Study finds how Covid-19 hastens stroke risk
A recent study led by researchers from University of California- Los Angeles Health Sciences (UCLA) determined the running fluid spiked with a Covid-19-like protein through a 3D-printed model to explain how the virus increases the risk of stroke.
Covid-19 was initially identified as a disease with severe respiratory symptoms, but a little is known about how it increases the risk of stroke.
To enhance the findings, UCLA researchers used a 3D-printed silicone model of blood vessels in the brain to mimic the forces generated by blood pushing through an artery that is abnormally narrowed, a condition called intracranial atherosclerosis. They showed that as those forces act on the cells lining the artery, and increase the production of a molecule called angiotensin-converting enzyme 2, or ACE2, which the coronavirus uses to enter cells on the surface of blood vessels.
Dr Jason Hinman, an assistant professor of neurology at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA and the study’s senior author claimed that the flow directly influences ACE2 expression.In addition to Hinman, the study’s authors are neurologists at the Geffen School of Medicine and scientists from UC San Francisco and the Veterans Health Administration. The paper was published (PDF) in Stroke.
UCLA researchers created the model using data from CT scans of blood vessels in a human brain. They then lined the inner surfaces of the models with endothelial cells, the type of cells that line human blood vessels. The models enabled the researchers to mimic the same forces that would act on real blood vessels during a Covid-19 infection.
To confirm whether coronavirus bobbing along in the bloodstream could latch onto the ACE2 on the endothelial cells in the brain, researchers produced imitation ‘viruses’ fatty molecules studded with the spike proteins that coronavirus uses to bind to ACE2. Previous research indicated that the coronavirus binds to endothelial cells in other organs, but it was unknown whether that was also happening in the brain.
After creating the new model, researchers confirmed the particles did indeed interact with the cells lining the blood vessel, mostly in the regions of the brain with higher levels of ACE2.
“This finding could explain the increased incidence of strokes seen in Covid-19 infections,” Hinman said.
Another discovery shows that when the scientists analyzed which genes were turned on in the endothelial cells after the coronavirus spike proteins bound to them, they found that the genes that were activated were a specific set of immune-response genes that are found in brain blood vessel cells, but not in endothelial cells from other organs of the body.
“There’s a unique brain endothelial response to the virus that may be helpful in identifying patients who have a higher risk for stroke,” Hinman said.
The researchers intend to conduct follow-up studies using a live coronavirus in the 3D-printed blood vessel model, which would further confirm the results of the current study and clarify which Covid-19 patients may have a higher risk for stroke.
(This story has been published from a wire agency feed without modifications to the text.)
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