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Protein Therapy Using Heme-Oxygenase-1 Fused to a Polyarginine Transduction Domain Attenuates Cerebral Vasospasm after Experimental Subarachnoid Hemorrhage
Author(s) -
Tomoyuki Ogawa,
Daniel Hänggi,
Yumei Wu,
Hiroyuki Michiue,
Kazuhito Tomizawa,
Shigeki Ono,
Hideki Matsui,
Isao Date,
Hans-Jakob Steiger
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
journal of cerebral blood flow and metabolism
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.167
H-Index - 193
eISSN - 1559-7016
pISSN - 0271-678X
DOI - 10.1038/jcbfm.2011.87
Subject(s) - cisterna magna , cerebral vasospasm , subarachnoid hemorrhage , heme oxygenase , cyclic guanosine monophosphate , signal transduction , heme , transduction (biophysics) , biology , cyclic adenosine monophosphate , vasospasm , medicine , endocrinology , nitric oxide , biochemistry , receptor , cerebrospinal fluid , enzyme
A sequence of 11 consecutive arginine residues (11R) is one of the best protein transduction domains for introducing proteins into cell membranes. Heme-oxygenase-1 (HO-1) is involved in heme catabolism and reduces the contractile effect of hemoglobin after subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH). Therefore, we constructed 11R-fused HO-1 protein to achieve successful transduction of the protein into the cerebral arteries and examined the therapeutic effect of the 11R-HO-1 protein for cerebral vasospasm (CV) after SAH. We injected the 11R-HO-1 protein into the cisterna magna of male rats and, several hours after the injection, performed immunofluorescence staining and western blotting analysis of the rat basilar arteries (BAs) to determine transduction efficacy. We also assessed intraarterial HO-1 activity as cGMP (cyclic guanosine 3′, 5′-cyclic monophosphate) accumulation in SAH and determined whether protein transduction of 11R-HO-1 quantified the therapeutic effect in a rat double-hemorrhage model of SAH. The BAs expressed significantly more HO-1 in the group injected with 11R-HO-1 (3.56±0.54 (11R-HO-1) versus control (saline)), and transduction of 11R-HO-1 resulted in higher activity (>3.25-fold) in rat BAs with SAH. Moreover, the results of the rat double-hemorrhage model showed that the 11R-HO-1 protein significantly attenuated CV after SAH (317.59±23.48 μm (11R-HO-1) versus 270.08±14.66 μm (11R-fused enhanced green fluorescent protein), 252.05±13.95 μm (saline), P<0.01).

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