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Published Online
on July 23, 2009

Stroke. 2009
Published online before print July 23, 2009, doi: 10.1161/STROKEAHA.109.556852
A more recent version of this article appeared on September 1, 2009
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Submitted on May 1, 2009
Accepted on June 4, 2009

Minocycline and Tissue-Type Plasminogen Activator for Stroke. Assessment of Interaction Potential

Livia S. Machado PhD; Irina Y. Sazonova PhD; Anna Kozak MS; Daniel C. Wiley BS; Azza B. El-Remessy PhD, RPh; Adviye Ergul MD, PhD; David C. Hess MD; Jennifer L. Waller PhD; and Susan C. Fagan PharmD*

From the Program in Clinical and Experimental Therapeutics, Department of Clinical and Administrative Pharmacy (L.S.M., A.K., D.C.W., A.B.E., A.E., D.C.H., S.C.F.), College of Pharmacy, University of Georgia; Charlie Norwood Veteran's Affairs Medical Center (L.S.M., A.K., D.C.W., A.B.E., S.C.F.); and the Departments of Medicine (I.Y.S.), Neurology (D.C.H., S.C.F.), Physiology (A.E.), and Biostatistics (J.L.W.), Medical College of Georgia, Augusta, Ga.

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: sfagan{at}mail.mcg.edu.

Background and Purpose—New treatment strategies for acute ischemic stroke must be evaluated in the context of effective reperfusion. Minocycline is a neuroprotective agent that inhibits proteolytic enzymes and therefore could potentially both inactivate the clot lysis effect and decrease the damaging effects of tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA). This study aimed to determine the effect of minocycline on t-PA clot lysis and t-PA–induced hemorrhage formation after ischemia.

Methods—Fibrinolytic and amidolytic activities of t-PA were investigated in vitro over a range of clinically relevant minocycline concentrations. A suture occlusion model of 3-hour temporary cerebral ischemia in rats treated with t-PA and 2 different minocycline regimens was used. Blood–brain barrier basal lamina components, matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs), hemorrhage formation, infarct size, edema, and behavior outcome were assessed.

Results—Minocycline did not affect t-PA fibrinolysis. However, minocycline treatment at 3 mg/kg IV decreased total protein expression of both MMP-2 (P=0.0034) and MMP-9 (P=0.001 for 92 kDa and P=0.0084 for 87 kDa). It also decreased the incidence of hemorrhage (P=0.019), improved neurologic outcome (P=0.0001 for Bederson score and P=0.0391 for paw grasp test), and appeared to decrease mortality. MMP inhibition was associated with decreased degradation in collagen IV and laminin-{alpha}1 (P=0.0001).

Conclusions—Combination treatment with minocycline is beneficial in t-PA–treated animals and does not compromise clot lysis. These results also suggest that neurovascular protection by minocycline after stroke may involve direct protection of the blood–brain barrier during thrombolysis with t-PA.


Key words: cerebral ischemia • minocycline • t-PA • matrix metalloproteinases • vascular protection • hemorrhagic transformation