The choroid plexus maintains adult brain ventricles and subventricular zone neuroblast pool, which facilitates poststroke neurogenesis.
Aleksandr TaranovAlicia BedollaEri IwasawaFarrah N BrownSarah BaumgartnerElizabeth M FugateJoel LevoySteven A CroneJune GotoYu LuoPublished in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2024)
The brain's neuroreparative capacity after injuries such as ischemic stroke is partly contained in the brain's neurogenic niches, primarily the subventricular zone (SVZ), which lies in close contact with the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) produced by the choroid plexus (ChP). Despite the wide range of their proposed functions, the ChP/CSF remain among the most understudied compartments of the central nervous system (CNS). Here, we report a mouse genetic tool (the ROSA26iDTR mouse line) for noninvasive, specific, and temporally controllable ablation of CSF-producing ChP epithelial cells to assess the roles of the ChP and CSF in brain homeostasis and injury. Using this model, we demonstrate that ChP ablation causes rapid and permanent CSF volume loss in both aged and young adult brains, accompanied by disruption of ependymal cilia bundles. Surprisingly, ChP ablation did not result in overt neurological deficits at 1 mo postablation. However, we observed a pronounced decrease in the pool of SVZ neuroblasts (NBs) following ChP ablation, which occurs due to their enhanced migration into the olfactory bulb. In the middle cerebral artery occlusion model of ischemic stroke, NB migration into the lesion site was also reduced in the CSF-depleted mice. Thus, our study establishes an important role of ChP/CSF in regulating the regenerative capacity of the adult brain under normal conditions and after ischemic stroke.
Keyphrases
- cerebrospinal fluid
- resting state
- white matter
- cerebral ischemia
- middle cerebral artery
- functional connectivity
- stem cells
- young adults
- atrial fibrillation
- radiofrequency ablation
- traumatic brain injury
- mesenchymal stem cells
- metabolic syndrome
- type diabetes
- bone marrow
- adipose tissue
- cell therapy
- high fat diet induced