Rapid endothelial cytoskeletal reorganization enables early blood-brain barrier disruption and long-term ischaemic reperfusion brain injury.
Yejie ShiLili ZhangHongjian PuLeilei MaoXiaoming HuXiaoyan JiangNa XuR Anne StetlerFeng ZhangXiangrong LiuRehana K LeakRichard F KeepXunming JiJun ChenPublished in: Nature communications (2016)
The mechanism and long-term consequences of early blood-brain barrier (BBB) disruption after cerebral ischaemic/reperfusion (I/R) injury are poorly understood. Here we discover that I/R induces subtle BBB leakage within 30-60 min, likely independent of gelatinase B/MMP-9 activities. The early BBB disruption is caused by the activation of ROCK/MLC signalling, persistent actin polymerization and the disassembly of junctional proteins within microvascular endothelial cells (ECs). Furthermore, the EC alterations facilitate subsequent infiltration of peripheral immune cells, including MMP-9-producing neutrophils/macrophages, resulting in late-onset, irreversible BBB damage. Inactivation of actin depolymerizing factor (ADF) causes sustained actin polymerization in ECs, whereas EC-targeted overexpression of constitutively active mutant ADF reduces actin polymerization and junctional protein disassembly, attenuates both early- and late-onset BBB impairment, and improves long-term histological and neurological outcomes. Thus, we identify a previously unexplored role for early BBB disruption in stroke outcomes, whereby BBB rupture may be a cause rather than a consequence of parenchymal cell injury.
Keyphrases
- blood brain barrier
- cerebral ischemia
- late onset
- brain injury
- endothelial cells
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- cell migration
- early onset
- adipose tissue
- single cell
- cell proliferation
- stem cells
- cancer therapy
- mesenchymal stem cells
- left ventricular
- drug delivery
- acute coronary syndrome
- binding protein
- amino acid
- coronary artery disease