90 research outputs found

    Post-ischaemic silencing of p66Shc reduces ischaemia/reperfusion brain injury and its expression correlates to clinical outcome in stroke

    Get PDF
    In light of the limited repertoire of therapeutical options available for the treatment of ischaemic stroke, the identification of novel potential targets is vital; in this respect, the present study demonstrates that the adaptor protein p66Shc holds this potential as an adjunct therapy to thrombolysis. Post-ischaemic silencing of p66Shc protein yielded beneficial effects in a mouse model of I/R brain injury underlying an interesting translational perspective for this target protein. Further, in proof-of-principle clinical experiments using PBMs, we demonstrate that p66Shc gene expression is transiently increased and that its levels correlate to short-term outcome in ischaemic stroke patients. Although these latter experiments are not directly relevant to the experiments performed in mice and in human endothelial cells, they provide novel important information about p66Shc regulation in stroke patients and set the basis for further investigations aimed at assessing the potential for p66Shc to become a novel therapeutic target as an adjunct of thrombolysis for the management of acute ischaemic strok

    Autologous stem cell transplantation: leukapheresis product has anti-angiogenic effects in vivo correlating with neutrophil-derived VEGFR1.

    Get PDF
    BACKGROUND: High-dose chemotherapy (HDC) followed by autologous stem cell transplantation (ASCT) is used for the treatment of hemato-oncologic malignancies. In this study, we measured the effect of HDC/ASCT on plasma concentrations of antiangiogenic soluble vascular endothelial growth factor receptor 1 (sVEGFR1) and of leukapheresis products (LP) and patient serum on chick chorioallantoic (CAM) angiogenesis. MATERIALS AND METHODS: VEGFR1- and CD34-expressing cells of leukapheresis products were analyzed by flow cytometry. Alternatively spliced isoforms of VEGFR1 mRNA were quantified using reverse transcription PCR. RESULTS: Plasma concentrations of sVEGFR1 decreased after HDC, but significantly increased after ASCT. In the CAM assay, sera of patients elicited a proangiogenic effect before and after HDC, but a strong antiangiogenic response after ASCT, comparable to that of bevacizumab at therapeutic concentrations. LP contains high concentrations of sVEGFR1, and high density of VEGFR1(+) neutrophilic granulocytes, in which mRNA expression is shifted toward the soluble VEGFR1 isoform. CONCLUSION: Neutrophil-derived antiangiogenic sVEGFR1 within the LP may contribute to the therapeutic efficacy of ASCT
    corecore