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  • Neutrophil extracellular traps released by neutrophils impair revascularization and vascular remodeling after stroke.

Neutrophil extracellular traps released by neutrophils impair revascularization and vascular remodeling after stroke.

Nature communications (2020-05-20)
Lijing Kang, Huilin Yu, Xing Yang, Yuanbo Zhu, Xiaofei Bai, Ranran Wang, Yongliang Cao, Haochen Xu, Haiyu Luo, Lu Lu, Mei-Juan Shi, Yujing Tian, Wenying Fan, Bing-Qiao Zhao
ABSTRACT

Neovascularization and vascular remodeling are functionally important for brain repair after stroke. We show that neutrophils accumulate in the peri-infarct cortex during all stages of ischemic stroke. Neutrophils producing intravascular and intraparenchymal neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) peak at 3-5 days. Neutrophil depletion reduces blood-brain barrier (BBB) breakdown and enhances neovascularization at 14 days. Peptidylarginine deiminase 4 (PAD4), an enzyme essential for NET formation, is upregulated in peri-ischemic brains. Overexpression of PAD4 induces an increase in NET formation that is accompanied by reduced neovascularization and increased BBB damage. Disruption of NETs by DNase 1 and inhibition of NET formation by genetic ablation or pharmacologic inhibition of PAD increases neovascularization and vascular repair and improves functional recovery. Furthermore, PAD inhibition reduces stroke-induced STING-mediated production of IFN-β, and STING knockdown and IFN receptor-neutralizing antibody treatment reduces BBB breakdown and increases vascular plasticity. Collectively, our results indicate that NET release impairs vascular remodeling during stroke recovery.