Newswise, October 27, 2015 — UCLA researchers have identified
a molecule that, after a stroke, signals brain tissue to form new connections
to compensate for the damage and initiate repairs to the brain.
The finding could eventually lead to a new treatment to
promote brain repair and functional recovery in people who have suffered a
stroke, which is the leading cause of serious long-term disability in adults.
The study, performed in an animal model, was the first to
identify growth differentiation factor 10, or GDF10, a molecule that previously
had no known role in the adult brain, said Dr. S. Thomas Carmichael, the
study’s senior author and a professor and vice chair for research and programs
in the UCLA department of neurology.
“The brain has a limited capacity for recovery after stroke,” Carmichael said. “Most stroke patients get better after their initial stroke, but few fully recover. If the signals that lead to this limited recovery after stroke can be identified and turned into a treatment, then it might be possible to enhance brain repair after stroke.”
The study appears Oct. 26, 2015 in the advance online edition of the peer-reviewed journal Nature Neuroscience.
The nearly five-year study also showed that GDF10 is released
after a stroke in humans and in many different animals. Carmichael and his team
began by determining which molecules become more prevalent in the brain during
the recovery period after a stroke, and listing all of the genes that are up-
or down-regulated, which the researchers had previously identified during an
earlier study.
Carmichael said researchers believed that one of the molecules
on the list could be a signal telling the brain to repair itself after a
stroke, and they screened for the molecules that saw the biggest increase in
the brain after stroke. After finding that GDF10 was a possible signal for
brain repair, the team analyzed the molecule in a petri dish.
The scientists found that GDF10 promotes brain cells’ ability
to form new connections, and they identified the signaling systems that control
the process.
“We found that GDF10 induces new connections to form in the brain after stroke, and that this mediates the recovery of the ability to control bodily movement,” Carmichael said.
“We found that GDF10 induces new connections to form in the brain after stroke, and that this mediates the recovery of the ability to control bodily movement,” Carmichael said.
Finally, the team identified all of the molecules that are
turned on or off by GDF10 in brain cells after a stroke and compared the cells’
RNA to RNA in comparable cells during brain development and normal learning,
and to RNA in the brain cells of people with other diseases.
They found that GDF10 regulates a unique collection of
molecules that improves recovery after stroke. The discovery indicates that
brain tissue regenerating after a stroke is a unique process rather than just a
reactivation of the molecules that are active in brain development.
The team also administered GDF10 to the animals that had
experienced strokes and then mapped the connections in the brain that are tied
to body movement. They compared those to the connections in animals who had
experienced a stroke but were not given GDF10, in animals with healthy brains
and with animals that had experienced a stroke and had a reduced level of
GDF10.
“The results indicated that GDF10 normally is responsible for
the very limited process of the formation of new connections after stroke,”
Carmichael said.
“Delivering more GDF10 markedly enhances the formation of new
connections and does so mostly in a specific brain circuit. The formation of
connections in this circuit with GDF10 administration significantly enhanced
recovery of limb control after stroke.”
Going forward, Carmichael and his team hope to identify a small molecule that activates the GDF10 signaling systems and that could eventually lead to the development of a drug to enhance recovery from strokes.
Stroke kills nearly 130,000 Americans each year — one of every
20 deaths in the U.S. — according to the Centers for Disease Control. Every
year, more than 795,000 people in the U.S. have a stroke, about 610,000 of them
for the first time. Stroke costs the U.S. an estimated $34 billion each year,
including the cost of health care, medications and missed days of work.
The study was funded by the National Institute of Neurological
Disorders and Stroke at the National Institutes of Health, the American Heart
Association, the Richard Merkin Foundation for Neural Regeneration at UCLA, the
Dr. Miriam and Sheldon G. Adelson Medical Research Foundation and the Edwin W.
and Catherine Davis Foundation.
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