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The Journal of Neuroscience, August 1, 2001, 21(15):5528-5534
Role of IL-1 and IL-1 in Ischemic Brain Damage
H.
Boutin1,
R. A.
LeFeuvre1,
R.
Horai2,
M.
Asano3,
Y.
Iwakura2, and
N. J.
Rothwell1
1 School of Biological Sciences, University of
Manchester, Manchester M13 9PT, United Kingdom, 2 Center
for Experimental Medicine, Institute of Medical Science, University of
Tokyo, Minato-ku, Tokyo, 108-8639, Japan, and 3 Institute
for Experimental Animals, Faculty of Medicine, Kanazawa University,
Kanazawa 920-8640, Japan
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ABSTRACT |
The cytokine interleukin-1 (IL-1) has been strongly implicated in
the pathogenesis of ischemic brain damage. Evidence to date suggests
that the major form of IL-1 contributing to ischemic injury is IL-1
rather than IL-1 , but this has not been tested directly.
The objective of the present study was to compare the effects of
transient cerebral ischemia [30 min middle cerebral artery occlusion
(MCAO)] on neuronal injury in wild-type (WT) mice and in IL-1 ,
IL-1 , or both IL-1 and IL-1 knock-out (KO) mice.
Mice lacking both forms of IL-1 exhibited dramatically reduced ischemic
infarct volumes compared with wild type (total volume, 70%; cortex,
87% reduction). Ischemic damage compared with WT mice was not
significantly altered in mice lacking either IL-1 or IL-1 alone.
IL-1 mRNA, but not IL-1 or the IL-1 type 1 receptor, was strongly
induced by MCAO in WT and IL-1 KO mice.
Administration (intracerebroventricularly) of recombinant IL-1 receptor
antagonist significantly reduced infarct volume in WT (-32%)
and IL-1 KO (-48%) mice, but had no effect on injury in IL-1 or
IL-1 / KO mice.
These data confirm that IL-1 plays a major role in ischemic brain
injury. They also show that chronic deletion of IL-1 or IL-1
fails to influence brain damage, probably because of compensatory changes in the IL-1 system in IL-1 KO mice and changes in
IL-1-independent mediators of neuronal death in IL-1 KO mice.
Key words:
interleukin-1; cytokines; stroke; brain; knock-out; mouse
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INTRODUCTION |
Interleukin-1 (IL-1) is a
proinflammatory cytokine that has been identified as an important
mediator of neurodegeneration induced by experimental cerebral ischemia
(stroke) or excitatory or traumatic brain injury in rodents (Touzani et
al., 1999 ; Rothwell and Luheshi, 2000 ). Both IL-1 ligands (IL-1 and
IL-1 ) are produced rapidly in the brains of rodents exposed to
cerebral ischemia (Wang et al., 1994 ; Hillhouse et al., 1998 ; Zhang et
al., 1998 ), and recombinant IL-1 administered
intracerebroventricularly, or directly into the brain, enhances
ischemic and other forms of injury (Yamasaki et al., 1995 ; Loddick and
Rothwell, 1996 ; Lawrence et al., 1998 ; Stroemer and Rothwell, 1998 ;
Allan et al., 2000 ). Conversely, blocking IL-1 actions, by
administration of the naturally occurring and selective IL-1 receptor
antagonist (IL-1ra), markedly reduces neuronal loss and inflammation
induced by a variety of experimental brain insults (Relton and
Rothwell, 1992 ; Lin et al., 1995 ; Betz et al., 1995 ; Garcia et al.,
1995 ; Yamasaki et al., 1995 ; Loddick and Rothwell, 1996 ; Stroemer and Rothwell, 1998 ; Yang et al., 1998 ).
Despite the extensive evidence implicating IL-1 in ischemic brain
damage, little information is available on the relative contribution of
IL-1 and IL-1 (Hill et al., 1999 ; Yu and Lau, 2000 ). Both
cytokines are induced in response to cerebral ischemia (Touzani et al.,
1999 ) or excitotoxicity, and central administration of IL-1
exacerbates damage (Allan et al., 1998 , 2000 ; Lawrence et al., 1998 ).
Yamasaki et al. (1995) reported that intracerebroventricular injection
of neutralizing anti-IL-1 antibody to rats reduces ischemic brain
damage, implicating IL-1 as the major mediator of injury.
Comparatively, only little information is available in the literature
concerning the role of IL-1 in ischemic brain injury (Hill et al.,
1999 ; Touzani et al., 1999 ).
Furthermore, mice lacking the gene for caspase-1 or expressing a
dominant negative form of caspase-1 (the enzyme that is required to
cleave inactive pro-IL-1 to the mature active form), also exhibit
reduced ischemic brain damage (Friedlander et al., 1997 ; Hara et al.,
1997 ; Schielke et al., 1998 ; Liu et al., 1999 ). Again this suggests a
primary role for IL-1 . However, caspase-1 also cleaves another
cytokine pro IL-18 (Akita et al., 1997 ), and mice lacking the enzyme
show reduced release of IL-1 as well as IL-1 (Li et al.,
1997 ).
Horai et al. (1998) have reported that febrile responses to turpentine
(which are modulated by IL-1 actions in the CNS) are diminished in mice
lacking IL-1 , but not in those in which the IL-1 gene is deleted,
and that IL-1 is markedly reduced in the brains of mice lacking
IL-1 . This again suggests that IL-1 is the primary IL-1 ligand in
the brain.
Thus, the objective of the present study was to identify the roles of
IL-1 and IL-1 in ischemic brain damage by studying mice lacking
either or both of these genes. A secondary aim was to determine
whether deletion of one of these IL-1 ligands genes leads to a
compensatory increase in the other and to test the effects of IL-1ra on
ischemic brain damage in mice lacking IL-1 or .
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Mice. All mice used were adult males. Mice, in which
genes for IL-1 and/or IL-1 (IL-1 KO, IL-1 KO, and
IL-1 KO) were deleted by homologous recombination [knock-out
(KO) mice], as described previously (Horai et al., 1998 ) were raised
on C57BL/6 background and bred in the local animal facilities. All KO
mice were born healthy and no major differences in growth or weight were found (Horai et al., 1998 and present study). C57BL/6 wild-type (WT) mice were supplied by Charles River (Kent, UK). No overt differences were observed between IL-1 KO and WT mice. The animals were
housed in a controlled environment with a 12 hr light/dark cycle (8:00
A.M./8:00 P.M.) at 22°C. Validation of IL-1 KO mice has been
performed by RT-PCR (see Materials and Methods). All experiments were
performed in accordance with United Kingdom legislation under the 1986 Animals (Scientific Procedures) Act.
Surgical procedures. The animals were studied at 3-6 months
of age and weighed between 22 and 31 gm at the time of use. Anesthesia was induced by inhalation of 4% halothane in a
NO2/O2 (70/30%) mixture
and maintained by inhalation of 1.5~2% halothane in a NO2/O2 (70/30%) mixture.
Body temperature was monitored throughout surgery (via rectal probe),
and animals were maintained normothermic (37.4 ± 0.4°C) by a
heating blanket (Homeothermic Blanket Control Unit; Harvard Apparatus Limited).
For intracerebroventricular injection, guide cannulas were implanted
stereotaxically (bregma 0.22 mm, lateral +1 mm, depth 2.5 mm)
(Franklin and Paxinos, 1997 ) into the right lateral cerebral ventricle
of the brain under halothane anesthesia (1.5% in
NO2/O2, 70/30%), 5-7 d
before middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAO), to permit
administration of substances intracerebroventricularly.
Temporary middle cerebral artery occlusion. Laser doppler
flowmetry (Moor Instruments) was used to monitor cerebral blood flow
(CBF) during the surgical procedure before and after MCAO for 7 min,
and then the probe was disconnected to let the animals recover from the
anesthesia. A small incision was made in the skin overlying the
temporalis muscle, then a 0.7 mm, flexible, laser Doppler probe (model
P10) was positioned on the superior portion of the temporal bone (6 mm
lateral and 2 mm posterior from the bregma) and secured with glue. This
position corresponded to the center of the ischemic territory.
Focal cerebral ischemia was induced by occlusion of the right middle
cerebral artery (MCA) using the intraluminal filament technique (Clark
et al., 1997 ) with the following modifications. After a midline, neck
incision, the common carotid artery (CCA) and external carotid artery
were isolated and ligated with 6.0 silk suture. A 6.0 silk suture was
placed around the internal carotid artery to avoid bleeding through the
arteriotomy when introducing the filament into the CCA. A nylon
monofilament (Drennan; diameter, 83 µm) coated with
"thermomelting" glue (1.5~2 mm long, diameter 180 µm) was
introduced through an incision in the CCA and advanced gently up to the
origin of the MCA. Cerebral blood flow was monitored for the following
7 min. Thereafter, to limit the effect of the anesthesia on infarct
size, animals were allowed to recover from anesthesia. Thirty minutes
after induction of MCAO, mice were reanesthetized, and the occluding
filament was withdrawn gently back into common carotid to allow
reperfusion. In sham-operated mice, the same surgical procedure was
performed, except that the filament was not advanced to occlude the MCA.
Intracardiac perfusion. Intracardiac perfusion was performed
for cerebrovasculature assessment and PCR studies. Mice were anesthetized with pentobarbital (Pentobarbitone sodium; 250 mg/kg, i.p.). An incision was performed along the thorax to expose the heart,
and the left cardiac ventricle was cannulated.
For cerebrovasculature assessment, animals were perfused with 4% PFA
for 5 min (2 ml/min), followed by ink (Quink Parker) diluted in 4% PFA
(1:5 v/v) (n = 8 per strain). Brains were removed carefully, left in 4% PFA overnight, and the Circle of Willis and
major arteries were carefully examined under microscope (Meiji, Encinitas, CA and SV Micro digital camera, SoundVision).
For PCR studies, 24 hr after induction of MCAO, mice were perfused with
a solution of diethylpyrocarbonate (DEPC 0.1%/NaCl 0.9%) for 5 min (2 ml/min) to limit RNA degradation in brain samples to be used for PCR measurement.
Administration of substances. Vehicle (NaCl 0.9%/BSA 0.1%)
or IL-1ra (5 gm/l in NaCl 0.9%/BSA 0.1%) were administered randomly into the cerebral ventricles 30 min before occlusion and 10 min after
reperfusion (i.e., 40 min after induction of MCAO). For each injection,
a volume of 0.5 µl was infused over 5 min. Human recombinant IL-1ra
was a generous gift from Dr. Steve Poole (National Institute for
Biological Standards and Control, Herts, UK)
Measurement of infarct volume. Twenty-four hours after MCAO,
mice were killed by anesthetic overdose with halothane and decapitated. Brains were removed and frozen in cooled ( 40°C) isopentane. Coronal brain sections were cut serially (20 µm at 300 µm intervals) on frozen brains by cryostat and stained with cresyl fast violet to
identify viable tissue. Infarcted areas were assessed blindly and
delineated by the relative paleness of histological staining in the
ischemic tissue. Infarct volumes were calculated by the integration of
infarcted areas on each brain slice, as quantified with a
computer-assisted image analyzer (SigmaScan 5.0; SPPS, Chicago, IL). To
correct for the effect of edema, the total infarcted area was also
determined indirectly by subtracting the area of the healthy tissue in
the ipsilateral hemisphere from the area of the contralateral
hemisphere on each section, edema was then estimated by the difference
between volumes corrected and not corrected for edema (Osborne et al.,
1987 ; Lin et al., 1993 ).
Semiquantitative PCR. After DEPC-saline perfusion (as
described above), ipsilateral and contralateral cortices were dissected on ice under a surgical microscope (Stemi SV11; Leica-Zeiss), and
frozen on dry ice. RNA Trizol (Life Technologies, Gaithersburg, MD) extraction and RT-PCR were then performed on the tissue
samples. To quantify expression of IL-1 , IL-1 , and IL-1RI genes,
their PCR products were compared with constitutively expressed genes: -actin for IL-1 and IL-1 and glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate
dehydrogenase (GAPDH) for IL-1RI (sequences of the primers are
described in Table 1).
The PCR program was 5 min at 95°C, then cycles of denaturation at
95°C for 30 sec, annealing at 55°C (IL-1 , IL-1 , -actin, and GAPDH) or 58°C (IL-1RI) for 45 sec, and extension at 72°C for
40 sec repeated for 35 cycles, with a 5 min final extension period at
72°C. Thereafter, PCR products were loaded on 2% agarose gel and
quantified using computer-assisted image analyzer (SigmaScan 5.0; SPPS)
and expressed as a ratio of the control gene. The absence of PCR
products in control samples without reverse transcription of RNA and
size of PCR products as described by Gabellec et al. (1997a) were
confirmed (Table 1).
Statistical analyses. All data are presented as mean ± SEM. To determine differences between groups, a one-way ANOVA
(Statview 5.0; SAS Institute, Cary, NC) was performed for infarct
volumes and CBF data with one factor: strain (WT, IL-1 KO, IL-1
KO, or IL-1 KO), or a multiparametric ANOVA with two factors:
strain and treatment (saline or IL-1ra), when treatment was applied. Because such analysis for infarct volume revealed a significant (p < 0.05) principal effect for the two factors
studied and interactions between them, a subsequent one-way ANOVA was
therefore performed, followed by Scheffé post hoc test
when required. Incidence of subcortical damage was assessed through the
use of 2 test.
PCR results were analyzed by the mean of a Kruskal-Wallis
nonparametric test followed, when significant differences between groups were highlighted, by a Mann-Whitney U test to
determine differences between control versus MCAO and sham versus MCAO. For all statistical analyses, the significance level accepted was
p < 0.05.
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RESULTS |
Cerebral blood flow measurement and cerebrovascular anatomy
Examination of circle of Willis and gross cerebrovascular anatomy
did not reveal any differences among any of the strains studied
(data not shown).
Doppler monitoring showed that reductions in CBF caused by insertion of
the thread were similar in all strains (percentage fall in CBF from
preischemic value: WT, 79 ± 0.1; IL-1 KO, 76 ± 0.1;
IL-1 KO, 77 ± 0.1; and IL-1 KO, 80 ± 0.1%).
Similar results were observed in animals injected with saline or IL-1ra (decrease in CBF expressed as a percentage of preischemic value: WT/saline, 86 ± 0.1; WT/IL-1ra, 80 ± 0.1; IL-1
KO/saline, 82 ± 0.1; IL-1 KO/IL-1ra, 83 ± 0.1; IL-1
KO/saline, 85 ± 0.1;IL-1 /IL-1ra: 85 ± 0.1%).
Effect of IL-1 and/or IL-1 gene deletion on
cerebral ischemia
No significant differences in total infarct volumes and edema
(Figs. 1, 2A,C) were found
between WT mice and mice in which IL-1 or IL-1 genes had been
deleted. Cortical infarct volumes were also similar in the WT, IL-1
KO, and IL-1 KO mice (Fig. 2B). Conversely, in
mice lacking genes for both IL-1 and IL-1 (IL-1 KO), total
infarct volume was significantly smaller than WT ( 70%) or either
IL-1 KO ( 64%) or IL-1 KO mice ( 71%; p < 0.01) (Figs. 1, 2A).
Cortical infarct volumes were also markedly reduced in the IL-1
KO mice ( 87% vs WT and IL-1 KO mice and 81% vs IL-1 KO
mice) (Fig. 2B). Similarly, edema was significantly smaller in IL-1 KO mice compared with WT ( 71%,
p < 0.05), but the latter did not reach statistical
significance when compared with IL-1 KO and IL-1 KO despite a
similar reduction of edema ( 66% IL-1 KO vs IL-1 KO and
IL-1 KO). No significant change in striatal infarct volume was
observed between any of the strains studied (Fig.
2B). Similar results were observed in total and cortical infarct after correction for edema.

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Figure 1.
Representative coronal brain sections (20 µm) of
WT, IL-1 KO, IL-1 KO, and IL-1 KO mice 24 hr after 30 min
of middle cerebral artery occlusion.
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Figure 2.
Effect of 30 min middle cerebral artery occlusion
on infarct volume (A, total; B, cortex
and striatum) and edema (C) in WT, IL-1 KO,
IL-1 KO, and IL-1 KO mice (n = 9 per
group). Volumes are expressed in cubic millimeters (mean ± SEM). *Significantly different to WT, and #significantly different to
WT, IL-1 KO, and IL-1 KO mice, respectively
(p < 0.05, ANOVA followed by Scheffe
post hoc test).
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IL-1 and IL-1 mRNA expression in WT, IL-1 KO, and IL-1
KO mice
In cortices ipsilateral to MCAO, IL-1 mRNA was expressed
constitutively in WT, but not in IL-1 KO mice (Fig.
3A). Cerebral ischemia did not
induce significant changes in IL-1 expression in WT animals. The
level of IL-1 mRNA in IL-1 KO mice was increased in sham-operated
groups and MCAO groups when compared with control group, but the
overall changes were not statistically significant (p = 0.06; Kruskal-Wallis test), and no
difference was observed between sham-operated and MCAO groups (Fig.
3A).

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Figure 3.
Representative PCR gels, with corresponding image
analysis quantification for IL-1 (A), IL-1
(B), and IL-1RI (C) in
ipsilateral cortices in WT (control, n = 4; sham,
n = 3; MCAO, n = 4), IL-1 KO
(control, n = 3; sham, n = 3;
MCAO, n = 4), and IL-1 KO mice (control,
n = 3; sham, n = 4; MCAO,
n = 5). Data are expressed as the ratio of the gene
of interest to the relevant control gene ( -actin for IL-1 and
IL-1 and GAPDH for IL-1RI; mean ± SEM). Significantly
different from control (*) and sham-operated (#) groups
(p < 0.05; Mann-Whitney
U test).
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Conversely, RT-PCR for IL-1 mRNA showed that IL-1 was not
expressed constitutively in WT or IL-1 KO mice, but was induced strongly by cerebral ischemia in both WT (+323% in MCAO group vs sham
group) and IL-1 KO mice (Fig. 3B). IL-1RI mRNA expression was not altered by cerebral ischemia (Fig. 3C). Similar
results were found in the striatum and other subcortical brain areas
(data not shown).
Effect of intracerebroventricular injection of IL-1ra in WT,
IL-1 KO, and IL-1 KO mice
To assess the influence of endogenous IL-1 on ischemic brain
damage in IL-1 KO and IL-1 KO mice, the effect of injection of
IL-1ra on brain damage was compared with vehicle treatment in separate
groups of animals exposed to MCAO.
Only minor differences in infarct volume were observed between WT and
IL-1 KO and IL-1 KO mice receiving saline. Cortical infarct size,
but not total infarct volume, was slightly reduced in IL-1 KO (Fig.
4B) when compared with
WT. In IL-1 KO mice receiving saline, only cortical infarct volume
not corrected for edema was significantly reduced ( 27%; data not
shown) compared with the WT. When treated with saline, edema was
reduced in IL-1 and IL-1 KO mice compared with WT but reached
statistical significance only in IL-1 KO mice (Fig. 4C).

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Figure 4.
Comparison of total (A) and
cortical infarct (B) volumes, corrected for edema
(expressed in cubic millimeters; mean ± SEM) and edema
(C) between saline and IL-1ra treatments, in WT, IL-1 KO,
and IL-1 KO mice (WT/saline, n = 13; WT/IL1-ra,
n = 10; IL-1 KO/saline, n = 10; IL-1 KO/IL-1ra, n = 10; IL-1 KO/saline,
n = 12; IL-1 KO/IL-1ra, n = 11). *Indicates significant difference from saline-treated group.
#Indicates a significant difference from WT receiving identical
treatment (p < 0.05, ANOVA followed by
Scheffe post hoc test).
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Intracerebroventricular injection of IL-1ra reduced significantly total
and cortical infarct size in WT ( 32 and 37%) and IL-1 KO ( 48
and 56%), but not in IL-1 KO mice (Fig. 4). Similar results were
observed for infarct volumes without correction for edema (data not
shown). Moreover, cortical infarct volume was reduced significantly in
IL-1 KO mice receiving IL-1ra when compared with IL-1 KO (Fig.
4). IL-1ra did not significantly affect the size of the lesion in the
striatum (data not shown). No differences were observed in subcortical
infarct size between strains or treatment, although IL-1ra reduced the
incidence of subcortical damage in WT mice (mice with subcortical
damage/total number of mice: WT/IL-1ra, 4/10 vs WT/saline, 12/13;
p < 0.01; 2 test).
IL-1ra had no effect in IL-1 KO (Fig. 4) or IL-1 KO mice
[total infarct: IL-1 KO/saline, 12.1 ± 1.9 mm3 (n = 4) vs IL-1
KO/IL-1ra 22.4 ± 4.7 mm3
(n = 5) mean ± SEM].
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DISCUSSION |
Occlusion of the MCAO induced reproducible brain damage in
wild-type mice, resulting in neuronal loss in the cortex and striatum that was accompanied by edema (Figs. 1, 2). Subcortical (hippocampus and/or thalamus) brain areas were also infarcted in ~50% of mice, but no statistical differences in subcortical infarct size were observed between strains.
In the present study, we observed no differences in the cerebrovascular
architecture (defined from injection of carbon black) or the severity
of the ischemic insult (assessed from cerebral blood flow) between IL-1
knock out (IL-1 , IL-1 , or IL-1 KO) and wild-type mice.
Consequently, we demonstrated that simultaneous deletion of both
IL-1 and IL-1 (IL-1 KO) genes caused a marked reduction
(approximately 85% for cortical areas and approximately 70% for total infarct volume) in ischemic brain damage (Figs. 1, 2).
Similarly, brain edema was significantly reduced in IL-1 KO mice
( 70%) when compared with WT mice. These observations support a major
role for endogenous IL-1 in ischemic brain damage. It seems unlikely
that this dramatic effect might be related to changes in body
temperature or CBF because such parameters were not significantly
different between strains.
Relatively few publications have reported changes in expression of the
IL-1 family, such as IL-1 and IL-1RI, after stroke (Hill et al.,
1999 ; Yu and Lau, 2000 ), yet it has been assumed that IL-1 is the
primary form of IL-1 involved in ischemic brain damage (Buttini et al.,
1994 ; Davies et al., 1999 ; Touzani et al., 1999 ), and in other local
and systemic responses to peripheral injury (Luheshi et al., 1997 ;
Eriksson et al., 1999 ). Indeed Horai et al. (1998) studying the same
mice as those used in the present study, report that IL-1 KO mice,
but not those lacking IL-1 , exhibit reduced responses to the effects
of systemic injection of turpentine on fever. Similarly, Kozak et al.
(1995) have reported a reduced febrile response to
lipopolysaccharide in IL-1 KO mice. Conversely Alheim et al.
(1997) have shown a potential hyper-responsive fever in
IL-1 -deficient mice, suggesting that in fever induction as well as
in cerebral ischemia, IL-1 could have an important, but not
obligatory role in the brain as a proinflammatory cytokine.
IL-1 appears to regulate IL-1 expression because the latter is
reduced in mice lacking IL-1 or caspase-1 (Dinarello, 1997 ; Horai et
al., 1998 ). This has been confirmed in the present study by RT-PCR in
IL-1 KO mice. Similarly, we also observed markedly reduced
expression of IL-1 in microglia from mice in which IL-1 gene is
deleted (D. Brough, R. Le Feuvre, and N. Rothwell, unpublished data),
which is consistent with reports that IL-1 regulates IL-1 expression. On the basis of these observations we predicted that deletion of IL-1 (but perhaps not IL-1 ) would limit
ischemic brain damage. However, we found in the present study that
infarct volume and edema were almost identical in mice lacking IL-1
or IL-1 when compared with WT mice.
Thus, the effects of chronic inhibition of IL-1 through gene
deletion appear to differ from acute inhibition of IL-1 by immunoneutralization (Yamasaki et al., 1995 ). It seems most likely that
chronic deletion of IL-1 or IL-1 failed to influence brain damage
because of a compensatory increase in the other form of IL-1. To test
this hypothesis, we first studied the expression of IL-1 , IL-1 ,
and IL-1RI mRNA after MCAO by semiquantitative RT-PCR. As described
previously (Touzani et al., 1999 ; Legos et al., 2000 ), IL-1 mRNA was
strongly induced by cerebral ischemia in WT (fourfold increase; MCAO vs
sham groups) and in IL-1 KO mice (Fig. 3B). IL-1 was
induced in sham-operated and MCAO groups when compared with the control
group, however because there was no difference between sham-operated
and ischemic group, it seems that the induction of IL-1 observed
here was more likely related to the surgery. Conversely, no significant
changes in IL-1RI expression were observed in any strain studied.
Previous studies have reported increased expression of IL-1 mRNA
after focal ischemia in mice (Hill et al., 1999 ) and IL-1RI after
global ischemia or focal ischemia in rats (Sairanen et al., 1997 ; Wang
et al., 1997 ). The apparent discrepancy between the results we describe
here and these reports could be attributable to differences between the models of cerebral ischemia (global vs focal), techniques used (in situ hybridization), and/or the time point investigated.
However, the latter seems unlikely for IL-1RI because the previous
reports have shown that the induction of IL-1RI was prolonged for up to 24 hr after ischemia (Sairanen et al., 1997 ).
It is possible that deletion of one form of IL-1 results in
compensatory changes in some other aspects of the IL-1 system or in
postreceptor signaling such that ischemic brain damage is not affected.
We attempted to test this possibility by studying the effects of IL-1ra
in mice lacking IL-1 , IL-1 , or both IL-1 and . We predicted
that if the IL-1 system was upregulated in IL-1 KO or IL-1 KO
mice, IL-1ra treatment should reduce damage in these mice. As reported
previously in slightly different models of cerebral ischemia in rats
and mice (Garcia et al., 1995 ; Loddick and Rothwell, 1996 ; Stroemer and
Rothwell, 1997 ; Touzani et al., 1999 ), injection of recombinant IL-1ra
(intracerebroventricularly) in wild-type mice reduced ischemic infarct
volume by ~35% (Fig. 4). Reduction of infarct size by IL-1ra was not
associated with changes in physiological parameters such as body
temperature in the present or earlier studies (Betz et al., 1995 ;
Loddick and Rothwell, 1996 ) or CBF (see Touzani et al., 1999 ). This
finding supports the involvement of IL-1 in ischemic brain damage. The reduction in ischemic brain damage in these IL-1 / KO mice
(approximately 70 to 80%) was greater than the effect of
IL-1ra reported in this and in earlier studies (approximately 30 to
60%; for review, see Touzani et al., 1999 ). Because we have used the
optimal dose of IL-1ra (Stroemer and Rothwell, 1997 ; Touzani et al.,
1999 ), the difference in ischemic damage between IL-1ra-treated animals and deletion of IL-1 and IL-1 may reflect poor brain penetration of IL-1ra or instability of the protein in the brain. However, it could
also suggest that IL-1ra does not fully block effects of endogenous
IL-1 on type I IL-1 receptor or another unidentified IL-1 signaling
receptor or receptors. Intracerebroventricular injection of IL-1ra
significantly reduced total ( 48%) and cortical ( 54%; IL-1ra vs
saline) infarct sizes in IL-1 KO mice, but had no effect in IL-1
KO mice (Fig. 4). In contrast to untreated mice in which no difference
between strains was observed, a slight decrease in cortical infarct
size was observed in IL-1 and IL-1 KO mice receiving saline
compared with WT saline-treated animals, probably because of reduction
in edema, which can be modified by intracerebroventricular cannulation
and/or injection, when compared with untreated mice. Total infarct
volumes in mice receiving saline were not significantly different.
These data suggest that in IL-1 KO mice, there was some compensatory
upregulation in IL-1 system, possibly at the level of translation,
cleavage, or release of IL-1 , expression of IL-1ra, or downstream of
IL-1R1, which was inhibited by IL-1ra treatment. In contrast, IL-1ra
was ineffective in IL-1 KO mice, indicating that the IL-1 system
might not contribute to the ischemic injury in these mice, but that
there may have been compensatory changes in other mediators of injury,
such as other cytokines, glutamate, or free radicals. This potential
compensation for gene deletion is important in considering all data
from knock-out animals. In parallel, the tendency of IL-1 KO mice to
have a smaller infarct than the WT or IL-1 KO mice could suggest
that any actions of endogenous IL-1 in the IL-1 KO mice were not
fully antagonized by administration of IL-1ra. It could also suggest
that IL-1 is acting on another subtype of IL-1 receptor than the
type I. These data suggest that chronic deletion of IL-1 (and
probably IL-1 ) has different effects on ischemic brain damage to
acute inhibition of IL-1 and that IL-1 KO mice differ from those
lacking the caspase-1 gene.
 |
Summary |
Overall, the data suggest that IL-1 is a major contributor to
ischemic brain damage because deletion of both IL-1 and IL-1 leads to a massive reduction in injury. Deletion of IL-1 apparently results in some compensatory changes in the IL-1 system such that overall damage is unaffected. Chronic deletion of IL-1 (unlike acute
intervention) does not result in reduced ischemic brain damage
presumably because of upregulation of other mediators of injury.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received March 8, 2001; revised May 3, 2001; accepted May 11, 2001.
This work was supported by the Medical Research Council (United
Kingdom). We thank Drs. Sarah Loddick and Stuart Allan for their expert
comments, and Catherine Smith, Anthea Hughes, and Sally Shepperd for
their contribution to this work.
Correspondence should be addressed to Prof. N. J. Rothwell, School
of Biological Sciences, 1.124 Stopford Building, University of
Manchester, Oxford Road, Manchester M13 9PT, UK. Email:
Nancy.Rothwell{at}man.ac.uk
 |
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