血脑屏障
内皮
内皮功能障碍
血管通透性
串扰
生物
细胞生物学
活体显微镜检查
下调和上调
内皮干细胞
微循环
医学
中枢神经系统
神经科学
内科学
内分泌学
体外
光学
物理
生物化学
基因
作者
Monica M. Santisteban,Sung Ji Ahn,Diane Lane,Giuseppe Faraco,Lidia García‐Bonilla,Gianfranco Racchumi,Carrie Poon,Samantha Schaeffer,Steven G. Segarra,Jakob Körbelin,Josef Anrather,Costantino Iadecola
出处
期刊:Hypertension
[Lippincott Williams & Wilkins]
日期:2020-07-13
卷期号:76 (3): 795-807
被引量:138
标识
DOI:10.1161/hypertensionaha.120.15581
摘要
Hypertension is a leading cause of stroke and dementia, effects attributed to disrupting delivery of blood flow to the brain. Hypertension also alters the blood-brain barrier (BBB), a critical component of brain health. Although endothelial cells are ultimately responsible for the BBB, the development and maintenance of the barrier properties depend on the interaction with other vascular-associated cells. However, it remains unclear if BBB disruption in hypertension requires cooperative interaction with other cells. Perivascular macrophages (PVM), innate immune cells closely associated with cerebral microvessels, have emerged as major contributors to neurovascular dysfunction. Using 2-photon microscopy in vivo and electron microscopy in a mouse model of Ang II (angiotensin II) hypertension, we found that the vascular segments most susceptible to increased BBB permeability are arterioles and venules >10 µm and not capillaries. Brain macrophage depletion with clodronate attenuates, but does not abolish, the increased BBB permeability in these arterioles where PVM are located. Deletion of AT1R (Ang II type-1 receptors) in PVM using bone marrow chimeras partially attenuated the BBB dysfunction through the free radical-producing enzyme Nox2. In contrast, downregulation of AT1R in cerebral endothelial cells using a viral gene transfer-based approach prevented the BBB disruption completely. The results indicate that while endothelial AT1R, mainly in arterioles and venules, initiate the BBB disruption in hypertension, PVM are required for the full expression of the dysfunction. The findings unveil a previously unappreciated contribution of resident brain macrophages to increased BBB permeability of hypertension and identify PVM as a putative therapeutic target in diseases associated with BBB dysfunction.
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