Human and nonhuman primate meninges harbor lymphatic vessels that can be visualized noninvasively by MRI.
Martina AbsintaSeung-Kwon HaGovind NairPascal SatiNicholas J LucianoMaryknoll PalisocAntoine LouveauKareem A ZaghloulStefania PittalugaJonathan KipnisDaniel S ReichPublished in: eLife (2017)
Here, we report the existence of meningeal lymphatic vessels in human and nonhuman primates (common marmoset monkeys) and the feasibility of noninvasively imaging and mapping them in vivo with high-resolution, clinical MRI. On T2-FLAIR and T1-weighted black-blood imaging, lymphatic vessels enhance with gadobutrol, a gadolinium-based contrast agent with high propensity to extravasate across a permeable capillary endothelial barrier, but not with gadofosveset, a blood-pool contrast agent. The topography of these vessels, running alongside dural venous sinuses, recapitulates the meningeal lymphatic system of rodents. In primates, meningeal lymphatics display a typical panel of lymphatic endothelial markers by immunohistochemistry. This discovery holds promise for better understanding the normal physiology of lymphatic drainage from the central nervous system and potential aberrations in neurological diseases.
Keyphrases
- high resolution
- lymph node
- contrast enhanced
- endothelial cells
- magnetic resonance
- magnetic resonance imaging
- mass spectrometry
- computed tomography
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- diffusion weighted imaging
- blood brain barrier
- copy number
- brain injury
- tandem mass spectrometry
- network analysis
- subarachnoid hemorrhage