Proper neuronal functioning depends on a strictly regulated interstitial environment and tight coupling of neuronal and metabolic activity involving adequate vascular responses. These functions take place at the blood brain barrier (BBB) composed of endothelial cells, basal lamina covered with pericytes, and the endfeet of perivascular astrocytes. In conventional in vitro models of the BBB, some of these components are missing. Here we describe a new model system for studying BBB and neurovascular coupling by using confocal microscopy and fluorescence staining protocols in organotypic hippocampal slice cultures. An elaborated network of vessels is retained in culture in spite of the absence of blood flow. Application of calcein-AM either from the interstitial or from the luminal side resulted in different staining patterns indicating the maintenance of a barrier. By contrast, the ethidium derivative MitoSox penetrated perivascular basal lamina and revealed free radical formation in contractile cells embracing the vessels, likely pericytes.
Keyphrases
- blood brain barrier
- cerebral ischemia
- blood flow
- endothelial cells
- room temperature
- induced apoptosis
- magnetic resonance
- skeletal muscle
- cell cycle arrest
- transcription factor
- cell death
- computed tomography
- contrast enhanced
- single cell
- image quality
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- electron transfer
- brain injury
- ionic liquid
- vascular endothelial growth factor