The Journal of Neuroscience, July 16, 2003, 23(15):6264-6271
Previous Article | Next Article 
Peroxisome Proliferator-Activated Receptor-
Activation as a Mechanism of Preventive Neuroprotection Induced by Chronic Fenofibrate Treatment
Dominique Deplanque,1,4 *
Patrick Gelé,1 *
Olivier Pétrault,1
Isabelle Six,1
Christophe Furman,2
Muriel Bouly,2
Stéphane Nion,3
Bernard Dupuis,1
Didier Leys,4
Jean-Charles Fruchart,2
Roméo Cecchelli,3
Bart Staels,2
Patrick Duriez,2 and
Régis Bordet1
1Laboratoire de Pharmacologie, Université
de Lille 2, Faculté deMédecine, Lille, 59045 France,
2Département de Recherches sur les
Lipoprotéines et l'Athérosclérose, Institut Pasteur de
Lille, Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale
UR545 et Université de Lille 2, Faculté de Pharmacie, Lille,
59019 France, 3Unité Mixte Université
d'ArtoisInstitut Pasteur de Lille, Faculté des Sciences Jean
Perrin, Université d'Artois, Lens, 62307 France, and
4Service de Neurologie et Pathologie Neurovasculaire,
Centre Hospitalier Régional et Universitaire de Lille, Lille, 59037
France
 |
Abstract
|
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The treatment of ischemic strokes is limited to the prevention of
cerebrovascular risk factors and to the modulation of the coagulation cascade
during the acute phase. A new therapeutic strategy could be to preventively
protect the brain against noxious biological reactions induced by cerebral
ischemia such as oxidative stress and inflammation to minimize their
neurological consequences. Here, we show that a peroxisome
proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR-
) activator, fenofibrate,
protects against cerebral injury by anti-oxidant and anti-inflammatory
mechanisms. A 14 d preventive treatment with fenofibrate reduces
susceptibility to stroke in apolipoprotein E-deficient mice as well as
decreases cerebral infarct volume in C57BL/6 wild-type mice. The
neuroprotective effect of fenofibrate is completely absent in
PPAR-
-deficient mice, suggesting that PPAR-
activation is
involved as a mechanism of the protection against cerebral injury.
Furthermore, this neuroprotective effect appears independently of any
improvement in plasma lipids or glycemia and is associated with (1) an
improvement in middle cerebral artery sensitivity to endothelium-dependent
relaxation unrelated to an increase in nitric oxide synthase (NOS) type III
expression, (2) a decrease in cerebral oxidative stress depending on the
increase in numerous antioxidant enzyme activities, and (3) the prevention of
ischemia-induced expression of vascular cell adhesion molecule-1 and
intercellular adhesion molecule-1 in cerebral vessels without any change in
NOS II expression. These data demonstrate that PPAR-
could be a new
pharmacological target to preventively reduce the deleterious neurological
consequences of stroke in mice and suggest that PPAR-
activators could
preventively decrease the severity of stroke in humans.
Key words: stroke; PPAR-
; neuroprotection; prevention; oxidative stress; inflammation; adhesion proteins; mouse
 |
Introduction
|
|---|
Ischemic stroke is the third leading cause of death and the first leading
cause of disability in adults in industrialized countries
(Hankey and Warlow, 1999
).
Currently, the therapeutic strategy available for the acute phase of stroke is
limited to aspirin and thrombolysis
(Hankey and Warlow, 1999
). To
date, clinical trials have not demonstrated any protective effects of drugs
during the acute phase of cerebral ischemia
(Lee et al., 2000
), and
therefore interest has turned to alternative therapeutic strategies such as
preventive neuroprotection based on the induction of cerebral resistance to
ischemia before its occurrence (Jonas,
1995
). On the basis of experimental brain ischemic tolerance data
(Chen and Simon, 1997
), there
is evidence that brain could be rendered resistant to the deleterious effects
of ischemia by the induction of cytoprotective proteins such as anti-oxidant
enzymes, endothelial nitric oxide synthase (NOS), or heat shock proteins as
well as by the inhibition of deleterious inflammatory, oxidative, and
apoptotic pathways (Chen and Simon,
1997
; Bordet et al.,
2000
; Puisieux et al.,
2000
). Pharmacological agents able to mimic the biological effects
observed in brain ischemic tolerance might then increase the resistance to
ischemia of patients with high risk for stroke
(Fisher et al., 1994
). Recent
evidence indicates that peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor
(PPAR)-
activators (fibrates) could reduce the incidence of stroke by
improving plasma lipid metabolism
(Amarenco, 2001
;
Bloomfield Rubins et al.,
2001
). In addition, by their so-called pleiotropic
lipid-independent effects (Fruchart et
al., 1999
) they could influence biological targets involved in
experimental brain ischemic tolerance
(Chen and Simon, 1997
).
PPAR-
is one of the three subtypes of the nuclear receptor PPAR
family (Fruchart et al.,
1999
). The activation of PPAR-
, by both natural ligands
such as fatty acids and derivates or synthetic ligands such as hypolipidemic
fibrates, stimulates target gene transcription via the formation of
heterodimeric transcription factor complexes with the retinoid x receptor
(RXR) (Fruchart et al., 1999
).
PPAR-
activation also induces a negative transcriptional regulation of
NF-
B and of the activator protein-1 (AP-1) signaling pathways
(Delerive et al., 1999
),
thereby modulating inflammation and oxidative stress
(Poynter and Daynes, 1998
;
Fruchart et al., 1999
). It has
been demonstrated that PPAR-
inhibits inducible NOS (NOS II) in
macrophages and prevents the expression of cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2)
(Staels et al., 1998
) in
smooth muscle cells. PPAR-
activation also inhibits vascular cell
adhesion molecule-1 (VCAM-1) expression
(Marx et al., 1999
) and, to a
lesser degree, intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1)
(Wayman et al., 2002
).
Moreover, PPAR-
activation stimulates antioxidant enzyme expression,
such as superoxide dismutase and catalase
(Poynter and Daynes, 1998
;
Inoue et al., 2001
), both of
which are involved in brain ischemic tolerance
(Jander et al., 1996
;
Chen and Simon, 1997
;
Bordet et al., 2000
).
PPAR-
is expressed in cerebral cells such as neurons and astrocytes
(Kainu et al., 1994
;
Cullingford et al., 1998
) and
in cerebral vascular endothelial and smooth muscle cells, as well as in
monocytes/macrophages (Bishop-Bailey,
2000
), which are all involved in cerebral ischemia pathophysiology
(Bastide et al., 1999
;
Deplanque et al., 2000
;
Lee et al., 2000
;
Chan, 2001
). Activation of
PPAR-
in all of these biological sites could contribute to change the
pathophysiological process during cerebral ischemia. Therefore, the purpose of
this study was to determine whether chronic PPAR-
activation by
fenofibrate reduces cerebral infarct size in mice, independently of any change
in plasma lipid levels, by modulating endothelial function of cerebral
arteries as well as by upregulating brain antioxidant enzyme activities and by
inhibiting inflammation pathways through a decrease in ischemia-induced
VCAM-1, ICAM-1, or NOS II expression.
 |
Materials and Methods
|
|---|
Animals and treatment administration. All experiments were
performed within the framework of the French legislation that controls animal
experimentation. To assess the neuroprotective effect of prophylactic
treatment with fenofibrate, male apolipoprotein (Apo) E-deficient mice (F6
homozygotes; C57BL/6 genetic background; Transgenic Alliance, L'Arbresle,
France), C57BL/6 and SV129 wild-type mice (IFFA Credo, L'Arbresle, France),
and PPAR-
-deficient mice (PPAR-
-/-) (F6 homozygotes; SV129
genetic background) (Lee et al.,
1995
; Delerive et al.,
1999
) were fed a diet containing 0.2% fenofibrate (UAR,
Villemoissonsur-orge, France) or placebo for 14 d. To assess the acute
neuroprotective effect of fenofibrate, three other groups of C57BL/6 wild-type
mice received fenofibrate (50 or 250 mg/kg, i.p.) (Sigma-Aldrich, Saint
Quentin Fallavier, France) or its vehicle (DMSO solution, 50 µl), 1 and 6
hr after the beginning of middle cerebral artery (MCA) occlusion. To assess
the vascular effects of fenofibrate, C57BL/6 mice and Wistar Kyoto rats (IFFA
Credo) were fed a diet containing 0.2% fenofibrate (UAR) or placebo for 14
d.
Middle cerebral artery occlusion method. Animals were anesthetized
with chloral hydrate (300 mg/kg, i.p.) (Sigma-Aldrich). According to the mouse
strain (Connolly et al.,
1996
), cerebral infarcts were produced by a 60 min (C57BL/6) or a
90 min (SV129) MCA occlusion followed by a 24 hr reperfusion period. The
ostium of the right MCA was occluded intraluminally with an adapted method
from that described previously in rat
(Bastide et al., 1999
). Under
surgical microscope control, an aneurysm clip was place across the carotid
bifurcation, and an arteriotomy was made in the common carotid artery stump to
allow the introduction of a 20-mm-long 6-0 nylon monofilament suture with its
tip rounded by flame heating. This was secured in place and the aneurysm clip
was removed; then the suture was advanced gently into the internal carotid
artery and passed into the intracranial circulation (1213 mm distal to
the carotid bifurcation), thereby occluding the origin of MCA. After 60 or 90
min, to allow reperfusion, the suture was removed carefully until its tip was
blocked by ligature placed on the common carotid artery. A rectal probe was
inserted, and core temperature was maintained at
37°C by the use of a
heating pad and a heating lamp.
Histology and measurement of infarct size. After 24 hr, mice were
killed, and the brains were removed and frozen in isopentane for histological
analysis. Cryostat-cut coronal brain sections (20 µm) were stained with
cresyl violet, and infarct volume was assessed by numerical integration of the
infarcted areas calculated by an image analysis software (Color Image 1.32,
NIH, Bethesda, MD) after digitization by scanner as described
(Bordet at al., 2000
).
Corrected infarct volumes were calculated to compensate for the effect of
brain edema as described (Bordet et al.,
2000
).
Analysis of metabolic parameters. Serum cholesterol [total
cholesterol, very low-density lipoprotein (VLDL) plus intermediate-density
lipoprotein (IDL) plus low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol, high-density
lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol], triglycerides, and glucose were determined
from blood samples obtained by retro-orbital puncture under chloral
hydrate-induced anesthesia 24 hr before surgical procedure as described
(Peters et al., 1997
). Because
of the well documented liver peroxisome proliferation in rodents
(Fruchart at al., 1999
), liver
weights were recorded after animals were killed to confirm that fenofibrate
was pharmacologically active.
Bloodbrain barrier model. To examine the ability of
fenofibrate to cross the bloodbrain barrier, an in vitro model
of bloodbrain barrier consisting of a coculture of bovine brain
capillary endothelial cells and rat astrocytes was used as described
(Dehouck et al., 1990
). The
major active metabolite of fenofibrate, fenofibric acid (Laboratoire Fournier,
Dijon, France), was added to the cultured medium in contact with endothelial
cells at a dose of 100 µM for 45 min at 37°C. Transports
were measured by HPLC quantification of fenofibric acid in the basal
compartment at each time point. To obtain a concentration-independent
transport parameter, the clearance principle was used. The slopes of the
clearance curves for the cultured inserts and the control filters were
Pst and Psf, respectively, with Ps = permeability
x surface area product. Permeability of endothelial cells monolayers
(Pse) was calculated from 1/Pse = 1/Pst -
1/Psf. The permeability coefficient of endothelial cells
(Pe) was obtained by dividing Pse values by the surface area
of the insert as described (Dehouck et
al., 1990
).
Cerebral blood flow measurement. Regional cerebral blood flow
(rCBF) was evaluated at baseline, during MCA occlusion and until 30 min after
reperfusion by laser Doppler flow (Periflux PF3, Perimed, Järfälla,
Sweden) in treated and untreated mice (five in each group) submitted to a 1 hr
cerebral ischemia using a flexible 0.5 mm fiber-optic probe (Perimed) that was
attached to the intact skull overlying the core region of the MCA territory (2
mm posterior, 6 mm lateral from bregma).
MCA vasoreactivity. Because of methodological limitations
according to the size of cerebral vessels in mice, MCA vascular reactivity was
evaluated in Wistar Kyoto rats (five in each groups) after a 14 d period of
fenofibrate or placebo treatment using a technique described previously
(Bastide et al., 2003
). A
segment of the dissected right MCA was mounted in a small vessel arteriograph
(Living Systems Intrumentation, Burlington, VT), and then the lumen diameter
was analyzed in the no-flow condition through a camera coupled to a video
dimension analyzer (Bastide et al.,
2003
). Before testing the endothelium-dependent and
endothelium-independent relaxation, a precontraction of the vessel was
realized using serotonin (5-HT) at a concentration of 10-
6 M. When the diameter reached a steady state, the
vessel was exposed to increasing concentrations of acetylcholine (ACh)
(10- 9 to 3 x 10-5
M) or to the NO donor sodium nitroprusside (SNP) (3 x
10-5 M). In these conditions, vasorelaxation
was measured as the percentage of increase from the preconstricted artery
diameter
Oxidative stress and antioxidant enzymes. Markers of oxidative
stress, thiobarbituric acid-reactive substances (TBARS), were measured in
brain homogenates of fenofibrate-treated and untreated animals as described
(Ramassamy et al., 2001
). This
was completed by measuring antioxidant enzyme activities (copper/zinc
superoxide dismutase, manganese superoxide dismutase, glutathione peroxidase,
glutathione reductase, glutathione S-transferase, and catalase) in
brain homogenates of fenofibrate-treated and untreated animals by
spectrophotometric assay as described
(Paglia and Valentine, 1967
;
Habig et al., 1974
;
Goldberg and Spooner, 1983
;
Bordet et al., 2000
).
VCAM-1 and ICAM-1 immunohistochemistry. Ischemia-induced VCAM-1
and ICAM-1 expressions (Wang et al.,
1994
; Jander et al.,
1996
) were evaluated in fenofibrate-treated and untreated animals
(five in each group). Twenty-four hours after the cerebral
ischemiareperfusion procedure, mice were anesthetized with a lethal
dose of pentobarbital and fixed by transcardial perfusion with 4%
paraformaldehyde in PBS, pH 7.4. Brains were removed and postfixed in the same
fixative during 4 hr at 4°C and then processed for paraffin embedding and
cut into 4-µm-thick sections. Endogenous peroxidases were inhibited with
0.3% H2O2 and 10% methanol in PBS, pH 7.4, and protein
nonspecific binding was blocked with 5% normal rabbit serum in PBS, pH 7.4.
Sections were then incubated overnight at 4°C with a goat polyclonal
antibody (anti-VCAM-1, 1:50; anti-ICAM-1, 1:100; Santa Cruz Biotechnology,
Santa Cruz, CA). Antibodies were visualized with an anti-goat Vectastain ABC
Elite kit (Vector Laboratories, Burlingame, CA) and
DAB/H2O2 exposure (Fast DAB tablets set; Sigma, St.
Louis, MO) according to the manufacturers' procedures. The sections incubated
with anti-VCAM-1 but not anti-ICAM-1 were counterstained with cresyl violet.
As negative control, some sections were incubated without primary antibody.
The intensity of staining for VCAM-1 and ICAM-1 was semiquantitatively
evaluated in number of + signs (0, no staining; +++, important staining), with
treatment and ischemic conditions concealed.
Western blot analysis. To investigate the role of fenofibrate
treatment on the putative protective or deleterious proteins, we first
analyzed the expression of NOS III and copper/zinc superoxide dismutase in
brain homogenates of treated and untreated animals by Western blot analysis
(anti-NOS III, 1:200; anti-superoxide dismutase (SOD)-1, 1:5000; Upstate
Biotechnology). According to manufacturer's procedures, mouse brain extract
and epidermal growth factor (EGF)-stimulated A431 cell lysate were used,
respectively, as control. Using the same technique, we analyzed the expression
of VCAM-1, ICAM-1, and NOS II 24 hr after brainischemia reperfusion in
treated and untreated mice (anti-VCAM-1, 1:1000; anti-ICAM-1, 1:1000; anti-NOS
II, 1:1000; Upstate Biotechnology) when non-ischemic mice injected with
lipopolysaccharide (1.5 mg/kg, i.p.; 24 hr before) were used as positive
control. Moreover, for all of these experiments, selected blots were probed
with
-actin (1:250; Santa Cruz Biotechnology) as internal control. After
digitization, densitometric values were evaluated using an image analysis
software (Perfect-image V6.1, Claravision, Orsay, France).
Statistical analysis. For statistical data comparison, a standard
software package (SPSS 11.0 for windows) was used. Variables were compared
between the different groups with a one-way variance analysis followed by
least significant difference tests. All values are given as mean ± SEM.
Values of p < 0.05 are considered significant.
 |
Results
|
|---|
Chronic fenofibrate administration suppresses susceptibility to
provoked stroke in apolipoprotein E-deficient mice
To investigate the putative neuroprotective effect of PPAR-
activation, we chose to study the effects of fenofibrate on Apo E-deficient
mice, which are hypercholesterolemic and highly susceptible to the deleterious
effects of a provoked stroke (Laskowitz et
al., 1997
). Apo E-deficient mice were pretreated with fenofibrate
(0.2% w/w in standard diet) or with placebo for 14 d. In this first
experimental step, wild-type mice carrying the same genetic background
(C57BL/6) received placebo. There was no mortality in the three tested groups
subjected to a 60 min middle cerebral artery occlusion followed by a recovery
period of 24 hr. Placebo-treated Apo E-deficient mice had larger cerebral
infarct volumes than placebo-treated wild-type mice (51 ± 6 versus 34
± 6 mm3, respectively; p < 0.05), confirming the
previously described higher susceptibility of Apo E-deficient mice to the
deleterious effects of cerebral ischemia
(Laskowitz et al., 1997
).
Fenofibrate pretreatment drastically reduced the susceptibility to stroke of
Apo E-deficient mice, because fenofibrate-treated Apo E-deficient mice had
lower cerebral infarct volumes than placebo-treated Apo E-deficient mice (32
± 4 versus 51 ± 6 mm3, respectively; p <
0.05) and because infarct volumes in fenofibrate-treated Apo E-deficient mice
were similar to those of placebo-treated wild-type mice. This protective
effect against susceptibility to stroke was observed only in the cortical area
and not in the striatal area (Fig.
1A). Although fenofibrate reduced cerebral infarct
volumes in Apo E-deficient mice, it increased total cholesterol by increasing
atherogenic cholesterol (VLDL + IDL + LDL cholesterol) and decreasing
anti-atherogenic cholesterol (HDL cholesterol) plasma levels without affecting
triglyceride concentrations (Table
1). It decreased fasting hyperglycemia as compared with the level
measured in placebo-treated Apo E-deficient mice or in placebo-treated
wild-type mice (Table 1). Liver
weights were increased in fenofibrate-treated Apo E-deficient mice, because of
the already well documented peroxisome proliferation in rodents
(Fruchart et al., 1999
),
indicating that fenofibrate was pharmacologically active
(Table 1).
Fenofibrate induces a preventive neuroprotection in wild-type C57BL/6
mice
To determine whether the neuroprotective effect of fenofibrate in mice was
independent of any genetic susceptibility to cerebral ischemia such as Apo E
deficiency, we tested whether preventive treatment with fenofibrate reduced
cerebral infarct volume after a 60 min middle cerebral artery occlusion
followed by a 24 hr reperfusion period in normolipidemic wild-type mice
carrying the same genetic background (C57BL/6) as the previously tested Apo
E-deficient mice. A 14 d prophylactic treatment with fenofibrate drastically
(p < 0.05) reduced infarct volume in fenofibrate-treated wild-type
mice (31 ± 5 mm3) as compared with placebo-treated wild-type
mice (48 ± 4 mm3). As previously, infarct volumes were
reduced only in the cortical area and not in the subcortical area
(Fig. 1B). Fenofibrate
was pharmacologically active as shown by increases in liver weights in treated
mice but did not have any significant effect on glycemia and plasma lipid
levels (Table 1) or on
hemodynamic parameters during ischemia (data not shown).
Because we had shown previously that fenofibrate pretreatment decreases
cerebral infarct size in mice, it was logical to test whether acute (and not
preventive) treatment of mice with fenofibrate also reduces infarct size in
this cerebral ischemiareperfusion model. There was no mortality in the
three tested groups. In the absence of pretreatment, two successive acute
intraperitoneal administrations of fenofibrate (50 or 250 mg/kg) to C57BL/6
wild-type mice 1 and 6 hr after starting a 60 min middle cerebral artery
occlusion did not induce any decrease in cerebral infarct volume (wild-type:
48 ± 4 mm3; fenofibrate 100 mg/kg: 45 ± 5
mm3; fenofibrate 500 mg/kg: 52 ± 2 mm3; NS).
Fenofibrate crosses the bloodbrain barrier slowly
It could be suggested that the absence of any neuroprotective effect of
acute administration of fenofibrate could be dependent on a poor capacity of
its active metabolite (fenofibric acid) to cross the bloodbrain
barrier. In a cell culture model of bloodbrain barrier consisting of a
coculture of bovine brain capillary endothelial cells and rat astrocytes
(Dehouck et al., 1990
), the
permeability coefficient of fenofibric acid (0.68 x
10-3 cm/min) was in the range of the permeability
coefficient of sucrose (0.70 x 10-3 cm/min), a
weak permeant molecule, indicating that fenofibric acid crosses the
bloodbrain barrier at a very slow rate (data not shown).
PPAR-
activation as a mechanism of fenofibrate-induced
preventive neuroprotection
To evaluate the role of PPAR-
activation in preventive
neuroprotection induced by fenofibrate, we compared its effect on brain
infarct size in PPAR-
-deficient mice with its effect on wild-type mice
positive for PPAR-
and carrying a genetic background similar to that of
PPAR-
-deficient mice. PPAR-
-/- mice were created in animals
carrying the SV129 genetic background (Lee
et al., 1995
; Delerive et al.,
1999
) but not in those carrying the C57BL/6 genetic background, as
in our previous experiments. Because differences in susceptibility to middle
cerebral artery occlusion have been reported between different types of mouse
strains (Connolly et al.,
1996
), we adapted the middle cerebral artery occlusion model to
wild-type SV129 mice. We chose a 90 min MCA occlusion because a 60 min
duration did not induce reproducible cerebral infarct in SV129 mice.
Such a 90 min MCA occlusion did not induce mortality in either PPAR-
+/+ mice or PPAR-
-/- mice. Total cerebral infarct volumes were similar
between untreated PPAR-
+/+ (66 ± 5 mm3) and
PPAR-
-/- mice (65 ± 1 mm3) as were infarct volumes
in cortical and striatal areas (Fig.
1C). Chronic fenofibrate pretreatment reduced total
cerebral infarct volumes in PPAR-
+/+ mice (fenofibrate, 45 ± 5
mm3 versus placebo, 66 ± 5 mm3; p <
0.01). As previously, this beneficial effect of fenofibrate in PPAR-
+/+ mice was observed in cortical areas but not in subcortical areas
(Fig. 1C). In
contrast, in PPAR-
-/- mice, fenofibrate pretreatment had no effect on
total infarct volume (fenofibrate, 65 ± 5 mm3 versus
placebo, 65 ± 1 mm3; NS) or on cortical and subcortical
infarct volume (Fig.
1C). Fenofibrate increased liver weights only in
PPAR-
+/+ mice (Table
2).
Chronic fenofibrate treatment improves sensitivity to endothelial
relaxation but does not upregulate NOS III expression
rCBF measured by laser Doppler flow was not different during the ischemia
and reperfusion period between mice treated with fenofibrate or placebo
(Fig. 2A). Western
blot analysis also showed that NOS III protein expression was not modified in
brain homogenates from fenofibrate-treated animals
(Fig. 2B). Chronic
administration of fenofibrate induces in rat an increase in the sensitivity to
acetylcholine-induced endothelium-dependent relaxation, without a change in
maximal response as compared with untreated rats
(Fig. 2C). Conversely,
endothelium-independent relaxation to the NO donor SNP (3 x
10-5 M) was not affected, as shown by the lack of
difference in the increase in diameter from the preconstricted level between
placebo (40 ± 13%) and fenofibrate (38 ± 17%). Moreover, the
contractile response of MCA to 5-HT (10-6 M) was not
different in treated and untreated animals (32 ± 8 vs 35 ±
3%).

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Figure 2. Fenofibrate induces a slight improvement of MCA endothelial vasodilatation
without any change in regional cerebral blood flow or NOS III expression.
A, In mice treated with fenofibrate, there is no modification of
regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) as evaluated by laser Doppler (n
= 5 in each group). NS, Not significant. B, NOS III is not
overexpressed in brain of fenofibrate-treated mice. NS, Not significant.
C, Application of low concentrations (3 x
10-9 to 3 x 10-8
M) but not high concentrations (10- 7 to 3
x 10-5 M) of ACh on isolated MCA from
rats treated with fenofibrate induces a slight improved sensitivity of
endothelium-dependent relaxation as measured by the increase in artery
diameter from 5-HT preconstricted level (n = 5 in each group).
*p < 0.05.
|
|
Fenofibrate regulates brain oxidative stress in parallel to
preventive neuroprotection
To study one of the different molecular mechanisms that may explain how
preventive PPAR-
activation induces a neuroprotective effect, we
decided to study whether PPAR-
activation could decrease the chronic
oxidative stress occurring in Apo E-deficient mice that forms the basis of the
susceptibility to provoked stroke in this strain of mice
(Laskowitz et al., 1997
;
Ramassamy et al., 2001
). We
confirmed that the TBARS level, a marker of oxidative stress, was
significantly higher in the cortex of Apo E-deficient mice treated with
placebo than in wild-type mice in similar conditions
(Fig. 3A). In
contrast, the striatal level of TBARS was unchanged in Apo E-deficient mice as
compared with wild-type mice (Fig.
3B). A 14 d treatment with fenofibrate decreased TBARS
concentration in the cortex of Apo E-deficient mice to levels similar to those
measured in placebo-treated wild-type mice
(Fig. 3A). There was
no effect on TBARS concentration in the striatum
(Fig. 3B), which
agrees with the lack of any neuroprotective effect of fenofibrate in this
brain area.

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Figure 3. Chronic administration of fenofibrate modulates oxidative stress and
antioxidant enzyme activities in the brain. A, B, Thiobarbituric
acid-reactive substances (TBARS) were measured in the cortex (A) and
striatum (B) of fenofibrate-treated Apo E-deficient mice and
untreated C57BL/6 wild-type mice and then compared with the TBARS level in
untreated Apo E-deficient mice (n = 5 per group). It appears that in
Apo E-deficient mice, the basal level of TBARS is increased in the cortical
area, whereas this oxidative stress marker is normalized by 14 d fenofibrate
pretreatment. Moreover, there is no TBARS level change in the striatum.
**p < 0.001; # p < 0.05. C,
D, Antioxidant enzyme activities were measured in brain homogenates of
C57BL/6 wild-type mice after a 14 d period under fenofibrate (n = 5)
or placebo (n = 7). Four of the main antioxidant enzymes, copper/zinc
superoxide dismutase (SOD), glutathione peroxidase (GPX), glutathione
reductase (GR), and glutathione S-transferase (GST), are
significantly increased in fenofibrate-treated mice, whereas manganese SOD and
catalase are not. *p < 0.05; **p
< 0.01. E, Conversely to the measure of SOD activity, Western blot
analysis does not show any difference in the expression of this enzyme in
placebo and fenofibrate-treated animals as compared with control
(EGF-stimulated A431 cells). Densitometric values from placebo and
fenofibrate-treated animals were not different. NS, Not significant.
|
|
To further explore the molecular mechanism involved in the prophylactic
activity of fenofibrate, the activity of antioxidant enzymes and the
expression of copper/zinc superoxide dismutase were studied. Copper/zinc
superoxide dismutase, glutathione reductase, glutathione peroxidase, and
glutathione S-transferase activities were significantly increased in
the brain of C57BL/6 wild-type mice treated with fenofibrate for 14 d as
compared with placebo-treated mice (Fig.
3C,D). In contrast, manganese superoxide dismutase and
catalase remained unchanged after 14 d fenofibrate treatment
(Fig. 3C); there was
no increase in copper/zinc superoxide dismutase expression on Western blot
analysis (Fig. 3E) as well.
Fenofibrate decreases VCAM-1 and ICAM-1 expression in ischemic
brain
To study the impact of PPAR-
activation on inflammatory pathways
during cerebral ischemia, we decided to evaluate whether a 14 d treatment with
fenofibrate could modulate VCAM-1 and ICAM-1 expression occurring in ischemic
brain (Wang et al., 1994
;
Jander et al., 1996
). We did
not find any VCAM-1 or ICAM-1 expression in brain homogenates from sham
animals (Fig. 4A,B),
whereas these proteins were induced in the brain of animals submitted to a 1
hr ischemia period (Fig.
4C,D). In these conditions, fenofibrate significantly
decreased ischemia-induced VCAM-1 and ICAM-1 expression
(Fig. 4E,F). Such a
result was confirmed by Western blot analysis, in which the expression of
VCAM-1 and ICAM-1 was significantly reduced in fenofibrate-treated mice
(Fig. 5A,B).

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Figure 4. Chronic administration of fenofibrate prevents ischemia-induced vascular
expression of VCAM-1 and ICAM-1. VCAM-1 and ICAM-1 expression were evaluated
in sham or mice subjected to a cerebral ischemia after a 14 d treatment period
with or without fenofibrate. The intensity of staining was measured as a mean
of five animals in each group. A, B, No expression is shown of VCAM-1
(A; cresyl violet counterstaining) or ICAM-1 (B; without
counterstaining) in the brain of sham animals. C, D, VCAM-1
(C) and ICAM-1 (D) are induced after a 1 hr ischemia after a
24 hr reperfusion period in untreated animals in which such expression
involves mainly vessels in the ischemic area. E, F, Adhesion molecule
expression is prevented in ischemic mice receiving the fenofibrate treatment.
Magnification: 20x. Scale bars, 50 µm.
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Figure 5. A 14 d fenofibrate treatment prevents ischemia-induced VCAM-1 and ICAM-1
but not NOS II overexpression. Western blot analysis was performed in brain
homogenates of placebo and fenofibrate-treated mice and then compared with
control animals injected with lipopolysaccharide (1.5 mg/kg, 24 hr before).
A, B, Representative blots as well as densitometric values show a
decrease in ischemia-induced VCAM-1 (A) and ICAM-1 (B).
*p < 0.05; **p < 0.01.
C, Conversely, ischemia-induced NOS II overexpression was not
modified by fenofibrate pretreatement. NS, Not significant.
|
|
Fenofibrate does not modify the expression of NOS II in the ischemic
brain
To complete the study of inflammatory pathways and putative proteins
involved in fenofibrate preventive neuroprotection, we analyzed NOS II
expression in the ischemic brain of fenofibrate-treated and untreated mice.
Western blot analysis realized on brain homogenates 24 hr after the brain
ischemiareperfusion procedure did not show any modification of NOS II
expression in fenofibrate-treated animals
(Fig. 5C).
 |
Discussion
|
|---|
The major finding of this study is that preventive treatment with a
PPAR-
activator protects the brain against the deleterious consequences
of focal cerebral ischemia. The neuroprotective effect of fenofibrate is
predominant in the cortical brain area, as is usual with potentially
protective agents administered during stroke
(Lee et al., 2000
). This
neuroprotective effect is independent of the well documented lipid-lowering
effects of PPAR-
activators reported in various mammals
(Fruchart et al., 1999
),
because in hypercholesterolemic Apo E-deficient mice, fenofibrate suppresses
susceptibility to stroke, although it increases total cholesterol plasma level
by increasing atherogenic cholesterol (VLDL + IDL + LDL cholesterol) and
decreasing anti-atherogenic cholesterol (HDL cholesterol) as previously
reported in such a model (Duez et al.,
2002
). Apo E-deficient mice had higher glycemia than wild-type
mice, which might increase their susceptibility to stroke because
hyperglycemia is an aggravating factor of ischemic injury
(Kawai et al., 1997
). The
normalization of this hyperglycemia by fenofibrate might contribute to its
neuroprotective effect observed in Apo E-deficient mice. However, the other
two tested strains (C57BL/6 and SV129) are normolipidemic and normoglycemic,
and fenofibrate also exerted a neuroprotective effect, without affecting
plasma lipids or glycemia, suggesting that the neuroprotective effect of
fenofibrate is independent of any effects on glucose and lipid metabolism.
In addition, we provide some arguments about the molecular target activated
by fenofibrate to protect the brain against the consequences of ischemia.
Previous data had already suggested that bezafibrate could decrease mortality
after experimental cerebral ischemia in gerbils, in part through a decrease in
anaerobic metabolism in ischemic tissue
(Aspey et al., 1989
). However,
PPARs had not been discovered when this experiment was performed, but it has
now been demonstrated that bezafibrate activates both PPAR-
and
PPAR-
(Willson et al.,
2000
; Inoue et al.,
2001
). Because fibrates have previously been reported to exert
their pleiotropic pharmacological effects by activating PPAR-
, we
hypothesized that the fenofibrate neuroprotective effect was the result of
this nuclear factor activation (Fruchart
et al., 1999
). Despite the ability of fenofibrate to activate both
PPAR-
and PPAR-
and recent evidence that PPAR-
activation
could induce a neuroprotection (Uryu et
al., 2002
), our study strongly argues in favor of PPAR-
activation as a mechanism of the neuroprotective effect of fenofibrate because
fenofibrate did not absolutely reduce infarct size in PPAR-
-deficient
mice. Moreover, PPAR-
deficiency did not induce any increase in
susceptibility to cerebral ischemia when animals were treated with placebo,
suggesting that the basal activity of PPAR-
is not involved in
endogenous neuroprotection against cerebral ischemia. Therefore, chronic
PPAR-
activation might be a new pharmacological procedure to induce
preventive neuroprotection. We show here that PPAR-
-induced
neuroprotection is associated with the modulation of vascular function as well
as oxidative stress and inflammatory pathways.
In our study, the occlusion-induced decrease in rCBF was comparable between
the two groups, suggesting that the neuroprotective effect is not explained by
differences in rCBF in treated and untreated mice. Nevertheless, we have shown
that chronic treatment with fenofibrate induces a slight increase in
endothelial vasodilatation of MCA from treated rats. Such a beneficial effect
has been discussed recently during myocardial ischemia
(Malik et al., 2001
;
Tabernero et al., 2002
), in
which fenofibrate treatment was able to enhance endothelial vasodilatation
without modifying coronary blood flow
(Tabernero et al., 2002
).
Moreover, the absence of NOS III overexpression after fenofibrate treatment
suggests that the enhanced endothelium-dependent relaxation cannot be
attributed to an increased activity of endothelial NOS. The lack of a
significant difference in the vascular effect of the NO donor SNP suggests
that sensibility to the transduction system of the NO pathway is not increased
in fenofibrate-treated rats. An increase in sensitivity of MCA to ACh could be
the result of a better bioavailability of NO related to an increase in
antioxidant capacity (Tabernero et al.,
2002
).
Indeed, we have demonstrated that chronic treatment with a PPAR-
activator induces an increase in activity of the major antioxidant enzymes in
the brain, in particular copper/zinc superoxide dismutase and enzymes involved
in glutathione metabolism, without affecting the activity of other antioxidant
enzymes such as catalase. Despite the presence of a peroxisome
proliferator-responsive element in the promoter of the copper/zinc superoxide
dismutase gene (Yoo et al.,
1999
), we did not demonstrate any increase in superoxide dismutase
expression, suggesting a non-transcriptional underlying mechanism. Increases
in antioxidant enzyme activities in the brains of fenofibrate-treated mice
might contribute to the capacity of this molecule to protect against the
deleterious consequences of cerebral ischemia. Moreover, fenofibrate decreases
susceptibility to stroke in Apo E-deficient mice partly by inhibiting chronic
high oxidative stress levels in the brains of these animals, because
fenofibrate normalizes the TBARS level in the brains of Apo E-deficient
mice.
Another hypothesis is that chronic PPAR-
activation prevents
cerebral ischemia-induced expression of the adhesion proteins
(Delerive et al., 1999
;
Marx et al., 1999
). Indeed, as
a consequence of oxidative stress and cytokine release
(Chan, 2001
), adhesion proteins
such as VCAM-1 or ICAM-1 are overexpressed during cerebral ischemia and may
play an important role in the inflammatory response in this condition
(Wang et al., 1994
;
Jander et al., 1996
). We have
shown that chronic treatment with fenofibrate decreases ischemia-induced
VCAM-1 expression in brain vessels in accordance with previous data showing
that PPAR-
activation inhibits VCAM-1 expression in endothelial cells
through the inhibition of NF-
B
(Marx et al., 1999
). We also
show a decrease in ischemia-induced ICAM-1 expression in brain. Although the
modulation of ICAM-1 by fenofibrate remains controversial
(Marx et al., 1999
), recent
data indicate that the expression of such an adhesion molecule could be
modulated through PPAR-
activation in a myocardial ischemia model
(Wayman et al., 2002
). In the
brain, the decreased expression of these adhesion molecules in turn should
inhibit the infiltration of the brain ischemic area by polynuclear neutrophils
and the induction of NOS II and COX-2, which contribute to the extent of the
ischemic lesions (Lee et al.,
2000
; Chan, 2001
).
Nevertheless, our data suggest that the NOS II pathway is not involved in the
neuroprotective effect of fenofibrate. This result suggests that fenofibrate
exerts its main effect on cerebral vessels in accordance with the poor
bloodbrain barrier crossing.
Experimental data concerning fenofibrate-induced PPAR-
activation
support the hypothesis that the brain can be rendered pharmacologically and
preventively resistant to cerebral ischemia. The other class of lipid-lowering
drugs, the hydroxymethyl-glutaryl-CoA reductase inhibitors (statins) can also
preventively reduce cerebral infarct size and improve neurological functioning
in normocholesterolemic mice, via upregulation of NOS III contrasting with the
mechanism of fenofibrate-induced neuroprotection
(Endres et al., 1998
;
Amin-Hanjani et al., 2001
).
Nevertheless, differences in mechanisms involved in the neuroprotective effect
of the two classes of lipid-lowering drugs suggest that brain ischemic
tolerance could be better mimicked pharmacologically by their association
(Chen and Simon, 1997
;
Vaughan and Delanty,
1999
).
In conclusion, we have demonstrated that a PPAR-
activator decreases
the deleterious consequences of ischemic stroke, independently of any effect
on lipid metabolism, and that this neuroprotective effect could result from
PPAR-
activation. Enhanced brain antioxidant enzyme activities and
decreased adhesion protein expression are probably two of the mechanisms by
which this agent protects against cerebral injury. This preventive
neuroprotective property of PPAR-
activators could be useful in
addition to primary prevention for patients with a high risk for stroke and to
secondary prevention in patients with a previous history of stroke or
transient ischemic attack as well as for patients undergoing elective
cardiovascular or radiological procedures with high risk for stroke
(Fisher et al., 1994
).
Moreover, evaluation of a potential synergistic protective effect of statins
and fibrates could be interesting in regard to their probable complementary
properties.
 |
Footnotes
|
|---|
Received Nov. 12, 2002;
revised May. 6, 2003;
accepted May. 9, 2003.
P.G. was supported by a grant from "Conseil Régional Nord Pas
de Calais et Centre Hospitalier Régional et Universitaire de Lille.
" This work was supported by grants from " Génopole Lille
Nord-Pas de Calais "(#01360124) and Institut National de la Santé
et de la Recherche Médicale (CReS4CR02F). We thank Alexandra
Tavernier-Sommerville for her assistance with the English version of this
paper.
Correspondence should be addressed to R. Bordet, Laboratoire de
Pharmacologie, Université de Lille 2, Faculté de
Médecine, 1 Place de Verdun, Lille, 59045 France. E-mail:
bordet{at}univ-lille2.fr.
Copyright © 2003 Society for Neuroscience
0270-6474/03/236264-08$15.00/0
* D.D. and P.G. participated equally in this study. 
 |
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