Plasma from healthy donors protects blood–brain barrier integrity via FGF21 and improves the recovery in a mouse model of cerebral ischaemia

Author:

Mamtilahun Muyassar,Jiang Lu,Song Yaying,Shi Xiaojing,Liu Chang,Jiang Yixu,Deng Lidong,Zheng Haoran,Shen Hui,Li Yongfang,Zhang Zhijun,Wang Yongting,Tang Yaohui,Yang Guo-YuanORCID

Abstract

BackgroundHealthy plasma therapy reverses cognitive deficits and promotes neuroplasticity in ageing brain disease. However, whether healthy plasma therapy improve blood–brain barrier integrity after stroke remains unknown.MethodsHere, we intravenously injected healthy female mouse plasma into adult female ischaemic stroke C57BL/6 mouse induced by 90 min transient middle cerebral artery occlusion for eight consecutive days. Infarct volume, brain atrophy and neurobehavioural tests were examined to assess the outcomes of plasma treatment. Cell apoptosis, blood–brain barrier integrity and fibroblast growth factor 21 knockout mice were used to explore the underlying mechanism.ResultsPlasma injection improved neurobehavioural recovery and decreased infarct volume, brain oedema and atrophy after stroke. Immunostaining showed that the number of transferase dUTP nick end labelling+/NeuN+ cells decreased in the plasma-injected group. Meanwhile, plasma injection reduced ZO-1, occluding and claudin-5 tight junction gap formation and IgG extravasation at 3 days after ischaemic stroke. Western blot results showed that the FGF21 expression increased in the plasma-injected mice. However, using FGF21 knockout mouse plasma injecting to the ischaemic wild-type mice diminished the neuroprotective effects.ConclusionsOur study demonstrated that healthy adult plasma treatment protected the structural and functional integrity of blood–brain barrier, reduced neuronal apoptosis and improved functional recovery via FGF21, opening a new avenue for ischaemic stroke therapy.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

National Key Research and Development Program of China

K. C. Wong Education Foundation

Scientific Research and Innovation Program of Shanghai Education Commission

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Neurology (clinical)

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