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Streptococcus pneumoniae worsens cerebral ischemia via interleukin 1 and platelet glycoprotein Ibα.

Dénes, Ádám; Pradillo, Jesus M; Drake, Caroline; Sharp, Andrew; Warn, Peter; Murray, Katie N; Rohit, Bazaz; Dockrell, David H; Chamberlain, Janet; Casbolt, Helen; Francis, Sheila; Martinecz, Bernadett; Nieswandt, Bernhard; Rothwell, Nancy J; Allan, Stuart M

Annals of neurology. 2014;75(5):670-83.

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Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Bacterial infection contributes to diverse noninfectious diseases and worsens outcome after stroke. Streptococcus pneumoniae, the most common infection in patients at risk of stroke, is a major cause of prolonged hospitalization and death of stroke patients, but how infection impacts clinical outcome is not known. METHODS: We induced sustained pulmonary infection by a human S. pneumoniae isolate in naive and comorbid rodents to investigate the effect of infection on vascular and inflammatory responses prior to and after cerebral ischemia. RESULTS: S. pneumoniae infection triggered atherogenesis, led to systemic induction of interleukin (IL) 1, and profoundly exacerbated (50-90%) ischemic brain injury in rats and mice, a response that was more severe in combination with old age and atherosclerosis. Systemic blockade of IL-1 with IL-1 receptor antagonist (IL-1Ra) fully reversed infection-induced exacerbation of brain injury and functional impairment caused by cerebral ischemia. We show that infection-induced systemic inflammation mediates its effects via increasing platelet activation and microvascular coagulation in the brain after cerebral ischemia, as confirmed by reduced brain injury in response to blockade of platelet glycoprotein (GP) Ibα. IL-1 and platelet-mediated signals converge on microglia, as both IL-1Ra and GPIbα blockade reversed the production of IL-1α by microglia in response to cerebral ischemia in infected animals. INTERPRETATION: S. pneumoniae infection augments atherosclerosis and exacerbates ischemic brain injury via IL-1 and platelet-mediated systemic inflammation. These mechanisms may contribute to diverse cardio- and cerebrovascular pathologies in humans.

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Place of publication:
United States
Volume:
75
Issue:
5
Pagination:
670-83
Digital Object Identifier:
10.1002/ana.24146
Pubmed Identifier:
24644058
Access state:
Active

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Manchester eScholar ID:
uk-ac-man-scw:237102
Created by:
Bentley, Deborah
Created:
15th October, 2014, 14:03:27
Last modified by:
Bentley, Deborah
Last modified:
2nd December, 2015, 08:02:36

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