Thrombosis |
From the Institute for Clinical & Experimental Surgery (M.R., T.S., C.S., Y.H., M.M.), University of Saarland, Homburg/Saar; the Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery (M.R.), Hannover Medical School, Hannover; and the Department of Experimental Surgery (B.V.), University of Rostock, Rostock, Germany.
Correspondence to Michael D. Menger, MD, Institute for Clinical & Experimental Surgery, University of Saarland, D-66421 Homburg/Saar, Germany. E-mail exmdme{at}uniklinik-saarland.de
| Abstract |
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Methods and Results To induce thromboembolization, a suspension of preformed microthrombi (maximum diameter: 40 µm) was injected via the femoral artery into the left hindlimbs of anesthetized rats. Local heat shock priming (42.5°C, 30 minutes) was performed 24 hours before embolization and resulted in a significant increase of endothelium-derived plasminogen activator expression. The study of the microcirculation by intravital microscopy revealed in all tissues analyzed (muscle, periosteum, subcutis, and skin) that heat shock priming significantly (P<0.05) accelerates recanalization of the thromboembolized microvasculature when compared with nonprimed and sham-primed controls. Importantly, the addition of plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 to the microthrombi suspension completely blunted the heat shock-induced acceleration of microvascular recanalization.
Conclusions Heat shock induces endogenous hyperfibrinolysis by upregulation of plasminogen activators that promote recanalization of thromboembolized microvasculature.
Using a rat thromboembolization model and intravital fluorescence microscopy, this study demonstrates that heat shock priming induces endothelium-derived plasminogen activator expression in vivo, and accelerates spontaneous recanalization of thromboembolized microvasculature. This was completely blunted by application of plasminogen activator inhibitor-1. Thus, heat shock induces endogenous hyperfibrinolysis, which promotes recanalization of thromboembolized microvasculature.
Key Words: heat shock intravital microscopy microcirculation plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 thromboembolization urokinase plasminogen activator
| Introduction |
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Recanalization of thromboembolized microvasculature can be achieved by urokinase therapy; however, this bears some risk for bleeding and aggravation of organ dysfunction, particularly if a surgical procedure is involved.6 In contrast, endogenous induction of hyperfibrinolysis would represent a more elegant approach; however, little information is available as to whether this may be capable of successfully promoting recanalization of thromboembolized microvasculature.
Preconditioning by heat shock requires the exposure of the tissue to a supraphysiological but sublethal temperature, which results in a transient change of cellular biosynthesis with an accelerated induction of only a few distinct proteins, including heat shock proteins.7
The serine proteases urokinase plasminogen activator(uPA) and tissue-type plasminogen activator (tPA) initiate the endogenously mediated lysis of platelet arterial emboli. Both enzymes derive from endothelial cells and convert plasminogen to the fibrinolytic protease plasmin.8 Various types of stimuli are known to directly modulate plasminogen activator synthesis and release from endothelial cells.9,10 In vitro, stress conditioning by heat shock has been shown to induce plasminogen activators in human umbilical vein endothelial cells.11 With the use of a rat hindlimb microcirculation model, we herein demonstrate for the first time to our knowledge that local heat shock priming induces upregulation of plasminogen activators also in vivo, and that this promotes endogenous hyperfibrinolysis, which results in accelerated recanalization of thromboembolized microvasculature.
| Methods |
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Surgical Procedure
Under pentobarbital anesthesia (50 mg/kg intraperitoneal; Abbott, Chicago, Ill), the animals underwent tracheotomies and were placed on a heating pad to guarantee 37°C body temperature. Polyethylene catheters were inserted into the right carotid artery and left jugular vein. The catheters allowed monitoring of blood pressure, continuous infusion of saline (1 mL/100 g per hour), withdrawal of blood, and injection of fluorescent dyes for intravital microscopy.
The left hindlimb preparation for microcirculatory analysis was performed according to the technique described previously in detail.12 The preparation exposed tibial periosteum, gracilis and semitendinosus muscles, subcutis and skin, and was supplied by the femoral vessels. All branching vessels were ligated up to the superficial epigastric artery, in which a catheter was inserted with the tip directed toward the femoral artery.
Microvascular Thromboembolization
Arterial platelet-rich thrombi were preformed in vitro in a moving high-pressure closed compartment system.13 For each experiment a 1-mL insulin syringe was filled with thrombin (60 U/mL; T6634; Sigma-Aldrich, Taufkirchen, Germany). In a second syringe, 400 µL blood was drawn from the carotid artery. After 20 seconds, the 2 syringes were interconnected and the suspension containing blood and thrombin (4:1) was moved during 3 minutes &70 times from one syringe to the other. In additional experiments, a rat-specific plasminogen activator inhibitor (PAI)-1 (30 pg/mL; #102; American Diagnostica, Pfungstadt, Germany), the principal physiological inhibitor of both tPA and uPA14 was added to the microthrombi suspension. The syringes were left standing for 30 minutes until embolization.
To exclude thrombi >40 µm, the thrombi suspension was filtered through a nylon strainer (2340; Falcon; Becton Dickinson, Heidelberg, Germany). For thromboembolization of the microvasculature in vivo, 30 µL of the filtered thrombi suspension was gently injected into the femoral artery.15
Intravital Fluorescence Microscopy
The tissues were positioned on a micromanipulator-adjusted stage and covered with a glass slide to prevent drying and exposure to ambient air. The microcirculation was analyzed with a blue filter combination (450 to 490 nm/>520 nm) after intravenous injection of 5% fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC)-labeled dextran (MW 150 000; Sigma-Aldrich) using a modified epi-illumination Axiotech microscope (Zeiss, Jena, Germany). The contrast enhancement achieved guarantees high-resolution imaging of the microcirculation.16
Video Analysis
Microscopic images were recorded by a charge-coupled device video camera (FK-6990, COHU, Prospective Measurements, San Diego, Calif) and transferred to a video system. Microcirculatory parameters were quantified off-line using a computer-assisted image analysis system (Capimage, Zeintl, Heidelberg, Germany). After thromboembolization, microvascular recanalization was analyzed by studying the re-onset of capillary perfusion. In addition, a 4-hour follow-up assessment included the determination of: (1) the fraction of perfused capillaries (%), defined as percentage of the length of red blood cell (RBC) perfused capillaries relative to the total length of all capillaries per unit area; (2) capillary VRBC (mm/s); and (3) capillary diameters (µm).16 Volumetric capillary blood flow (CBF) (pL/s) was calculated for each microvessel as CBF=
*(D/2)2*VRBC.
Stress Conditioning
For stress conditioning, left hindlimbs of anesthetized rats were heated in a waterbath 24 hours before thromboembolization.17 During local heating, muscle temperature was increased to 42.5°C and was kept constant for 30 minutes. Animals undergoing a sham heating procedure were also anesthetized 24 hours before thromboembolization, and the hindlimb was exposed in a waterbath to 30°C for 30 minutes. In these animals, the muscle temperature was kept at &36°C to 37°C. Muscle temperature was monitored with a needle thermo-probe (LICOX-System; GMS, Kiel-Mielkendorf, Germany).
Immunohistochemistry
After elimination of endogenous peroxidase activity and nonspecific protein binding, specimens were incubated overnight at 4°C with either anti-uPA-antibody (1:200; #1191; American Diagnostica), anti-tPA-antibody (1:200; kindly provided by J.J. Emeis; Leiden, Netherlands) or anti-PAI-1-antibody (1:200; #1062; American Diagnostica), which react specifically with rat uPA, rat tPA and rat PAI-1, respectively. As secondary antibody, either a biotinylated donkeyanti-chickenIgG (Dianova, Hamburg, Germany) or goat-anti-rabbit-IgG antibody (DAKO-Cytomation, Hamburg, Germany) was used. Thereafter, streptavidin-horseradish peroxidase complex was added for 30 minutes at 20°C, followed by 5 minutes of treatment with 3,3'diaminobenzidine.
Slides were counterstained with hematoxylin. For negative controls, slides were treated similarly but without the primary antibody. All control stainings were negative.
The staining intensity was evaluated blindly according to Page et al18 A "0 to 4" score was applied, depending on color intensity and extent, ie, 0 indicates negative, comparable to control section; 1, very weakly positive; 2, weakly positive; 3, positive; and 4, strongly positive.
Western Blot Analysis of uPA, tPA, and PAI-1
Muscle and skin tissue (n=4 per group) of control and heat shocked animals was harvested after 24 hours and homogenized in lysis buffer (10 mmol/L Tris pH 7.5, 10 mmol/L NaCl, 0.1 mmol/L EDTA, 0.5% Triton-X-100, 0.02% NaN3, 0.2 mmol/L phenyl-methyl-sulfonyl-fluoride), incubated for 30 minutes on ice, and centrifugated for another 30 minutes at 16 000g and 4°C. Equal amounts of protein per lane (90 µg) were separated discontinuously on 10% sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gels under denaturing conditions and transferred to a polyvinyldifluoride membrane (BioRad, Munich, Germany). After blockade of nonspecific binding sites, membranes were incubated for 2 hours with a chickenanti-rodentuPA (1:50; American Diagnostica), a goatanti-rattPA (1:50; Santa Cruz Biotechnology) or a rabbitanti-ratPAI-1 antibody (1:50; American Diagnostica) followed by the secondary horseradish peroxidase-conjugated bovineanti-chicken (1:5000; Santa Cruz Biotechnology), rabbitanti-goat (1:2000; R&D, Wiesbaden, Germany), and donkeyanti-rabbit (1:2500; Amersham Biosciences, Freiburg, Germany) IgG antibodies, respectively. Protein expression was visualized using luminol-enhanced chemiluminescence and exposure of membranes to blue light-sensitive autoradiography film. Signals were densitometrically assessed and normalized to ß-actin signals to correct unequal loading.
Experimental Groups
In a first group of animals (n=8), stress conditioning by local heat shock priming was performed 24 hours before thromboembolization. Animals undergoing a sham procedure of local heat shock priming (n=4) and animals without stress conditioning (n=8) served as controls. In an additional control group, the normal microcirculation was studied without thromboembolization and without treatment (n=8), and a further group of animals was designed to study the effect of heat shock preconditioning alone without thromboembolization (n=8). To study the role of plasminogen activators, further heat shock-primed (n=8) and nonheat shock-primed animals (n=8) underwent thromboembolization with PAI-1supplemented microthrombi suspensions. The microcirculation of muscle, periosteum, subcutis and skin was analyzed before and at 30 minutes, 60 minutes, 120 minutes, 180 minutes, and 240 minutes after thromboembolization. Tissue samples for immunohistochemistry were obtained at thromboembolization (additional animals) and 4 hours recanalization.
Statistical Analysis
Results are expressed as means±SEM. Differences between groups were assessed by 1-way ANOVA, differences within each group were analyzed by 1-way repeated measures ANOVA. To isolate overall differences, appropriate Student-Newman-Keuls or Dunn post-hoc tests were performed. Differences were considered significant at P<0.05.
| Results |
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Expression of uPA, tPA, and PAI-1
In nonheat shock-primed controls, immunohistochemistry revealed almost lack of expression of uPA and an only slight expression of tPA, which was found predominantly localized in arteriolar endothelial cells (Figure 1). After heat shock, expression of uPA and tPA was significantly enhanced (Table), predominantly in endothelial and smooth muscle cells (Figure 1). PAI-1 increased slightly on heat shock-priming but was less pronounced compared with uPA and tPA (Table; Figure 1). In all experiments, uPA, tPA, and PAI-1 expression was not affected by adding PAI-1 to the microthrombi suspension.
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Quantitative Western blot analysis confirmed a significant upregulation of uPA and tPA at 24 hours after heat shock preconditioning, whereas PAI-1 expression was only slightly increased in muscle and not affected in skin compared with nonheat shocked controls (Figure 2).
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Microvascular Thromboembolization
Directly after injection, intravital microscopy revealed that the microthrombi were arrested in the downstream microcirculation (Figure 3). This resulted in a complete shutdown of microvascular perfusion in all tissues analyzed.
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Microvascular Recanalization
During the first 30 minutes after thromboembolization, nonheat shock-primed and sham heat shock-primed controls showed almost complete lack of recanalization. Only 1 of 8 and 1 of 4 preparations revealed signs of recanalization (Figure 3). During the second 30 minutes after thromboembolization, all preparations developed recanalization (Figure 3), but with different quality of microvascular reperfusion. After 30 minutes only 10% of the initially perfused capillaries were found reperfused (Figure 4). Recanalization improved during the next 2 hours, as indicated by an increase of perfused capillaries to &50% of baseline, but without further recovery during the 4-hour observation period (Figure 4). This was associated with a markedly lowered volumetric CBF (P<0.05; Figure 5). There were no differences in recanalization between muscle, periosteum, subcutis and skin, and no significant differences between nonheat shock-primed and sham heat shock-primed animals (Figure 4).
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Heat shock priming effectively accelerated initial recanalization of the obstructed microvasculature. Within the first 15 minutes after thromboembolization, all 8 tissue preparations showed recanalization (Figure 3). At 30 minutes, already 60% of the initially perfused capillaries were found reperfused in either of the tissues analyzed (P<0.05; Figure 4). Recanalization over the subsequent 3.5-hours further improved capillary perfusion to &80% of baseline, which was significantly higher than that of nonheat shock-primed and sham-heat shock-primed controls (P<0.05; Figure 4).
Importantly, heat shock-primed tissues showed already at baseline a significantly higher volumetric CBF (P<0.05) than nonconditioned tissues (Figure 5). Further, heat shock produced reactive hyperemia during initial recanalization and preserved CBF over the entire post-thromboembolization period.
Addition of PAI-1 to the thrombi resulted in prolonged failure of recanalization (P<0.05). Until 2 hours after thromboembolization, zero and, at 4 hours only 2, of 8 preparations showed recanalization (Figure 3). This was associated with a significantly (P<0.05) lowered fraction of perfused capillaries (Figure 4) and a marked (P<0.05) compromise of CBF (Figure 5) compared with nontreated controls. Heat shock priming accelerated the onset of recanalization and improved the microcirculation (Figures 4 and 5
; P<0.05), although the addition of PAI-1 was associated with a reduction of capillary density and CBF when compared with heat shock-conditioned but nonPAI-1treated controls (Figures 4 and 5
; P<0.05).
Microvascular Response to Heat Shock Priming
In animals without any treatment, analysis of capillary perfusion over the 4-hour observation period showed &100% of the capillaries perfused without significant changes of CBF (Figures 4 and 5
). Heat shock priming without thromboembolization did not affect capillary density (Figure 4) and confirmed the increased CBF compared with nonheat-shocked controls (Figure 5).
| Discussion |
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Thromboembolization significantly contributes to the shutdown of microvascular perfusion, infarction, and necrosis.1,3 The microemboli may clot primarily arteriolar and capillary segments of the microvasculature, and thus produce initially a negative angiogram.19 Over time, obstruction of the vasculature may aggravate, producing relevant infarction, or may dissolve because of spontaneous recanalization.20,21
The study of the mechanisms of thromboembolization requires an adequate experimental model, which should consider the development of both infarction and spontaneous recanalization. OShaughnessy et al22 introduced a thromboembolization model, demonstrating that platelet emboli, originating from the site of arterial vessel repair, pass downstream, and block the microcirculation.22 This confirms the particular risk of interventional and microsurgical procedures for thromboembolism. Herein, we have not chosen this model, because the development of thromboemboli is heterogeneous, and the cremaster muscle allows only a 2-hour study period, which is too short to analyze spontaneous recanalization. We have used the rat hindlimb model, because this allows repetitive intravital microscopy of the microcirculation of muscle, periosteum, subcutis, and skin for a period of 6 hours.12 Further, we have injected in vitro produced microthrombi, mimicking platelet-rich arterial thrombi, which adequately standardizes the experiments.15
The process of platelet-rich arterial thrombus formation can be partitioned into platelet adhesion, coagulation factor activation and thrombus propagation.23 Accordingly, in the model used thrombi were generated by addition of thrombin (coagulation factor activation). Because a low pressure in vitro system can produce large "white" thrombi, however, with a "red" tail,24 we have chosen a moving high-pressure closed compartment system,13 which generates arterial "white" thrombi, rich in platelets and fibrin, intermingled with only a few erythrocytes and leukocytes.13 The moving high-pressure closed compartment system mimics conditions of pressure and turbulences as known in arterial thrombus formation in vivo. The platelet-rich thrombi were filtered through a 40-µm mesh to exclude large thrombi >40 µm. Only small thrombi of <40 µm were used for the experiment to guarantee that embolization takes place within terminal arterioles. This microembolization mimics the clinical situation of ischemic stroke and flap tissue failure.5,13,22
Because terminal arterioles are not regularly visible by intravital microscopy,15 recanalization was not assessed by direct visualization of the lysis of arrested microthrombi, but indirectly by evaluation of the re-onset of capillary perfusion within the downstream microcirculation. This can reliably be performed, because downstream capillary perfusion failure, which additionally indicates tissue viability, has been shown to correlate with embolization-induced arteriolar vessel obstruction.25
Previous studies have demonstrated that heat shock increases capillary perfusion in flap tissue.17 Thus, the increased baseline CBF may have contributed to the accelerated recanalization. However, although baseline skin CBF did not differ significantly between heat shock preconditioning versus non-preconditioned controls, heat shock significantly accelerated recanalization, similarly as observed in the other tissues, in which baseline CBF was different between the 2 groups. Thus, the heat shock-mediated increase in basal CBF may not be considered a primary determinant for recanalization.
Beside acceleration of recanalization and improvement of capillary perfusion, heat shock increased CBF above baseline levels initially during recanalization. This reactive hyperemia, which classically is produced only after short ischemia periods, may be caused by the rapid lysis-associated reduction of ischemia time by heat shock priming.
Because anesthesia and immersion of the hindlimb may also represent a stress conditioning, we have exposed additional animals to a sham procedure, which was not associated with tissue heating. Of interest, these animals did not show acceleration of recanalization and improvement of capillary perfusion. This supports that the protective effect on the microcirculation is caused by heat induction rather than anesthesia or hindlimb manipulation-associated stress.
By converting plasminogen to plasmin, plasminogen activators are the main upregulators of the fibrinolytic system.8 The serine proteases uPA26 and tPA27 are synthesized by endothelial cells. In vivo, tPA is the principal plasminogen activator, whereas uPA serves as an amplifier of the tPA-mediated fibrinolysis after its activation by tPA-mediated generation of plasmin.28 A procoagulant condition induced by thrombin is the predominant physiological stimulus for expression and release of both plasminogen activators.29
In vitro studies have demonstrated that prolonged hyperthermia of >8 hours downregulates plasminogen activators and stimulates PAI-1 expression in human umbilical vein endothelial cells.30,31 However, hyperthermic exposure times of <8 hour indicated that both uPA and tPA are upregulated by heat shock in endothelial cells.11 The present study extends this observation, demonstrating for the first time to our knowledge that 30 minutes of heat shock upregulates uPA and tPA also in vivo, and that the expression is found primarily in arteriolar endothelial cells. Thus, an enhanced lysis of fibrin in platelet emboli by uPA and tPA may be the cause for the observed acceleration of recanalization after heat shock priming.
Fibrinolysis is inhibited by endothelium-derived PAI-1, which binds irreversibly to the active site of uPA and tPA.27,32 The observed abrogation of recanalization by PAI-1 is in line with these previous reports,32,33 and confirms the causative role of uPA and tPA in spontaneous recanalization of thromboembolized microvasculature. Our PAI-1 experiments further indicate that the heat shock-mediated upregulation of endogenous uPA and tPA does not only counteract the function of endogenous but also exogenously applied PAI-1.
The increase of endogenously expressed PAI-1 on heat shock induction was markedly less pronounced compared with the increase of uPA and tPA. This is in line with previous observations, demonstrating a stronger expression of uPA and tPA compared with PAI-1 in response to hyperthermia.34 Although PAI-1 is a major stress-regulated gene, it is only weakly expressed in endothelial cells,35 and may be further reduced in endothelial cells located close to fibrin clots.34
The endogenous induction of a local pro-thrombolytic state by heat shock priming offers some advantages compared with the systemic application of plasminogen activators. Plasminogen activators are rapidly cleared from the systemic circulation, mainly by the function of the liver.36 Additionally, the thrombolytic properties after local heat shock are restricted to the endangered microcirculation. Thus, systemic side effects, such as the assumed neurotoxicity of tPA,37 adverse bleeding complications,38 or anaphylactoid reactions related to recombinant tPA,39 may be avoided.
Heat shock priming may represent a promising tool also in the clinical setting. Of interest, fever in septic conditions has been shown to induce heat shock proteins and to result in better respiratory function, lower blood lactate concentrations, and prolonged survival times.40 These experimental results support clinical studies, demonstrating protective functions of intracellular heat shock protein-70 expression in patients with severe sepsis.41 However, the effect of sepsis-associated fever on blood coagulation and thrombus formation remains to be determined.
In conclusion, we herein demonstrate that local heat shock priming induces endogenous hyperfibrinolysis by upregulation of plasminogen activators and consequently results in an accelerated and improved recanalization of thromboembolized microvasculature. Thus, the efficacy of local heat shock preconditioning should be further evaluated experimentally as a novel treatment strategy in disease states associated with microthromboembolization and infarction.
| Acknowledgments |
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Source of Funding
This study was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (Me 900/1-3 and 1-4).
Disclosures
None.
| Footnotes |
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