Vladimir Matchkov

Does Src Kinase Mediated Vasoconstriction Impair Penumbral Reperfusion?

Research output: Contribution to journal/Conference contribution in journal/Contribution to newspaperComment/debate/letter to the editorResearchpeer-review

Standard

Does Src Kinase Mediated Vasoconstriction Impair Penumbral Reperfusion? / Guldbrandsen, Halvor Østerby; Staehr, Christian ; Iversen, Nina Kerting et al.

In: Stroke, Vol. 52, No. 6, 06.2021, p. E250-E258.

Research output: Contribution to journal/Conference contribution in journal/Contribution to newspaperComment/debate/letter to the editorResearchpeer-review

Harvard

APA

CBE

MLA

Vancouver

Guldbrandsen HØ, Staehr C, Iversen NK, Postnov D, Matchkov V. Does Src Kinase Mediated Vasoconstriction Impair Penumbral Reperfusion? Stroke. 2021 Jun;52(6):E250-E258. Epub 2021 May 5. doi: 10.1161/STROKEAHA.120.032737

Author

Bibtex

@article{32b3e0f2c67e4be3bf7e26a00c2aaa93,
title = "Does Src Kinase Mediated Vasoconstriction Impair Penumbral Reperfusion?",
abstract = "Despite successful recanalization, a significant number of patients with ischemic stroke experience impaired local brain tissue reperfusion with adverse clinical outcome. The cause and mechanism of this multifactorial complication are yet to be understood. At the current moment, major attention is given to dysfunction in blood-brain barrier and capillary blood flow but contribution of exaggerated constriction of cerebral arterioles has also been suggested. In the brain, arterioles significantly contribute to vascular resistance and thus control of perfusion. Accordingly, pathological changes in arteriolar wall function can, therefore, limit sufficient reperfusion in ischemic stroke, but this has not yet received sufficient attention. Although an increased vascular tone after reperfusion has been demonstrated in several studies, the mechanism behind it remains to be characterized. Importantly, the majority of conventional mechanisms controlling vascular contraction failed to explain elevated cerebrovascular tone after reperfusion. We propose here that the Na,K-ATPase-dependent Src kinase activation are the key mechanisms responsible for elevation of cerebrovascular tone after reperfusion. The Na,K-ATPase, which is essential to control intracellular ion homeostasis, also executes numerous signaling functions. Under hypoxic conditions, the Na,K-ATPase is endocytosed from the membrane of vascular smooth muscle cells. This initiates the Src kinase signaling pathway that sensitizes the contractile machinery to intracellular Ca2+ resulting in hypercontractility of vascular smooth muscle cells and, thus, elevated cerebrovascular tone that can contribute to impaired reperfusion after stroke. This mechanism integrates with cerebral edema that was suggested to underlie impaired reperfusion and is further supported by several studies, which are discussed in this article. However, final demonstration of the molecular mechanism behind Src kinase-associated arteriolar hypercontractility in stroke remains to be done.",
keywords = "Blood-brain barrier, Homeostasis, Ischemic stroke, Reperfusion, Smooth muscle, Na,K-ATPase, Src kinase",
author = "Guldbrandsen, {Halvor {\O}sterby} and Christian Staehr and Iversen, {Nina Kerting} and Dmitry Postnov and Vladimir Matchkov",
year = "2021",
month = jun,
doi = "10.1161/STROKEAHA.120.032737",
language = "English",
volume = "52",
pages = "E250--E258",
journal = "Stroke",
issn = "0039-2499",
publisher = "LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Does Src Kinase Mediated Vasoconstriction Impair Penumbral Reperfusion?

AU - Guldbrandsen, Halvor Østerby

AU - Staehr, Christian

AU - Iversen, Nina Kerting

AU - Postnov, Dmitry

AU - Matchkov, Vladimir

PY - 2021/6

Y1 - 2021/6

N2 - Despite successful recanalization, a significant number of patients with ischemic stroke experience impaired local brain tissue reperfusion with adverse clinical outcome. The cause and mechanism of this multifactorial complication are yet to be understood. At the current moment, major attention is given to dysfunction in blood-brain barrier and capillary blood flow but contribution of exaggerated constriction of cerebral arterioles has also been suggested. In the brain, arterioles significantly contribute to vascular resistance and thus control of perfusion. Accordingly, pathological changes in arteriolar wall function can, therefore, limit sufficient reperfusion in ischemic stroke, but this has not yet received sufficient attention. Although an increased vascular tone after reperfusion has been demonstrated in several studies, the mechanism behind it remains to be characterized. Importantly, the majority of conventional mechanisms controlling vascular contraction failed to explain elevated cerebrovascular tone after reperfusion. We propose here that the Na,K-ATPase-dependent Src kinase activation are the key mechanisms responsible for elevation of cerebrovascular tone after reperfusion. The Na,K-ATPase, which is essential to control intracellular ion homeostasis, also executes numerous signaling functions. Under hypoxic conditions, the Na,K-ATPase is endocytosed from the membrane of vascular smooth muscle cells. This initiates the Src kinase signaling pathway that sensitizes the contractile machinery to intracellular Ca2+ resulting in hypercontractility of vascular smooth muscle cells and, thus, elevated cerebrovascular tone that can contribute to impaired reperfusion after stroke. This mechanism integrates with cerebral edema that was suggested to underlie impaired reperfusion and is further supported by several studies, which are discussed in this article. However, final demonstration of the molecular mechanism behind Src kinase-associated arteriolar hypercontractility in stroke remains to be done.

AB - Despite successful recanalization, a significant number of patients with ischemic stroke experience impaired local brain tissue reperfusion with adverse clinical outcome. The cause and mechanism of this multifactorial complication are yet to be understood. At the current moment, major attention is given to dysfunction in blood-brain barrier and capillary blood flow but contribution of exaggerated constriction of cerebral arterioles has also been suggested. In the brain, arterioles significantly contribute to vascular resistance and thus control of perfusion. Accordingly, pathological changes in arteriolar wall function can, therefore, limit sufficient reperfusion in ischemic stroke, but this has not yet received sufficient attention. Although an increased vascular tone after reperfusion has been demonstrated in several studies, the mechanism behind it remains to be characterized. Importantly, the majority of conventional mechanisms controlling vascular contraction failed to explain elevated cerebrovascular tone after reperfusion. We propose here that the Na,K-ATPase-dependent Src kinase activation are the key mechanisms responsible for elevation of cerebrovascular tone after reperfusion. The Na,K-ATPase, which is essential to control intracellular ion homeostasis, also executes numerous signaling functions. Under hypoxic conditions, the Na,K-ATPase is endocytosed from the membrane of vascular smooth muscle cells. This initiates the Src kinase signaling pathway that sensitizes the contractile machinery to intracellular Ca2+ resulting in hypercontractility of vascular smooth muscle cells and, thus, elevated cerebrovascular tone that can contribute to impaired reperfusion after stroke. This mechanism integrates with cerebral edema that was suggested to underlie impaired reperfusion and is further supported by several studies, which are discussed in this article. However, final demonstration of the molecular mechanism behind Src kinase-associated arteriolar hypercontractility in stroke remains to be done.

KW - Blood-brain barrier

KW - Homeostasis

KW - Ischemic stroke

KW - Reperfusion

KW - Smooth muscle

KW - Na,K-ATPase

KW - Src kinase

U2 - 10.1161/STROKEAHA.120.032737

DO - 10.1161/STROKEAHA.120.032737

M3 - Comment/debate/letter to the editor

C2 - 33947213

VL - 52

SP - E250-E258

JO - Stroke

JF - Stroke

SN - 0039-2499

IS - 6

ER -