Junlei Chang,Michael R. Mancuso,Carolina M. Maier,Xibin Liang,Kanako Yuki,Lu Yang,Jeffrey W. Kwong,Jing Wang,Varsha Rao,Mario Vallon,Cynthia Kosinski,JJ H. Zhang,Amanda T. Mah,Lijun Xu,Le Li,Sharareh Gholamin,Teresa F Reyes,Rui Li,Frank Kuhnert,Xiaoyuan Han
出处
期刊:Nature Medicine [Springer Nature] 日期:2017-03-13卷期号:23 (4): 450-460被引量:207
The G-protein-coupled receptor GPR124, acting through the canonical Wnt pathway, is required for the maintenance of blood–brain barrier function in mouse models of stroke and glioblastoma. Although blood–brain barrier (BBB) compromise is central to the etiology of diverse central nervous system (CNS) disorders, endothelial receptor proteins that control BBB function are poorly defined. The endothelial G-protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) Gpr124 has been reported to be required for normal forebrain angiogenesis and BBB function in mouse embryos, but the role of this receptor in adult animals is unknown. Here Gpr124 conditional knockout (CKO) in the endothelia of adult mice did not affect homeostatic BBB integrity, but resulted in BBB disruption and microvascular hemorrhage in mouse models of both ischemic stroke and glioblastoma, accompanied by reduced cerebrovascular canonical Wnt–β-catenin signaling. Constitutive activation of Wnt–β-catenin signaling fully corrected the BBB disruption and hemorrhage defects of Gpr124-CKO mice, with rescue of the endothelial gene tight junction, pericyte coverage and extracellular-matrix deficits. We thus identify Gpr124 as an endothelial GPCR specifically required for endothelial Wnt signaling and BBB integrity under pathological conditions in adult mice. This finding implicates Gpr124 as a potential therapeutic target for human CNS disorders characterized by BBB disruption.