We recently demonstrated that ischemic tolerance was dependent on astrocytes, for which HIF-1α had an essential role. The mild ischemia (preconditioning; PC) increased HIF-1α in a biphasic pattern, that is, a quick and transient increase in neurons, followed by a slow and sustained increase in astrocytes. However, mechanisms underlying such temporal difference in HIF-1α increase remain totally unknown. Here, we show that unlike a hypoxia-dependent mechanism in neurons, astrocytes increase HIF-1α via a novel hypoxia-independent but P2X7-dependent mechanism. Using a middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAO) model of mice, we found that the PC (a 15-min MCAO period)-evoked increase in HIF-1α in neurons was quick and transient (from 1 to 3 days after PC), but that in astrocytes was slow-onset and long-lasting (from 3 days to at least 2 weeks after PC). The neuronal HIF-1α increase was dependent on inhibition of PHD2, an oxygen-dependent HIF-1α degrading enzyme, whereas astrocytic one was independent of PHD2. Astrocytes even do not possess this enzyme. Instead, they produced a sustained increase in P2X7 receptors, activation of which resulted in HIF-1α increase. The hypoxia-independent but P2X7-receptor-dependent mechanism could allow astrocytes to cause long-lasting HIF-1α expression, thereby leading to induction of ischemic tolerance efficiently. GLIA 2017
Main Points
- Unlike neurons, an increase in HIF-1α in astrocytes is independent of hypoxia but dependent on P2X7 receptor.
- The sustained upregulation of P2X7 receptor and HIF-1α allows astrocytes to show long-lasting ischemic tolerance.
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