Abstract

Cerebral infarct penumbra due to hypoxia and toxin accumulation is not conducive to the transplantation of neural stem cells (NSCs), although mild hypothermia can improve the local microenvironment of the ischemic penumbra and exert neuroprotective effects. However, insufficient understanding of the molecular mechanism by which mild hypothermia protects the brain limits widespread clinical application. This study evaluated the molecular mechanism of mild hypothermia-induced brain protection from the perspective of global protein small ubiquitin-like modifier (SUMO) modification, with the aim of improving NSC transplant survival rates in the penumbra to enhance neurological function. NSCs from neonatal rats were extracted to detect the effects of hypoxia and mild hypothermia on SUMOylation modification levels, cell stemness, and hypoxia-induced injury. Overexpression and knockdown of UBC9 in NSCs were used to evaluate their ability to maintain stemness and withstand hypoxic injury. Finally, a rat middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAO) model was used to verify the effect of mild hypothermia treatment and UBC9 overexpression on neural function of NSCs following penumbra transplantation in rats. Results showed that hypoxia and mild hypothermia promoted both the SUMOylation modification and maintenance of NSC stemness. Overexpression of UBC9 enhanced the abilities of NSCs to maintain stemness and resist hypoxic injury, while UBC9 knockdown had the opposite effect. Following transplantation into the ischemic penumbra of MCAO model rats, mild hypothermia and Ubc9-overexpressing NSCs significantly reduced cerebral infarct areas and improved neurological function. In conclusion, this study demonstrated that global protein SUMOylation is an important molecular mechanism for NSCs to tolerate hypoxia, and mild hypothermia can further increase the degree of global SUMOylation to enhance the hypoxia tolerance of NSCs, which increases their survival during transplantation in situ and ability to perform nerve repair in the penumbra of cerebral infarction.

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