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Non-productive angiogenesis disassembles Aß plaque-associated blood vessels.

Maria I Alvarez-VergaraAlicia E Rosales-NievesRosana March-DiazGuiomar Rodriguez-PerinanNieves Lara-UreñaClara Ortega-de San LuisManuel A Sanchez-GarciaMiguel Martin-BornezPedro Gómez-GálvezPablo Vicente-MunueraBeatriz Fernandez-GomezMiguel A MarchenaAndrea S Bullones-BolanosJose C DavilaRocio Gonzalez-MartinezJose L Trillo-ContrerasAna C Sanchez-HidalgoRaquel Del ToroFrancisco G SchollEloísa HerreraMartin TrepelJakob KörbelinLuis M EscuderoJavier VilladiegoMiriam EchevarriaFernando de CastroAntonia GutierrezAlberto RabanoJavier VitoricaAlberto Pascual
Published in: Nature communications (2021)
The human Alzheimer's disease (AD) brain accumulates angiogenic markers but paradoxically, the cerebral microvasculature is reduced around Aß plaques. Here we demonstrate that angiogenesis is started near Aß plaques in both AD mouse models and human AD samples. However, endothelial cells express the molecular signature of non-productive angiogenesis (NPA) and accumulate, around Aß plaques, a tip cell marker and IB4 reactive vascular anomalies with reduced NOTCH activity. Notably, NPA induction by endothelial loss of presenilin, whose mutations cause familial AD and which activity has been shown to decrease with age, produced a similar vascular phenotype in the absence of Aß pathology. We also show that Aß plaque-associated NPA locally disassembles blood vessels, leaving behind vascular scars, and that microglial phagocytosis contributes to the local loss of endothelial cells. These results define the role of NPA and microglia in local blood vessel disassembly and highlight the vascular component of presenilin loss of function in AD.
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