Cell autonomous role of border associated macrophages in ApoE4 neurovascular dysfunction and susceptibility to white matter injury
神经血管束
白质
白色(突变)
生物
病理
医学
磁共振成像
遗传学
基因
放射科
作者
Costantino Iadecola,Antoine Anfray,Samantha Schaeffer,Yorito Hattori,Monica M. Santisteban,Nicole Casey,Gang Wang,Michael R. Strickland,Ping Zhou,David M. Holtzman,Josef Anrather,Laibaik Park
出处
期刊:Research Square - Research Square日期:2023-08-04被引量:5
Apolipoprotein-E4 (ApoE4), the strongest genetic risk factor for sporadic Alzheimer's disease, is also a risk factor for microvascular pathologies leading to cognitive impairment, particularly subcortical white matter injury. These effects have been attributed to alterations in the regulation of the brain blood supply, but the cellular source of ApoE4 and the underlying mechanisms remain unclear. In mice expressing human ApoE3 or ApoE4 we report that border associated macrophages (BAM), myeloid cells closely apposed to neocortical microvessels, are both the source and the target of the ApoE4 mediating the neurovascular dysfunction through reactive oxygen species. ApoE4 in BAM is solely responsible for the increased susceptibility to oligemic white matter damage in ApoE4 mice and is sufficient to enhance damage in ApoE3 mice. The data unveil a new aspect of BAM pathobiology and highlight a previously unrecognized cell autonomous role of BAM in the neurovascular dysfunction of ApoE4 with potential therapeutic implications.