Rapamycin Treatment Reduces Brain Pericyte Constriction in Ischemic Stroke

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Abstract

The contraction and subsequent death of brain pericytes may play a role in microvascular no-reflow following the re-opening of an occluded artery during ischemic stroke. Mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) inhibition has been shown to reduce motility/contractility of various cancer cell lines and reduce neuronal cell death in stroke. However, the effects of mTOR inhibition on brain pericyte contraction and death during ischemia have not yet been investigated. Cultured pericytes exposed to simulated ischemia for 12 hours in vitro contracted after less than 1 h, which was about 7h prior to cell death. Rapamycin significantly reduced the rate of pericyte contraction during ischemia, however, it did not have a significant effect on pericyte viability at any time point. Rapamycin appeared to reduce pericyte contraction through a RhoA-dependent pathway, independent of changes in intracellular calcium. Using a mouse model of middle cerebral artery occlusion, rapamycin significantly increased the diameter of capillaries underneath pericytes and increased the number of open capillaries 30 minutes following recanalization. Our findings suggest rapamycin may be a useful adjuvant therapeutic to reduce pericyte contraction and improve cerebral reperfusion post-stroke.

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