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Aging is a risk factor for stroke. Animal models of stroke have been widely used to study the pathophysiology of ischemic stroke, which in turn helped to develop numerous therapeutic strategies. Despite the considerable success of therapeutic strategies in animal models of ischemic stroke, almost all of them have been proved to be unsuccessful in the clinical trials. One of explanation is that data obtained from young animals may not fully resemble the effects of ischemic stroke in aged animals or elder patients, causing the discrepancy between animal experiments and clinical trials. To investigate these differences with regard to age, pathway specific gene arrays were used to identify and isolate differentially expressed genes in periinfarct following focal cerebral ischemia. The results from this study showed a persistent up-regulation of pro-apoptotic and inflammatory-related genes up to 14 days post stroke, a 50% reduction in the number of transcriptionally active stem cell-related genes and a decreased expression of genes with anti-oxidative capacity in aged rats. Also, it was observed that at day 3 post-stroke, the contralateral, healthy hemisphere of young rats is much more active at transcriptional level than that of the aged rats, especially at the level of stem cell- and hypoxia signaling associated genes. Next, protein levels between young and aged post-stroke rats in periinfarct were compared using proteomic tools. Among others, AnxA3 was identified as differentially regulated protein, but the expression of AnxA3 has no significant changes in periinfarct between these two age groups at day 3 and 14. Different from periinfarct, a strong upregulation of AnxA3 at day 3 in young rats plus a strengthened increase of AnxA3 at day 14 in aged rats using immunohistochemical quantification indicated a delayed microglial accumulation in infarct core of aged rats, suggesting that quick activation of microglia in infarct core of young rats might be beneficial for recovery. Colocalization with established microglial marker demonstrated that AnxA3 as a novel microglial marker is implicated in the microglial responses to the focal cerebral ischemia. In addition, it was found that AnxA3 positive microglial cells incorporated more proliferating cell marker BrdU. Third, the expression, localization and function of several transport proteins were investigated in young rats following focal ischemic stroke. P-gp staining was detected in endothelial cells of desintegrated capillaries and by day 14 in newly generated blood vessels. There was no significant difference, however, in the Mdr1a mRNA amount in the periinfarct region compared to the contralateral site. For Bcrp, a significant mRNA up-regulation was observed from day 3 to 14. This up-regulation was followed by the protein as confirmed by quantitative immunohistochemistry. Oatp2, located in the vascular endothelium, was also up-regulated at day 14. For Mrp5, an up-regulation was observed in neurons in the periinfarct region (day 14). In conclusion, reduced transcriptional activity in the healthy, contralateral sensorimotor cortex in conjunction with an early up-regulation of proapoptotic genes and a decreased expression of genes with anti-oxidative capacity in the ipsilateral sensorimotor cortex of aged rats, plus the delayed up-regulation of AnxA3 positive microglial cells in infarct core may contribute to diminished recovery in post-stroke old rats. In addition, it was demonstrated in this study that after stroke the transport proteins were up-regulated with a maximum at day 14, a time point that coincides with behavioral recuperation. The study further suggests Bcrp as a pronounced marker for the regenerative process and a possible functional role of Mrp5 in surviving neurons. This study provided several evidences for the different responses of young and aged rats using a focal ischemic stroke model. Understanding the effect of age is crucial for the development of relevant therapeutic drugs.
About 30 % of epileptic patients are non-responsive to multidrug antiepileptic therapy. One of non-responsiveness in epilepsy hypothesis claims that non-responsiveness occurs because of reduced access of antiepileptic drugs to their targets, as a result of increased efflux of antiepileptic drugs away from these targets. Transporters believed to be involved in non-responsiveness in epilepsy are mainly but not exclusively the members of the ABC superfamily including P-gp (MDR1, ABCB1), MRP1 (ABCC1), MRP2 (ABCC2) and others. These proteins are normally found in the blood-brain barrier and the blood-cerebrospinal fluid barrier where they function as protectors. There is emerging evidence that P-gp, MRP1 and MRP2 are up-regulated in epileptogenic brain tissue. The risk of non-responsiveness could be related also to the MDR1 or MRP2 gene polymorphisms. We hypothesised that changes in expression and function of multidrug transporters involved in non-responsiveness of epilepsy might be detectable not only in the brain but also in other tissues such as lymphocytes. Therefore we evaluated the expression of MDR1, MRP1 and MRP2 and function of P-gp in lymphocytes in patients with epilepsy and healthy subjects. Three groups of epileptic patients and 15 healthy subjects as a control group were included in the study. The patients’ group was defined as follows: Monotherapy – patients treated with carbamazepine monotherapy, without seizures - corresponded to group responders. Combined therapy – patients after monotherapy (two different medicines have been tried) and combined therapy (two trials of combined therapy), not free of seizures. Monotherapy and combined therapy groups each embraced 15 patients. Neurosurgery – patients who had undergone neurosurgery, afterwards were or were not additionally treated with carbamazepine, with or without seizures. This group comprised 24 patients. Combined therapy and neurosurgery groups composed the group of non-responders. The mRNA expression of MRP1, MRP2 and MDR1 by means of quantitative real-time PCR as well as MRP2 and P-gp protein content by Western blot in lymphocytes was measured. For P-gp functional analysis rhodamine efflux from lymphocytes and natural killer (NK) cells was performed. The influence of the polymorphisms C3435T, G2677T/A in the MDR1 gene and C24T, G1249A, C3972T in the MRP2 gene for the transporters expression, function and their association with non-responsive epilepsy phenotype was investigated. Our results showed that MRP1 expression in lymphocytes was significantly lower in epileptics than in healthy subjects. Non-responders had lower MRP1 mRNA content in lymphocytes than responders. We did not find any difference in MRP2 expression between epileptics and healthy volunteers. MRP2 mRNA levels in lymphocytes were higher in non-responders than in responders. However, at protein level epileptic patients had significantly lower MRP2 content in lymphocytes than controls. MRP2 protein content did not differ in responders and non-responders. There was no reliable correlation between MRP2 mRNA expression and MRP2 protein content in lymphocytes. Epileptics had significantly lower MDR1 expression in lymphocytes than healthy individuals. MDR1 expression was decreasing according to the consumption of antiepileptic drugs and seizures frequency: patients after neurosurgery had significantly lower MDR1 expression than patients after combined therapy and monotherapy. MDR1 expression was significantly lower in non-responders than in responders. At protein level epileptics had lower P-gp content than controls. Detected P-gp amount in lymphocytes did not differ between responders and non-responders. Rhodamine efflux from lymphocytes and NK cells did not differ significantly between epileptics and healthy subjects, but it was higher in patients after neurosurgery than in patients after monotherapy. Rhodamine efflux from NK cells, which are known to express the highest levels of P-gp, was significantly higher in non-responders than in responders. In this study, we showed that MRP1 mRNA expression in lymphocytes was significantly correlated to its expression in the brain. We detected also a significant co-correlation between MRP1 expression in the hippocampus and MDR1 expression in lymphocytes. We found no evidence regarding the impact of the MDR1 polymorphisms on mRNA expression, P-gp content and rhodamine efflux from lymphocytes. Our data showed lack of evidence regarding the impact of the MRP2 polymorphisms on mRNA expression and protein content. We did not detect any association between MDR1 or MRP2 polymorphisms and non-responsiveness in epilepsy or epilepsy in the main. In conclusion, our results suggest that lymphocytes are an appropriate surrogate for studies on changes of multidrug transporters expression in epilepsy. Lymphocytes as an easily accessible tissue might serve as a marker for responsiveness to antiepileptic drug therapy in epilepsy studies.