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Neuroprotection and Blood–Brain Barrier Restoration by Salubrinal After a Cortical Stab Injury

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Journal of Cellular Physiology

Published online on

Abstract

Following a central nervous system (CNS) injury, restoration of the blood‐brain barrier (BBB) integrity is essential for recovering homeostasis. When this process is delayed or impeded, blood substances and cells enter the CNS parenchyma, initiating an additional inflammatory process that extends the initial injury and causes so‐called secondary neuronal loss. Astrocytes and profibrotic mesenchymal cells react to the injury and migrate to the lesion site, creating a new glia limitans that restores the BBB. This process is beneficial for the resolution of the inflammation, neuronal survival, and the initiation of the healing process. Salubrinal is a small molecule with neuroprotective properties in different animal models of stroke and trauma to the CNS. Here, we show that salubrinal increased neuronal survival in the neighbourhood of a cerebral cortex stab injury. Moreover, salubrinal reduced cortical blood leakage into the parenchyma of injured animals compared with injured controls. Adjacent to the site of injury, salubrinal induced immunoreactivity for platelet‐derived growth factor subunit B (PDGF‐B), a specific mitogenic factor for mesenchymal cells. This effect might be responsible for the increased immunoreactivity for fibronectin and the decreased activation of microglia and macrophages in injured mice treated with salubrinal, compared with injured controls. The immunoreactivity for PDGF‐B colocalized with neuronal nuclei (NeuN), suggesting that cortical neurons in the proximity of the injury were the main source of PDGF‐B. Our results suggest that after an injury, neurons play an important role in both, the healing process and the restoration of the BBB integrity. J. Cell. Physiol. 232: 1501–1510, 2017. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Salubrinal is neuroprotective in an animal model of cortical stab injury and facilitated the restoration of the BBB integrity, by inducing the neuronal production of PDGF‐B. Our results suggest that neurons in the proximity of the lesion have a previously underrated, major role in the restoration of the BBB.