Annexin A6 mitigates neurological deficit in ischemia/reperfusion injury by promoting synaptic plasticity

Author:

Wang Yilin1,Yang Zhenhong1,Wang Rongliang1,Zheng Yangmin1,Han Ziping1,Fan Junfen1,Yan Feng1,Liu Ping1,Luo Yumin12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Cerebrovascular Disease Research and Department of Neurology Xuanwu Hospital of Capital Medical University Beijing China

2. Beijing Institute for Brain Disorders Beijing China

Abstract

AbstractAimsAlleviating neurological dysfunction caused by acute ischemic stroke (AIS) remains intractable. Given Annexin A6 (ANXA6)'s potential in promoting axon branching and repairing cell membranes, the study aimed to explore ANXA6's potential in alleviating AIS‐induced neurological dysfunction.MethodsA mouse middle cerebral artery occlusion model was established. Brain and plasma ANXA6 levels were detected at different timepoints post ischemia/reperfusion (I/R). We overexpressed and down‐regulated brain ANXA6 and evaluated infarction volume, neurological function, and synaptic plasticity‐related proteins post I/R. Plasma ANXA6 levels were measured in patients with AIS and healthy controls, investigating ANXA6 expression's clinical significance.ResultsBrain ANXA6 levels initially decreased, gradually returning to normal post I/R; plasma ANXA6 levels showed an opposite trend. ANXA6 overexpression significantly decreased the modified neurological severity score (p = 0.0109) 1 day post I/R and the infarction area at 1 day (p = 0.0008) and 7 day (p = 0.0013) post I/R, and vice versa. ANXA6 positively influenced synaptic plasticity, upregulating synaptophysin (p = 0.006), myelin basic protein (p = 0.010), neuroligin (p = 0.078), and tropomyosin‐related kinase B (p = 0.150). Plasma ANXA6 levels were higher in patients with AIS (1.969 [1.228–3.086]) compared to healthy controls (1.249 [0.757–2.226]) (p < 0.001), that served as an independent risk factor for poor AIS outcomes (2.120 [1.563–3.023], p < 0.001).ConclusionsThis study is the first to suggest that ANXA6 enhances synaptic plasticity and protects against transient cerebral ischemia.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Natural Science Foundation of Beijing Municipality

Publisher

Wiley

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