RESUMO
Ischemic stroke-induced mitochondrial dysfunction in the blood-brain barrier-forming brain endothelial cells ( BECs ) results in long-term neurological dysfunction post-stroke. We previously data from a pilot study where intravenous administration of human BEC ( hBEC )-derived mitochondria-containing extracellular vesicles ( EVs ) showed a potential efficacy signal in a mouse middle cerebral artery occlusion ( MCAo ) model of stroke. We hypothesized that EVs harvested from donor species homologous to the recipient species ( e.g., mouse) may improve therapeutic efficacy, and therefore, use of mouse BEC ( mBEC )-derived EVs may improve post-stroke outcomes in MCAo mice. We investigated potential differences in the mitochondria transfer of EVs derived from the same species as the recipient cell (mBEC-EVs and recipient mBECs or hBECs-EVs and recipient hBECs) vs . cross-species EVs and recipient cells (mBEC-EVs and recipient hBECs or vice versa ). Our results showed that while both hBEC- and mBEC-EVs transferred EV mitochondria, mBEC-EVs outperformed hBEC-EVs in increasing ATP levels and improved recipient mBEC mitochondrial function via increasing oxygen consumption rates. mBEC-EVs significantly reduced brain infarct volume and neurological deficit scores compared to vehicle-injected MCAo mice. The superior therapeutic efficacy of mBEC-EVs in a mouse MCAo stroke support the continued use of mBEC-EVs to optimize the therapeutic potential of mitochondria-containing EVs in preclinical mouse models.
RESUMO
Ischemic stroke causes brain endothelial cell (BEC) death and damages tight junction integrity of the blood-brain barrier (BBB). We harnessed the innate mitochondrial load of BEC-derived extracellular vesicles (EVs) and utilized mixtures of EV/exogenous 27 kDa heat shock protein (HSP27) as a one-two punch strategy to increase BEC survival (via EV mitochondria) and preserve their tight junction integrity (via HSP27 effects). We demonstrated that the medium-to-large (m/lEV) but not small EVs (sEV) transferred their mitochondrial load, that subsequently colocalized with the mitochondrial network of the recipient primary human BECs. Recipient BECs treated with m/lEVs showed increased relative ATP levels and mitochondrial function. To determine if the m/lEV-meditated increase in recipient BEC ATP levels was associated with m/lEV mitochondria, we isolated m/lEVs from donor BECs pre-treated with oligomycin A (OGM, mitochondria electron transport complex V inhibitor), referred to as OGM-m/lEVs. BECs treated with naïve m/lEVs showed a significant increase in ATP levels compared to untreated OGD cells, OGM-m/lEVs treated BECs showed a loss of ATP levels suggesting that the m/lEV-mediated increase in ATP levels is likely a function of their innate mitochondrial load. In contrast, sEV-mediated ATP increases were not affected by inhibition of mitochondrial function in the donor BECs. Intravenously administered m/lEVs showed a reduction in brain infarct sizes compared to vehicle-injected mice in a mouse middle cerebral artery occlusion model of ischemic stroke. We formulated binary mixtures of human recombinant HSP27 protein with EVs: EV/HSP27 and ternary mixtures of HSP27 and EVs with a cationic polymer, poly (ethylene glycol)-b-poly (diethyltriamine): (PEG-DET/HSP27)/EV. (PEG-DET/HSP27)/EV and EV/HSP27 mixtures decreased the paracellular permeability of small and large molecular mass fluorescent tracers in oxygen glucose-deprived primary human BECs. This one-two punch approach to increase BEC metabolic function and tight junction integrity may be a promising strategy for BBB protection and prevention of long-term neurological dysfunction post-ischemic stroke.