Jing Zhao, Yanhui Wang, Dong Wang, Wei Yan, Shishuang Zhang, Dai Lei, Zhaoli Han, Fanglian Chen, Ping Lei
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) can cause the pathological disruption of the blood-brain barrier (BBB) and associated neurological injury. Reducing the severity of such barrier disruption following TBI can decrease the degree of brain edema, suppress intracranial inflammation, and thereby protect against neurological damage. The BBB is made up of brain microvascular endothelial cells (BMVECs), neurons, pericytes, astrocytes, and extracellular matrix components. In prior analyses, we have demonstrated that miR-124-3p expression is enhanced in microglia-derived exosomes following TBI, with this miRNA being capable of promoting neural repair after such injury. Based upon these results, the present study was formulated to examine the impact of miR-124-3p on BMVEC function and to evaluatethe mechanistic basis for its activity by overexpressing miR-124-3p in these endothelial cells.
We utilized a bEnd.3 cell scratch wound in vitro model to simulate TBI-associated brain microvascular endothelial cell injury. Lipofectamine3000 was used to transfect endothelial cells such that they overexpressed miR-124-3p. Fluorescence microscopy was used to observe the effects of miR-124-3p expression on these endothelial cells. TUNEL+CD31 immunofluorescence stainingwas employed to observe endothelial cell apoptosis. Tight junctions were observed via ionconductivity microscopy. Western blotting was used to detect the expression of tight junction proteins (occludin, ZO-1), autophagy-associated proteins (Beclin1, p62, LC3-II/LC3-I), and mTOR-associated proteins (p-mTOR, PDE4B). Chloroquine was used to treat these injured endothelial cells overexpressing miR-124-3p, and endothelial cell apoptosis was assessed via TUNEL+CD31 immunofluorescence staining. We found that the upregulation of miR-124-3p was sufficient to suppress bEnd.3 cell apoptotic death following in vitro scratch injury while promoting the upregulation of the tight junction proteins ZO-1 and occludin in these cells, thereby reducing the degree of leakage across the cerebral microvascular endothelial barrier. These protective effects may be related to the ability of miR124-3p to suppress mTOR signaling and to induce autophagic activity within BMVECs. These data support a model wherein miR-124-3p can inhibit mTOR signaling and promote autophagic induction in BMVECs, thereby protecting these cells against TBIinduced damage.
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