrin receptors that ligate these proteins, and possibly a novel function for microglial-derived
OPN
in astrocyte migration after focal ischemia that may drive glial activation, organization, and repair functions.
...
PMID:Matrix remodeling after stroke. De novo expression of matrix proteins and integrin receptors. 1066 27
Cardiovascular calcification is a common consequence of aging, diabetes, hypercholesterolemia, mechanically abnormal valve function, and chronic renal insufficiency. Although vascular calcification may appear to be a uniform response to vascular insult, it is a heterogenous disorder, with overlapping yet distinct mechanisms of initiation and progression. A minimum of four histoanatomic variants-atherosclerotic (fibrotic) calcification, cardiac valve calcification, medial artery calcification, and vascular calciphylaxis-arise in response to metabolic, mechanical, infectious, and inflammatory injuries. Common to the first three variants is a variable degree of vascular infiltration by T cells and macrophages. Once thought benign, the deleterious clinical consequences of calcific vasculopathy are now becoming clear;
stroke
, amputation, ischemic heart disease, and increased mortality are portended by the anatomy and extent of calcific vasculopathy. Along with dystrophic calcium deposition in dying cells and lipoprotein deposits, active endochondral and intramembranous (nonendochondral) ossification processes contribute to vascular calcium load. Thus vascular calcification is subject to regulation by osteotropic hormones and skeletal morphogens in addition to key inhibitors of passive tissue mineralization. In response to oxidized lipids, inflammation, and mechanical injury, the microvascular smooth muscle cell becomes activated. Orthotopically, proliferating stromal myofibroblasts provide osteoprogenitors for skeletal growth and fracture repair; however, in valves and arteries, vascular myofibroblasts contribute to cardiovascular ossification. Current data suggest that paracrine signals are provided by bone morphogenetic protein-2, Wnts, parathyroid hormone-related polypeptide,
osteopontin
, osteoprotegerin, and matrix Gla protein, all entrained to endocrine, metabolic, inflammatory, and mechanical cues. In end-stage renal disease, a "perfect storm" of vascular calcification often occurs, with hyperglycemia, hyperphosphatemia, hypercholesterolemia, hypertension, parathyroid hormone resistance, and iatrogenic calcitriol excess contributing to severe calcific vasculopathy. This brief review recounts emerging themes in the pathobiology of vascular calcification and highlights some fundamental deficiencies in our understanding of vascular endocrinology and metabolism that are immediately relevant to human health and health care.
...
PMID:Osteogenic regulation of vascular calcification: an early perspective. 1510 15
Osteopontin
(
OPN
) is a secreted extracellular phosphoprotein involved in diverse biologic functions, including inflammation, cell migration, and antiapoptotic processes. Here we investigate the neuroprotective potential of
OPN
to reduce cell death using both in vitro and in vivo models of ischemia. We show that incubation of cortical neuron cultures with
OPN
protects against cell death from oxygen and glucose deprivation. The effect of
OPN
depends on the Arg-Gly-Asp (RGD)-containing motif as the protective effect of
OPN
in vitro was blocked by an RGD-containing hexapeptide, which prevents integrin receptors binding to their ligands.
Osteopontin
treatment of cortical neuron cultures caused an increase in Akt and p42/p44 MAPK phosphorylation, which is consistent with
OPN
-inducing neuroprotection via the activation of these protein kinases. Indeed, the protective effect of
OPN
was reduced by inhibiting the activation of Akt and p42/p44 MAPK using LY294002 and U0126, respectively. The protective effect of
OPN
was also blocked by the protein synthesis inhibitor cycloheximide, suggesting that the neuroprotective effect of
OPN
required new protein synthesis. Finally, intracerebral ventricular administration of
OPN
caused a marked reduction in infarct size after transient middle cerebral artery occlusion in a murine
stroke
model. These data suggest that
OPN
is a potent neuroprotectant against ischemic injury.
...
PMID:Neuroprotection by osteopontin in stroke. 1567 24
Inflammation aggravates brain injury caused by
stroke
and neurodegeneration.
Osteopontin
(
OPN
) is a cytokine-like glycoprotein that binds to various integrins and CD44 variants.
OPN
exerts proinflammatory effects in autoimmune conditions but also has cytoprotective properties and participates in wound healing. In this study, we addressed the role of
OPN
in ischaemic brain injury using
OPN
knock-out (KO) mice in models of cortical
stroke
. Compared with wild-type animals,
OPN
KO mice exhibited unaltered infarct development at the primary injury site but greatly increased retrograde degeneration of the ipsilateral thalamus. Thalamic neurodegeneration in
OPN
-deficient mice was associated with pronounced microglia activation and inflammatory gene expression and could be attenuated via pharmacological blockade of the inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS). Therefore, delayed neurodegeneration in
OPN
-deficient mice was at least partly due to an excessive release of nitric oxide via the iNOS pathway. Neuroprotective and anti-inflammatory effects of
OPN
may be relevant for a variety of neurological disease conditions.
...
PMID:Increased thalamic neurodegeneration following ischaemic cortical stroke in osteopontin-deficient mice. 1663 21
In bone and teeth formation, coordinated calcification is a highly desirable biological process. However, heterotopic calcification at unwanted tissue sites leads to dysfunction, disease and, potentially, to death and therefore requires prevention and treatment. With the recent discovery of calcification inhibitors we now know that biological calcification is not passive but a complex, active and highly regulated process. Calcification at vascular sites is the most threatening localization and manifests as part of atherosclerosis or arteriosclerosis. Atherosclerosis is often accompanied by intimal plaque calcification, whereas arteriosclerosis is characterized by calcification of the media. The severity of calcification of cerebral or coronary atherosclerotic plaques is associated with an increased incidence of events such as
stroke
or myocardial infarction. Medial calcification is the major cause of arterial stiffness, which contributes to left ventricular dysfunction and heart failure. Patients with chronic kidney disease are at especially increased risk for both intimal and medial calcification. In this context, it is currently thought that calcium-regulatory factors including fetuin-A, matrix Gla protein, osteoprotegerin, and pyrophosphates act in a local or systemic manner to prevent calcifications of the vasculature, and that dys-regulations of such calcification inhibitors may contribute to progressive calcifications. Nephrolithiasis represents another process of unwanted calcification responsible for significant morbidity. More than 80% of renal stones contain calcium. Urinary factors inhibiting calcification are citrate, glycosaminoglycans, Tamm-Horsfall protein, and
osteopontin
. This review summarizes current experimental and clinical data underlining the biological importance of these calcification inhibitors.
...
PMID:Inhibitors of calcification in blood and urine. 1737 84
The assessment of target organ damage is important in defining the optimal treatment of hypertension and blood pressure-related cardiovascular disease. The aims of the present study were (1) to investigate candidate biomarkers of target organ damage,
osteopontin
(
OPN
) and plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1), in models of malignant hypertension with well characterized end-organ pathology; and (2) to evaluate the effects of chronic treatment with a p38 MAPK inhibitor. Gene expression, plasma concentrations, and renal immunohistochemical localization of
OPN
and PAI-1 were measured in
stroke
-prone spontaneously hypertensive rats on a salt-fat diet (SFD SHR-SP) and in spontaneously hypertensive rats receiving N(omega)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME SHR). Plasma concentrations of
OPN
and PAI-1 increased significantly in SFD SHR-SP and L-NAME SHR as compared with controls, (2.5-4.5-fold for
OPN
and 2.0-9.0-fold for PAI-1). The plasma levels of
OPN
and PAI-1 were significantly correlated with the urinary excretion of albumin (p < 0.0001). Elevations in urinary albumin, plasma
OPN
and PAI-1 were abolished by chronic treatment (4-8 weeks) with a specific p38 MAPK inhibitor, SB-239063AN.
OPN
immunoreactivity was localized predominantly in the apical portion of tubule epithelium, while PAI-1 immunoreactivity was robust in glomeruli, tubules and renal artery endothelium. Treatment with the p38 MAPK inhibitor significantly reduced
OPN
and PAI-1 protein expression in target organs. Kidney gene expression was increased for
OPN
(4.9- and 7.9-fold) and PAI-1 (2.8- and 11.5-fold) in SFD SHR-SP and L-NAME SHR, respectively. In-silico pathway analysis revealed that activation of p38 MAPK was linked to
OPN
and PAI-1 via SPI, c-fos and c-jun; suggesting that these pathways may play an important role in p38 MAPK-dependent hypertensive renal dysfunction. The results suggest that enhanced
OPN
and PAI-1 expression reflects end-organ damage in hypertension and that suppression correlates with end-organ protection regardless of overt antihypertensive action.
...
PMID:P38 MAPK inhibitors suppress biomarkers of hypertension end-organ damage, osteopontin and plasminogen activator inhibitor-1. 1743 56
Osteopontin
(
OPN
) is a cytokine that involves in vascular remodeling processes in cerebrovascular diseases. The association of its gene with ischemic
stroke
was investigated in a Korean population. Representative sequence variants covering the entire
OPN
gene were genotyped in 455 controls and 271 patients with ischemic
stroke
including large artery atherosclerosis (LAA), small vessel occlusion, and cardioembolism. Analysis with the individual tagging variants and their haplotypes revealed an evidence of association only with LAA. Significances were shown with the haplotypes, especially with the TCA at the loci C2140T, C5891T, and A7385G conferring a risk of 2.09 for LAA (P < 0.05). The CG at the loci C1013T and A7385G was the most protective haplotype (OR = 0.66, P < 0.05). Our findings suggested that several haplotypes of
OPN
gene contributed to determining risk factors as well as protective factors of LAA.
...
PMID:Haplotype analysis revealed a genetic influence of osteopontin on large artery atherosclerosis. 1831 49
Osteopontin
(
OPN
), a large secreted glycoprotein with an arginine, glycine, aspartate (RGD) motif, can bind and signal through cellular integrin receptors. We have shown previously that
OPN
enhances neuronal survival in the setting of ischemia. Here, we sought to increase the neuroprotective potency of
OPN
and improve the method of delivery with the goal of identifying a treatment for
stroke
in humans. We show that thrombin cleavage of
OPN
improves its ability to ligate integrin receptors and its neuroprotective capacity in models of ischemia. Thrombin-cleaved
OPN
is a twofold more effective neuroprotectant than the untreated molecule. We also tested whether
OPN
could be administered intranasally and found that it is efficiently targeted to the brain via intranasal delivery. Furthermore, intranasal administration of thrombin-treated
OPN
confers protection against ischemic brain injury.
Osteopontin
mimetics based on the peptide sequences located either N or C terminal to the thrombin cleavage site were generated and tested in models of ischemia. Treatment with successively shorter N-terminal peptides and a phosphorylated C-terminal peptide provided significant neuroprotection against ischemic injury. These findings show that
OPN
mimetics offer promise for development into new drugs for the treatment of
stroke
.
...
PMID:Nasal administration of osteopontin peptide mimetics confers neuroprotection in stroke. 1836 27
An increase in angiotensin II (ANG II) under conditions of high salt intake can result in renal damage. The extent to which ANG II does this directly or by way of stimulating aldosterone (Aldo) secretion is a subject of some debate. In the present study, we sought to determine the separate effects of Aldo and ANG II on the expression of plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1) and other factors related to renal fibrosis in the
stroke
-prone spontaneously hypertensive rat (SHRSP). Saline-drinking male SHRSPs underwent adrenalectomy (ADX) or sham operation (Sham). Treatment groups consisted of ADX + ANG II (25 ng/min sc) and ADX + Aldo (40 microg.kg(-1).day(-1) sc). After 2 wk of treatment, circulating Aldo levels were reduced to the limit of detection, renal PAI-1, transforming growth factor-beta1 (TGF-beta1), and
osteopontin
expression, and phospho-Smad2 (p-Smad2) level were decreased severalfold, and Smad7 (an inhibitory regulator of TGF-beta1 action) expression was increased in ADX compared with Sham rats. Infusion of Aldo into ADX SHRSPs restored the renal mRNA expression of PAI-1, TGF-beta1 (along with restored p-Smad2 level), and
osteopontin
and reduced that of Smad7, whereas ANG II had no or a lesser effect. The findings were confirmed by histological examination of renal tissue. In summary, in the saline-drinking SHRSP, Aldo increased renal profibrotic factors and produced renal injury whereas ANG II in the absence of the adrenals had no effect.
...
PMID:Aldosterone, but not angiotensin II, increases profibrotic factors in kidney of adrenalectomized stroke-prone spontaneously hypertensive rats. 1849 73
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