The aPKC-CBP Pathway Regulates Post-stroke Neurovascular Remodeling and Functional Recovery
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Epigenetic modifications have emerged as attractive molecular substrates that integrate extrinsic changes into the determination of cell identity. Since stroke-related brain damage releases micro-environmental cues, we examined the role of a signaling-induced epigenetic pathway, an atypical protein kinase C (aPKC)-mediated phosphorylation of CREB-binding protein (CBP), in post-stroke neurovascular remodeling. Using a knockin mouse strain (CbpS436A) where the aPKC-CBP pathway was defective, we show that disruption of the aPKC-CBP pathway in a murine focal ischemic stroke model increases the reprogramming efficiency of ischemia-activated pericytes (i-pericytes) to neural precursors. As a consequence of enhanced cellular reprogramming, CbpS436A mice show an increased transient population of locally derived neural precursors after stroke, while displaying a reduced number of i-pericytes, impaired vascular remodeling, and perturbed motor recovery during the chronic phase of stroke. Together, this study elucidates the role of the aPKC-CBP pathway in modulating neurovascular remodeling and functional recovery following focal ischemic stroke.
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aPKC-CBP pathway, cellular reprogramming, ischemic stroke, neural precursors, pericyte, vascular remodeling, Animals, Brain Ischemia, CREB-Binding Protein, Cellular Reprogramming, Mice, Neurogenesis, Pericytes, Phosphorylation, Protein Kinase C, Recovery of Function, Signal Transduction, Stroke, Stroke Rehabilitation, Vascular Remodeling
