Functional Dynamics of Neutrophils After Ischemic Stroke

107Citations
Citations of this article
98Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.
Get full text

Abstract

Neutrophils are forerunners to brain lesions after ischemic stroke and exert elaborate functions. However, temporal alterations of cell count, polarity, extracellular trap formation, and clearance of neutrophils remain poorly understood. The current study was aimed at providing basic information of neutrophil function throughout a time course following stroke onset in patients and animal subjects. We found that neutrophil constitution in peripheral blood increased soon after stroke onset of patients, and higher neutrophil count indicated detrimental stroke outcomes. Comparably, neutrophil count in peripheral blood of stroke mice peaked at 12 h after cerebral ischemia, followed by a 1-2-day spike in brain lesions. In stroke lesion, clearance of neutrophils peaked at 2 days after stroke and extracellular traps were mostly detected at 2–3 days after stroke. In neutrophil infiltrated into stroke lesion, expression of the N2 marker CD206 was relatively stable. We found that the N2 phenotype facilitated neutrophil clearance by macrophage and did not further induce neuronal death after ischemic injury compared with N0 or N1 neutrophils. Skewing neutrophil toward the N2 phenotype before stroke reduced infarct volumes at 1 day after tMCAO. Conditioned medium of ischemic neurons drove neutrophils away from the protective N2 phenotype and increased the formation of extracellular traps. Conclusively, neutrophil function has an important impact on stroke outcomes. Neutrophil frequency in the peripheral blood could be an early indicator of stroke outcomes. N2 neutrophils facilitate macrophage phagocytosis and are less harmful to ischemic neurons. Directing neutrophils toward the N2 phenotype could be a promising therapeutic approach for ischemic stroke.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Cai, W., Liu, S., Hu, M., Huang, F., Zhu, Q., Qiu, W., … Lu, Z. (2020). Functional Dynamics of Neutrophils After Ischemic Stroke. Translational Stroke Research, 11(1), 108–121. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12975-019-00694-y

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free