Abstract

Polymorphonuclear neutrophil granulocytes (PMNs) are part of the early post-ischemic immune response that orchestrates the removal of infarcted brain tissue. PMNs contribute to secondary brain injury in experimental stroke models. In human patients, high PMN-to-lymphocyte ratios in peripheral blood are predictive of poor stroke outcome. Following earlier studies indicating that the cerebral microvasculature forms an efficient barrier that impedes PMN brain entry even under conditions of ischemia, more recent studies combining intravital two-photon microscopy and ex vivo immunohistochemistry unequivocally demonstrated the accumulation of PMNs in the ischemic brain parenchyma. In the meantime, transgenic mouse lines, such as mice expressing Cre-recombinase and the red fluorescent reporter protein tdTomato under the highly granulocyte-specific locus for the gene Ly6G (so-called Catchup mice), have become available that allow study of dynamic interactions of PMNs with brain parenchymal cells. These mice will further help us understand how PMNs promote brain injury and disturb brain remodeling and plasticity.

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