Common
Surprise for Stroke-Researchers
Apoplectic strokes proceed more harmlessly if certain immune cells are missing from the blood. This previously unknown mechanism was presented by scientists from the University of Würzburg in the “Blood” Journal.
Every other minute a person in Germany suffers a stroke. The
blockage of vessels providing the brain with blood is usually the
cause. People surviving a stroke may be harmed with severe impairments
like speech defects or paralyses. The reason: the brain is damaged due
to prolonged insufficient blood supply.
What usually blocks the vessels are clots of blood. Dissolving these
plugs or not letting them emerge in the first place is the uppermost
goal in treating and preventing strokes.
Therefore, the search for new and better therapies starts at the
disease’s cause: hemostasis, leading to the clot formation. Then, when
the Würzburg scientists made a find in a completely different area,
they were even more surprised – T-cells also seem to play a role in
strokes, though actually these cells are responsible for defence
against pathogenic germs.
T-cells with an adverse effect
What exactly it was the researchers have discovered? Mice lacking
T-cells because of a genetic defect suffer from less severe strokes
than their normal fellow species. Moreover, they develop less
neurological impairments, e.g. paralysis, after the stroke.
Hence, T-cells have a negative effect on the course of strokes. This is
what the teams around Guido Stoll, Christoph Kleinschnitz and Heinz
Wiendl from the neurological university hospital in cooperation with
Bernhard Nieswandt from the Rudolf-Virchow Center for Experimental
Biomedicine have demonstated.
“That T-cells exert such a damaging effect in strokes came complete as
a surprise”, reports Christoph Kleinschnitz. The negative effect is
attributable to two subgroups of immune cells, the so called CD4- and
CD8-positive T-helper cells.
But in which way do the T-cells intensify the apoplectic stroke? Two
possible mechanisms were ruled out by the Würzburg scientists in their
experiments. For one thing, the T-cells do not support the clumping of
blood platelets, and therefore neither do they encourage the emergence
of thrombuses. “For another thing, they do not aid the process in form
of a specific immune reaction either”, says Neuro-immunologist Heinz
Wiendl. Further studies need to find out how the T-cells exert their
negative effect.
New approaches to therapy imaginable
The Würzburg scientists are hoping their work will help improving human
stroke therapies. If their findings are transferable to humans, new
approaches involving deliberately influencing T-cells might arise. For
example, switching off the adverse fraction of T-cells temporarily and
thereby moderating the impairments at an early stage of the stroke is
imaginable. “Until then, further studies need to be conducted though”,
says the neurologist Guido Stoll.
Results coming from two Collaborative Research Centers
These results have been worked out in the two Würzburg Collaborative
Research Centers 688 and 581. Both are financially supported by the
German Research Foundation (DFG). The findings were published on March
9th 2010 in the online issue of “Blood”, the American Society of
Haematology’s journal.
Original Publication:
Christoph Kleinschnitz, Nicholas Schwab, Peter Kraft, Ina Hagedorn,
Angela Dreykluft, Tobias Schwarz, Madeleine Austinat, Bernhard
Nieswandt, Heinz Wiendl, and Guido Stoll: "Early detrimental T cell
effects in experimental cerebral ischemia are neither related to
adaptive immunity nor thrombus formation." Blood First Edition
Paper
10.1182/blood-2009-10-249078
For further information please contact:
PD Dr. Christoph Kleinschnitz
Phone: +49 931 201-23765
E-Mail: christoph.kleinschnitz@uni-wuerzburg.de
Source: Julius-Maximilians-Universität Würzburg


