Abstract

BackgroundWays to prevent disease-induced vascular modifications that accelerate brain damage remain largely elusive. Improved understanding of perivascular cell signalling could provide unparalleled insight as these cells impact vascular stability and functionality of the neurovascular unit as a whole. Identifying key drivers of astrocyte and pericyte responses that modify cell–cell interactions and crosstalk during injury is key. At the cellular level, injury-induced outcomes are closely entwined with activation of the hypoxia-inducible factor-1 (HIF-1) pathway. Studies clearly suggest that endothelial HIF-1 signalling increases blood–brain barrier permeability but the influence of perivascular HIF-1 induction on outcome is unknown. Using novel mouse lines with astrocyte and pericyte targeted HIF-1 loss of function, we herein show that vascular stability in vivo is differentially impacted by perivascular hypoxia-induced HIF-1 stabilization.MethodsTo facilitate HIF-1 deletion in adult mice without developmental complications, novel Cre-inducible astrocyte-targeted (GFAP-CreERT2; HIF-1αfl/fl and GLAST-CreERT2; HIF-1αfl/fl) and pericyte-targeted (SMMHC-CreERT2; HIF-1αfl/fl) transgenic animals were generated. Mice in their home cages were exposed to either normoxia (21% O2) or hypoxia (8% O2) for 96 h in an oxygen-controlled humidified glove box. All lines were similarly responsive to hypoxic challenge and post-Cre activation showed significantly reduced HIF-1 target gene levels in the individual cells as predicted.ResultsUnexpectedly, hypoxia-induced vascular remodelling was unaffected by HIF-1 loss of function in the two astrocyte lines but effectively blocked in the pericyte line. In correlation, hypoxia-induced barrier permeability and water accumulation were abrogated only in pericyte targeted HIF-1 loss of function mice. In contrast to expectation, brain and serum levels of hypoxia-induced VEGF, TGF-β and MMPs (genes known to mediate vascular remodelling) were unaffected by HIF-1 deletion in all lines. However, in agreement with the permeability data, immunofluorescence and electron microscopy showed clear prevention of hypoxia-induced tight junction disruption in the pericyte loss of function line.ConclusionThis study shows that pericyte but not astrocyte HIF-1 stabilization modulates endothelial tight junction functionality and thereby plays a pivotal role in hypoxia-induced vascular dysfunction. Whether the cells respond similarly or differentially to other injury stimuli will be of significant relevance.

Highlights

  • Ways to prevent disease-induced vascular modifications that accelerate brain damage remain largely elusive

  • This study shows that pericyte but not astrocyte hypoxia-inducible factor-1 (HIF-1) stabilization modulates endothelial tight junc‐ tion functionality and thereby plays a pivotal role in hypoxia-induced vascular dysfunction

  • Pericyte-targeted HIF-1α loss of function (LoF) was obtained by crossing the same floxed animal with a smooth muscle myosin heavy chain promoter (SMMHC)-CreERT2 line kindly provided by Dr Stephan Offermanns, Max Planck Institute, Germany (Fig. 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Ways to prevent disease-induced vascular modifications that accelerate brain damage remain largely elusive. The BBB is a complex dynamic structure consisting of microvascular endothelial cells that line the vessel wall, astrocyte endfeet, pericytes, as well as the basal lamina [1] These components interact in concert to maintain the characteristic low paracellular flux of the brain vascular system, presence of specific transporters that facilitate entry of essential nutrients and metabolizing enzymes that remove toxic and/or waste products [2, 3]. Elegant studies using pericyte-deficient mouse models conclusively showed pericytes regulate functional aspects of the embryonic and adult BBB in vivo [7,8,9] They strongly influence expression of BBB-specific genes and proteins, regulate vascular tone as well as polarize astrocyte end-feet surrounding CNS blood vessels, underlying their important role in both endothelial and astrocyte functional integration [6, 10]. Perivascular cells are a rich source of growth factors and potential permeability-modulating proteins, and their ability to signal to the endothelium is thought to occur predominantly via soluble and solid phase factors as well as cognate receptors [11,12,13,14]

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