Anti-IL-6 neutralizing antibody modulates blood-brain barrier function in the ovine fetus
Document Type
Article
Date of Original Version
5-1-2015
Abstract
Impaired blood-brain barrier function represents an important component of hypoxic-ischemic brain injury in the perinatal period. Proinflammatory cytokines could contribute to ischemia-related blood-brain barrier dysfunction. IL-6 increases vascular endothelial cell monolayer permeability in vitro. However, contributions of IL-6 to blood-brain barrier abnormalities have not been examined in the immature brain in vivo. We generated pharmacologic quantities of ovine-specific neutralizing anti-IL-6 mAbs and systemically infused mAbs into fetal sheep at 126 days of gestation after exposure to brain ischemia. Anti-IL-6 mAbs were measured by ELISA in fetal plasma, cerebral cortex, and cerebrospinal fluid, bloodbrain barrier permeability was quantified using the bloodto-brain transfer constant in brain regions, and IL-6, tight junction proteins, and plasmalemma vesicle protein (PLVAP) were detected by Western immunoblot. Anti-IL-6 mAb infusions resulted in increases in mAb (P < 0.05) in plasma, brain parenchyma, and cerebrospinal fluid and decreases in brain IL-6 protein. Twenty-four hours after ischemia, anti-IL-6 mAb infusions attenuated ischemiarelated increases in blood-brain barrier permeability and modulated tight junction and PLVAP protein expression in fetal brain. We conclude that inhibiting the effects of IL-6 protein with systemic infusions of neutralizing antibodies attenuates ischemia-related increases in blood-brain barrier permeability by inhibiting IL-6 and modulates tight junction proteins after ischemia.
Publication Title, e.g., Journal
FASEB Journal
Volume
29
Issue
5
Citation/Publisher Attribution
Zhang, Jiyong, Grazyna B. Sadowska, Xiaodi Chen, Seon Yeong Park, Jeong Eun Kim, Courtney A. Bodge, Erin Cummings, Yow Pin Lim, Oleksandr Makeyev, Walter G. Besio, John Gaitanis, William A. Banks, and Barbara S. Stonestreet. "Anti-IL-6 neutralizing antibody modulates blood-brain barrier function in the ovine fetus." FASEB Journal 29, 5 (2015). doi: 10.1096/fj.14-258822.