Our work of the last ten years supported by NINR emphasizes that the cellular and molecular pathophysiology of ischemic brain injury is strongly influenced by gender and by estrogen deficiency. If we are to formulate therapies for stroke survivors of both sexes, it is essential to understand how mechanisms of cell damage are shaped by male and female sex steroids. We have shown that native estrogens (or 17B estradiol administered at physiological levels) reduce stroke sensitivity, i.e. reduce neuronal damage once an ischemic event has occurred. We have focused largely on brain parenchyma and neurons, rather than vascular elements such as endothelia, in our search for estrogen's anti-ischemic actions. We propose to move into new ground by addressing how estradiol (E2) acts within normal vs post-ischemic cerebral blood vessels. We examine the role of estrogen receptor a in E2's acute protection of microcirculatory function (Aim 1) and in fostering longer- term capillary generation de novo (angiogenesis, Aim 2). Furthermore, little is known about loss of androgens in aging men and how the """"""""andropause"""""""" affects vascular stroke. This gap has remained curiously unaddressed, despite the fact that male sex is a consistent and known risk factor in clinical stroke. This important issue remains understudied, i.e. if androgens can improve outcome from ischemic injury in the middle-aged male animal by a vascular mechanism (Aim 3) or by direct preservation of DNA-damaged neurons (Aim 4). This proposal employs our well-established animal model of focal cerebral ischemia and standard molecular tools, but in an innovative way. Instead of minimizing gender differences or effect of sex hormones, as we traditionally do in experimental research; the present approach will maximize these factors. Our findings will help to elucidate the mechanisms behind a most fundamental """"""""genetic"""""""" aspect of ischemia, biological sex.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Nursing Research (NINR)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01NR003521-16
Application #
7408048
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG1-BDCN-3 (01))
Program Officer
Wasserman, Joan
Project Start
1993-12-10
Project End
2009-09-28
Budget Start
2008-05-01
Budget End
2009-09-28
Support Year
16
Fiscal Year
2008
Total Cost
$327,979
Indirect Cost
Name
Oregon Health and Science University
Department
Anesthesiology
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
096997515
City
Portland
State
OR
Country
United States
Zip Code
97239
Palmateer, Julie; Pan, Jie; Pandya, Arushi et al. (2016) Ultrasonic vocalization in murine experimental stroke: A mechanistic model of aphasia. Restor Neurol Neurosci 34:287-95
Mittal, Nitish; Pan, Jie; Palmateer, Julie et al. (2015) So you think you can jump? A novel long jump assessment to detect deficits in stroked mice. J Neurosci Methods 256:212-9
Hurn, Patricia D (2014) 2014 Thomas Willis Award Lecture: sex, stroke, and innovation. Stroke 45:3725-9
Nobile, Cameron W; Palmateer, Julie M; Kane, Jackie et al. (2014) Impaired limb reaction to displacement of center of gravity in rats with unilateral striatal ischemic injury. Transl Stroke Res 5:562-8
Herson, Paco S; Palmateer, Julie; Hurn, Patricia D (2013) Biological sex and mechanisms of ischemic brain injury. Transl Stroke Res 4:413-9
Ren, Xuefang; Akiyoshi, Kozaburo; Grafe, Marjorie R et al. (2012) Myelin specific cells infiltrate MCAO lesions and exacerbate stroke severity. Metab Brain Dis 27:7-15
Offner, Halina; Hurn, Patricia D (2012) A novel hypothesis: regulatory B lymphocytes shape outcome from experimental stroke. Transl Stroke Res 3:324-30
Kosaka, Y; Quillinan, N; Bond, Ct et al. (2012) GPER1/GPR30 activation improves neuronal survival following global cerebral ischemia induced by cardiac arrest in mice. Transl Stroke Res 3:500-507
Jia, Jia; Verma, Saurabh; Nakayama, Shin et al. (2011) Sex differences in neuroprotection provided by inhibition of TRPM2 channels following experimental stroke. J Cereb Blood Flow Metab 31:2160-8
Dziennis, Suzan; Akiyoshi, Kozaburo; Subramanian, Sandhya et al. (2011) Role of dihydrotestosterone in post-stroke peripheral immunosuppression after cerebral ischemia. Brain Behav Immun 25:685-95

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