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Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine, Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions, Baltimore, Maryland 21287
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ABSTRACT |
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Estrogen protects the brain from experimental cerebral
ischemia, likely through both vascular and neuronal cellular
mechanisms. The purpose of this study was to determine whether chronic
estrogen treatment in males and repletion in ovariectomized (Ovx)
females reverses abnormalities in pial arteriolar reactivity during
reperfusion from global forebrain ischemia (4-vessel occlusion,
15 min) and whether the site of protection is vascular endothelium.
Male and Ovx female rats were implanted with either placebo or a
25-µg 17
-estradiol pellet 10 days before ischemia. With
the use of intravital microscopy, pial vessel dilation to ACh (10 µM)
and S-nitroso-N-acetyl-penicillamine (SNAP; 1 µM) and vasoconstriction to serotonin (10 µM) was examined in situ
at 30-60 min of reperfusion. Postischemic changes in
vessel diameter were compared with preischemic values for each
agent. Postischemic response to both ACh and SNAP was lost in
males and Ovx females, but not in estrogen pellet-implanted males and
estrogen-implanted Ovx females, suggesting that estrogen protects both
endothelial and smooth muscle-mediated vasodilation. Ischemia
blunted vessel constriction to serotonin regardless of treatment. These
data demonstrate that estrogen acts as a vasoprotective agent within
the cerebral circulation and can improve microvascular function under
conditions of an acutely evolving ischemic pathology.
cerebral ischemia; microvasculature; pial circulation
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INTRODUCTION |
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ESTROGEN HAS BEEN WELL ESTABLISHED as a neuroprotectant in cerebral ischemic injury. The ability of the steroid to salvage brain has been linked to multiple cellular mechanisms, and its protective targets potentially include neurons and cerebral blood vessels (for reviews, see Refs. 24 and 44). Chronic estrogen treatment in animals can improve cerebral blood flow (CBF) during global (21, 39) and focal cerebral ischemia (2). Recent findings (31) also indicate that acute estrogen infusion during postischemic reperfusion acts as a potent cerebral vasodilator in the pathological, but not in the uninjured, brain. The ability of estrogen to augment vascular signaling has been well described in normal cerebral vessels (16, 17, 41), particularly with regard to enhancing endothelium-derived nitric oxide (NO) and cyclooxygenase signaling (18). It has not been reported whether estrogen improves cerebral vessel function during and after neuroinjury.
Cerebral ischemia is well known to produce early vascular abnormalities during reperfusion: hyperemia, delayed hypoperfusion, and a markedly depressed responsiveness to both endothelium-mediated vasodilators, e.g., acetylcholine (ACh) (8, 30, 35) and vasoconstrictors, e.g., serotonin (5-HT) (7, 32, 42). Alternatively, increased sensitivity to vasoconstrictors is present in some types of cerebral vascular injury (30, 32). Because estrogen improves intra- and postischemic CBF, we hypothesized that the steroid normalizes impaired vasodilation after ischemic stress. However, estrogen also modulates selected vasoconstrictor stimuli, which could shift the net balance of vascular function toward dilation under some conditions. For example, steroid withdrawal increases basilar artery sensitivity to the neurotransmitter and platelet product 5-HT (11, 15). Endothelium-dependent vasoconstriction to 5-HT is putatively mediated through tyrosine kinase activation in large cerebral arteries (27), but through non-NO mechanisms in pial vessels (13, 45).
This previous work suggests that estrogen amplifies vascular endothelial signaling under physiological conditions. However, it is not known whether the steroid can normalize vascular behavior, which is ordinarily dysfunctional after cerebral ischemia. As a first step in understanding the functional actions of estrogen within the postischemic circulation in vivo, we sought to broadly characterize pial vascular responsivity to both dilator and constrictor agonists. The purpose of this study was to determine the following: 1) whether chronic estrogen treatment in males and repletion in ovariectomized (Ovx) females protects pial vasodilation versus constriction during early reperfusion after four-vessel occlusion (4-VO), and 2) whether this protection is restricted to endothelium-dependent signaling.
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METHODS |
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Animals.
All protocols for this study were approved by the Johns Hopkins Medical
Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee. Three-month-old, sexually
mature Wistar rats (204-252 g body wt) were randomized into four
groups (n = 7 rats per group): placebo-implanted males, placebo-implanted Ovx females, estrogen pellet-implanted males (EMale)
and estrogen-implanted Ovx females (EOvx). One investigator (Y. Watanabe), who was blinded to animal treatment status, conducted the
experiments. Rats were fitted with a closed cranial window over the
parietal cortex and baseline pial arteriolar responses to ACh, the
endothelium-independent NO donor
S-nitroso-N-acetyl-penicillamine (SNAP), and 5-HT
were determined by using video microscopy under fentanyl (25 µg · kg
1 · h
1,
intravenous infusion) and 70% NO2-30% O2
anesthesia. Reversible global forebrain ischemia was induced by
4-VO for 15 min. Reperfusion was initiated, and changes in vessel
diameter in response to ACh, SNAP, and 5-HT was reevaluated between 30 and 60 min postischemia. All methods are as previously
published or as detailed below (21, 25, 28).
Animal preparation.
Female rats were ovariectomized under halothane anesthesia, as
previously described (2). All rats received subcutaneous implants of either 17
-estradiol (25 µg, 3 wk-timed release pellet; Innovative Research) or placebo (nitrocellulose carrier) and were randomized to treatment group at not <7 days and not >14 days of
steroid administration. The implants delivered a consistent dose over
21 days (1.2 µg/day for 21 days) producing stable, reproducible plasma estrogen levels, as previously published (2, 23, 38, 48), by 7 days of implantation. The dose and duration of
estradiol treatment was selected on the basis of our previous findings
of efficacy in neuroprotection for male, Ovx females, and
reproductively senescent Wistar rats at this same dose and duration of
implantation (2, 48, 49). Treatment of males with this
dose and duration of estradiol does not alter plasma testosterone
level, as previously reported (49). The implant results in
plasma steroid levels that are physiological for the reproductively
active female rat, i.e., achieved 10 ± 3 pg/ml in males and
20 ± 8 pg/ml in Ovx females (2, 48, 49). Implants
were inserted aseptically under 1-2% halothane anesthesia in the
dorsal neck.
1 · h
1). The
cranial window was suffused with artificial cerebrospinal fluid at a
constant physiological temperature (37°C), pH,
PCO2, and PO2 and was
sealed with dental acrylic. Inlet and outlet tubing allowed superfusion
of experimental agents and control of intra-window pressure at 5 mmHg.
Pial artery and arteriolar diameters were measured with the use of a
Zeiss compound microscope with fiber-optic epi-illumination interfaced
to a charge-coupled device camera and high-resolution monitor, a Super
VHS video recorder, and a graphic printer. Arteriolar diameter
measurements were obtained in each animal from a single main pial
vessel with 3-5 daughter branches, which served as benchmarks
within the vessel; these individual measurements were averaged and
analyzed per animal as a single case. Inner diameters of vessels within
individual arteriolar networks were measured with a resolution of
~2-3 µm. Absolute vessel diameter was measured off-line and
expressed as percentage of the baseline diameter established before
each drug superfusion.
Experimental protocol.
After a 30-min recovery period, preischemic pial vessel
responses were evaluated to a single concentration of three agents administered in randomized order: ACh (10 µM), SNAP (1 µM), and 5-HT (10 µM). Because the objective of the study was to test multiple aspects of vascular behavior within the same postischemic
animal, full dose-response curves could not be constructed for each
agent. Therefore, the optimal single infusion concentration to be used in the study was determined in preliminary experiments in which each
agent was evaluated (10
4 to 10
7 M) in
nonischemic animals equipped with cranial windows. Dilatation produced by ACh was 16.2 ± 1.5, 12.6 ± 0.6, and 8.3 ± 2.8% of baseline was at 10
5, 10
6, and
10
7 M, respectively. For SNAP, dilation was 18.0 ± 1.2 and 15.2 ± 1.2% of baseline at 10
6 and
10
7 M, respectively. For 5-HT, constriction was
11 ± 0.9,
9.6 ± 1.4, and
8.4 ± 1.3% of baseline at
10
5, 10
6, and 10
7 M,
respectively. These doses are consistent with those employed in
previous reports from our laboratory (8, 25, 28) and others (13, 14, 30, 41). The optimal infusion
concentration was selected for its ability to produce maximum change in
vessel diameter. To further confirm that the selected doses for each agent produced significant responses in postischemic vessels
under halothane/NO2 anesthesia, additional preliminary
experiments were conducted in a separate cohort of control animals not
treated with either placebo or estrogen implants (n = 7). We observed that ACh, SNAP, and 5-HT at the selected doses produced
robust responses in the preischemic period and diminished but
clearly measurable changes in vessel diameter when infused post-4-VO
(data not shown).
Statistical analysis.
All values are reported as means ± SE unless otherwise indicated.
Physiological parameters and vessel diameters were evaluated by using a
two-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) or Kruskal-Wallace ANOVA on ranks
in cases when the data were not normally distributed (vessels tested
with SNAP and 5-HT). Post hoc comparisons were made with a Newman-Keuls
test. Significance was set at P
0.05.
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RESULTS |
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Arterial blood gases and blood pressure and intrawindow
temperature and pressure were constant throughout the study (Table 1). Intrawindow temperature was held
constant at 37.8 ± 0.03°C, and intrawindow pressure was
maintained at 5 mmHg. Baseline, preischemic pial vessel
diameter among groups ranged from 31.8 ± 0.48 to 69.9 ± 1.8 µm. Absolute preischemic and postischemic vessel
diameters are summarized in Table 2.
There were no differences in the mean vessel diameters between
treatment groups either before or after 4-VO. Furthermore,
postischemic vessel diameters were allowed to rapidly return to
preischemic values before the randomized set of agonist
infusions was initiated (see Table 2).
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Before ischemia, pial vessels of all treatment groups reacted
normally to stimulation with ACh, SNAP, or 5-HT (Figs.
1-3). Both ACh and SNAP superfusions
produced brisk vasodilation, increasing by ~18-20% of
presuperfusion diameter in all animals. Superfusion of 10 µM 5-HT
resulted in a small but consistent vasoconstriction, decreasing by
8-10% of presuperfusion diameter. However, postischemic dilation to 10 µM ACh in Males (2.6 ± 1.6% of presuperfusion
diameter) and Ovx females (6.3 ± 2.0% presuperfusion diameter)
was strikingly depressed compared with preischemic dilation
(see Fig. 1). In contrast, estrogen treatment resulted in vasodilation
to ACh that was not different from that observed before the
ischemic insult (see Fig. 1). In EMales and EOvx, the
vasodilations to ACh were 14.3 ± 1.1 and 16.2 ± 2.0% of
presuperfusion diameter, respectively. Similarly, vasodilation to 1 µM of SNAP was strongly depressed after ischemia in Males and
Ovx females (Fig. 2). Estrogen treatment preserved vasodilatory responses to SNAP in postischemic pial vessels. In EMales and EOvx, postischemic vessel diameter
increased with SNAP (16.4 ± 1.0 and 15.8 ± 1.7% of
presuperfusion values, respectively), which did not differ from
preischemic vasodilation (Fig. 2).
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In contrast, ischemia blunted normal constriction to 10 µM 5-HT in all groups regardless of treatment. Figure 3 illustrates that unlike the beneficial effect of estrogen on arteriolar dilation to ACh and SNAP, hormone pretreatment failed to restore postischemic vasoconstriction to 5-HT in the male or female rat.
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DISCUSSION |
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This study demonstrates two novel findings. First, chronic estrogen treatment reverses the loss of response to endothelium-mediated vasodilator, but not vasoconstrictor, agents that is ordinarily observed after ischemia in untreated rats. This indicates that physiologically relevant plasma estrogen levels in animals of either gender could enhance blood flow by restoring dilation rather than by mitigating excessive vasoconstriction. Although male sex steroids were not measured in this study, Sampei et al. (49) observed that plasma testosterone is unaffected by estrogen treatment in male rats. Thus the preservation of postischemic vasoreactivity by chronic estrogen availability is unlikely to have been influenced by testosterone. Second, the action of estrogen is not limited to endothelium-dependent agonists because dilation to ACh and SNAP is almost completely restored by steroid treatment. These data clearly demonstrate that estrogen is "vasoprotective" in the ischemic cerebral circulation and preserves function in vessels at high risk of reperfusion injury. This preservation of vasodilatory capacity may account for our recent observation that estrogen rapidly restores CBF after vascular occlusion to near preischemic levels, whereas hypoperfusion persists in untreated male animals (31).
Abnormal vasomotor activity has been documented in numerous models of global forebrain ischemia (5, 8, 10, 30, 47), and, to our knowledge, no agents have been shown to reverse defective postischemic vasodilation in vivo. Chronic estrogen exposure can achieve this end and could be therapeutically useful in restoring sensitivity to physiological dilator stimuli within recovering brain. The present study focused on specific vasomotor pathways that are known to be dysfunctional after ischemic stress and that have been shown to be potential targets for the activity of estrogen under physiological conditions. There is extensive evidence (12, 24, 34, 44) in coronary, uterine, and peripheral vessels that estrogen modulates multiple aspects of normal and atherosclerotic vessel function by targeting vascular smooth muscle cells, endothelium, and platelets. Our findings extend this concept by demonstrating that estrogen preserves NO-mediated vasodilation, but not NO-independent vasoconstriction, after a global ischemic insult. Whether the gain in postischemic functionality is limited to NO-guanylate cyclase signaling remains to be shown, and other vasodilatory mechanisms not tested here may be spared in the estrogen-treated vasculature. Furthermore, the protection of estrogen cannot be necessarily assured for all endothelium-dependent function, because postischemic vasoconstriction to a constrictive platelet product, 5-HT, was unaffected by estrogen treatment. Serotonin is a known constrictor of cerebral blood vessels, with complex mechanisms that are vessel size and site dependent, likely through endothelial generation of prostanoids (45, 46). Preischemic pial vasoconstriction to 5-HT was modest in our preparation, as was expected from previous findings (13, 14, 19, 44, 45) in small versus large cerebral arterioles. However, a significant loss of response to 5-HT was readily demonstrated during reperfusion, and this was not reversible by estrogen treatment.
The present data do not show the specific mechanisms by which estrogen
preserves postischemic NO vasodilation after cerebral ischemia. Estrogen receptors (ER) have been identified in
endothelium and vascular smooth muscle cells of many species (for a
review, see Ref. 34), including both known ER-
and
ER-
subtypes (26). Furthermore, endothelial injury and
denudation result in a threefold upregulation of ER-
and stable,
low-level ER-
expression in vascular tunica media (29).
Therefore, ER-dependent and -independent mechanisms of vascular
protection may be important. Although testing the importance of
ER-dependent mechanisms in vivo is challenged by the lack of ER
subtype-specific pharmacological antagonists, ER-
-deficient
transgenic mice demonstrate abnormal CBF responses during middle
cerebral artery occlusion (49). Reports from some laboratories (18, 33, 41) suggest that estrogen enhances endothelial NO synthase expression and microvascular cGMP content (38), amplifies cGMP protein kinase signaling (50,
51), and increases enzyme activity and NO production (3,
4, 16, 17, 22, 33, 37). Estradiol also induces phosphorylation and rapid activation of endothelial NO synthase via receptor-dependent, nongenomic means that are mediated by phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase-Akt pathways (20). Given these extensive studies, one
hypothesis would be that chronic estrogen treatment in the present
study enhanced basal NO availability, resulting in a relative
preservation of NO vasodilatory signaling after ischemia.
However, this mechanism seems unlikely because preischemic
dilation to either ACh or SNAP was not different between
estrogen-deficient males and EMales or Ovx females. Although loss of
vasodilation to ACh has been reported (41) in
estrogen-deficient female rats, we did not observe abnormal baseline
pial vasodilation to ACh (10 µM) or SNAP (1 µM) in any animal
regardless of treatment status. Nevertheless, estrogen treatment
resulted in preserved sensitivity to ACh and SNAP during reperfusion.
This observation is consistent with recent observations that
17
-estradiol has very modest effects on basal CBF but strongly
increases CBF after ischemic stress. The efficacy of chronic
estrogen treatment in restoring responsiveness to SNAP during
reperfusion could be through preservation of cGMP activity, cGMP
phosphorylation of cGMP-dependent protein kinases (50, 51), large conductance Ca2+-dependent K+
(BKCa) channel function (9). For
example, estrogen mimics the action of SNAP on coronary artery smooth
muscle, increasing cGMP and stimulating BKCa channel
opening (9).
The present model of global cerebral ischemia produced clear vascular abnormalities during early reperfusion in pial vessels, which were largely reversed by preischemic hormone implantation. The estrogen dose was selected for its previous efficacy in reducing neuronal damage after focal cerebral ischemia (2, 48, 49). Although the present findings emphasize early function recovery in estrogen-treated vessels, further studies are needed to determine whether morphological vascular damage is also averted. It is unlikely that the vasoprotection of estrogen can be explained by differences in baseline arterial tone, because preischemic vessel diameters were not different between treatment groups. Furthermore, vessel diameters returned to preischemic values within minutes of restoring CBF in all animal cohorts (see Table 2). Finally, systemic variables, which affect vascular tone such as arterial blood pressure, were quite comparable between estrogen- versus placebo-treated animals.
To our knowledge, these data are the first to demonstrate that estrogen provides a gender-independent restoration of agonist-induced pial vasodilation that is ordinarily dysfunctional during early reperfusion. Estrogen-induced preservation of small vessel responsivity to endothelium and nonendothelium-dependent dilators could have significant effects on postischemic hemodynamics and tissue recovery. Taken together, our results suggest that chronic estrogen replacement mitigates early and evolving endothelial and vascular smooth muscle vascular dysfunction associated with global cerebral ischemic injury.
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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The authors gratefully acknowledge the expert technical support of Percy Smith with these studies.
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FOOTNOTES |
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This work was supported in part by National Institutes of Health Grants NS-20020, NS-33668, NR-03521, and NR-04943.
Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: M. T. Littleton-Kearney, 1508-B, Blalock, 600 N. Wolfe St., Baltimore, MD 21287 (E-mail: mkearney{at}jhmi.edu).
The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
Received 2 October 2000; accepted in final form 27 February 2001.
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