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Low-intensity focused ultrasound stimulation promotes stroke recovery via astrocytic HMGB1 and CAMK2N1 in mice.

Authors: Qi L, Wang C, Deng L, Pan JJ, Suo Q, Wu S, Cai L, Shi X, Sun J, Wang Y, Tang Y, Qiu W, Yang GY, Wang J, Zhang Z

Low-intensity focused ultrasound stimulation (LIFUS) has been developed to enhance neurological repair and remodelling during the late acute stage of ischaemic stroke in rodents. However, the cellular and molecular mechanisms of neurological repair and remodelling after LIFUS in ischaemic stroke are unclear. Ultrasound stimulation was treated in adult male mice 7 days after transient middle cerebral artery occlusion. Angiogenesis was measured by laser speckle imaging and histological analyses. Electromyography and fibre photometry records were used for synaptogenesis. Brain atrophy volume and neurobehaviour were assessed 0-14 days after ischaemia. iTRAQ proteomic analysis was performed to explore the differentially expressed protein. scRNA-seq was used for subcluster analysis of astrocytes. Fluorescence in situ hybridisation and Western blot detected the expression of HMGB1 and CAMK2N1. Optimal ultrasound stimulation increased cerebral blood flow, and improved neurobehavioural outcomes in ischaemic mice (p<0.05). iTRAQ proteomic analysis revealed that the expression of HMGB1 increased and CAMK2N1 decreased in the ipsilateral hemisphere of the brain at 14 days after focal cerebral ischaemia with ultrasound treatment (p<0.05). scRNA-seq revealed that this expression pattern belonged to a subcluster of astrocytes after LIFUS in the ischaemic brain. LIFUS upregulated HMGB1 expression, accompanied by VEGFA elevation compared with the control group (p<0.05). Inhibition of HMGB1 expression in astrocytes decreased microvessels counts and cerebral blood flow (p<0.05). LIFUS reduced CAMK2N1 expression level, accompanied by increased extracellular calcium ions and glutamatergic synapses (p<0.05). CAMK2N1 overexpression in astrocytes decreased dendritic spines, and aggravated neurobehavioural outcomes (p<0.05). Our results demonstrated that LIFUS promoted angiogenesis and synaptogenesis after focal cerebral ischaemia by upregulating HMGB1 and downregulating CAMK2N1 in a subcluster of astrocytes, suggesting that LIFUS activated specific astrocyte subcluster could be a key target for ischaemic brain therapy.

Introduction

Purpose Transcranial ultrasound stimulation
Study Objective To investigate whether and how low-intensity focused ultrasound stimulation (LIFUS) promotes angiogenesis and synaptogenesis and the underlying astrocyte-mediated molecular mechanisms during the late acute stage of focal cerebral ischaemia in mice.
Animal model / Human subject Mus C57BL/6J musculus (mouse), strain not specified, adult, male
Disease model Ischaemic stroke (focal cerebral ischaemia; transient middle cerebral artery occlusion model in mice)
Targeted brain region(s) Ipsilateral Hemisphere (Middle Cerebral Artery Territory)

Outcomes and Safety

Summary of Outcomes LIFUS increased cerebral blood flow, promoted angiogenesis and synaptogenesis, and improved neurological recovery after focal cerebral ischemia in mice.
Duration of biological effect 14 days
Safety-related matter A 10-minute LIFUS regimen (US3, 101 mW/cm2) caused damage to the ipsilateral hemisphere in healthy mice, indicating overstimulation; shorter regimens (US1, 3 min) were selected as optimal and described as safe and effective, with no overt tissue damage or adverse behavioural changes reported in sham animals.

Brain Region

Ultrasound Parameters

Ultrasound instrument Ultrasound Neurostimulation System (Shenzhen institute of Advanced Technology)
FUS Frequency 500 kHz
FUS Intensity 101 mW/cm2
FUS Mode pulsed
Pulse duration 300 ms
Duration of a single FUS session 3 minutes
Focal Characteristics Focal depth: 4 mm; Focal length: None; Aperture size: None
Treatment frequency multiple sessions

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