| Literature DB >> 23986663 |
Helen B Stolp1, Shane A Liddelow, Inês Sá-Pereira, Katarzyna M Dziegielewska, Norman R Saunders.
Abstract
For a long time the brain has been considered an immune-privileged site due to a muted inflammatory response and the presence of protective brain barriers. It is now recognized that neuroinflammation may play an important role in almost all neurological disorders and that the brain barriers may be contributing through either normal immune signaling or disruption of their basic physiological mechanisms. The distinction between normal function and dysfunction at the barriers is difficult to dissect, partly due to a lack of understanding of normal barrier function and partly because of physiological changes that occur as part of normal development and ageing. Brain barriers consist of a number of interacting structural and physiological elements including tight junctions between adjacent barrier cells and an array of influx and efflux transporters. Despite these protective mechanisms, the capacity for immune-surveillance of the brain is maintained, and there is evidence of inflammatory signaling at the brain barriers that may be an important part of the body's response to damage or infection. This signaling system appears to change both with normal ageing, and during disease. Changes may affect diapedesis of immune cells and active molecular transfer, or cause rearrangement of the tight junctions and an increase in passive permeability across barrier interfaces. Here we review the many elements that contribute to brain barrier functions and how they respond to inflammation, particularly during development and aging. The implications of inflammation-induced barrier dysfunction for brain development and subsequent neurological function are also discussed.Entities:
Keywords: blood-brain barrier; cerebrospinal fluid; choroid plexus; development; inflammation
Year: 2013 PMID: 23986663 PMCID: PMC3750212 DOI: 10.3389/fnint.2013.00061
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Integr Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5145
Figure 1Protective barriers of the brain. The collective term “blood-brain barrier” is used to describe four main interfaces between the central nervous system and the periphery. (i) The blood-brain barrier proper formed by tight junctions between the endothelial cells of the cerebral vasculature. It is thought that pericytes (peri.) are sufficient to induce some barrier characteristics in endothelial cells, while astrocytes (astro.) are able to maintain the integrity of the blood-brain barrier postnatally. (ii) The blood-CSF barrier formed by tight junctions between epithelial cells of the choroid plexus epithelial cells (note the plexus vasculature is fenestrated). Resident epiplexus (epi.) immune cells are present on the CSF-surface of the plexus epithelium. (iii) The outer CSF-brain barrier and the level of the pia arachnoid, formed by tight junctions between endothelial cells of the arachnoid vessels. (iv) The inner CSF-brain barrier, present only in early development, formed by strap junctions between the neuroependymal cells lining the ventricular surfaces. In the adult this barrier is no longer present. Both the blood-brain and CSF-brain barriers extend down the spinal cord. The CSF-filled ventricular system is depicted in blue, while CNS brain tissue is in brown. The lateral ventricular choroid plexuses are shown in red. Abbreviations: astro, astrocyte; bv, blood vessel; cpec, choroid plexus epithelial cell; csf, cerebrospinal fluid; peri, pericytes.
Comparison of expression of influx transporters and published reports on transport function in the developing brain.
| 66.8 | Iodothyronines T3, T4 | |
| 11.4 | Neutral amino acids | |
| 9.6 | Iron | |
| 7.1 | Cysteine, glutamate | |
| 5.5 | Anion transporter | |
| 4.6 | GABA transporter | |
| 4.4 | Glutamate, neutral amino acids | |
| 4.2 | Acidic and neutral amino acids | |
| 4.1 | Taurine | |
| 4.1 | Na+-HCO−3 cotransporter | |
| 4.1 | Acidic amino acids | |
| 3.3 | Zinc transporter |
Expression levels for the E15 and adult mouse choroid plexus. Fold change in expression compares E15 with adult choroid plexus (positive values are enriched in the embryo). Superscript numbers indicate published studies showing transport into developing brain or CSF.
Gene product ferroportin-1 identified in choroid plexus. References:
(Porterfield and Hendrich, 1992);
(Lefauconnier and Trouve, 1983);
(Morgan and Moos, 2002);
(Damkier et al., 2010);
(Amtorp and Sorensen, 1974);
(Al-Sarraf et al., 1997);
(Al-Sarraf, 2002);
(Chowanadisai et al., 2005). Data from Liddelow et al. (2012), adapted from Saunders et al. (2013).
Figure 2Neuroependymal cell uptake of plasma proteins from the CSF. Coronal, paraffin-embedded section of lateral ventricular wall from sheep fetuses at embryonic day 40 (E40, A), E60 (B), and E15 mouse (C) stained to detect endogenous plasma protein. The migrating neurons in the ventricular zone are strongly stained (arrows), blood vessels also show a positive staining reaction (unfilled arrowhead). Protein is also seen precipitated in the CSF (filled arrowheads). Extensive precipitation of CSF plasma protein can be seen in the embryonic mouse example displayed in panel (C) (arrowheads, also in A,B). Choroid plexus epithelial cells individually positive for protein can also be seen in panel (A) (asterisks). Abbreviations: csf, cerebrospinal fluid; lvcp, lateral ventricular choroid plexus. Scale bars 50 μm in each.
Figure 3Neurogenic niches in the developing brain. Dividing cells in the subventricular zone are closely associated with blood vessels, and the concept of a neurovascular niche (yellow), which reflects a zone of influence of vascular factors on neural progenitor cells, suggested in the adult and developmental subventricular zone. In early development, the dividing cells in the ventricular zone are not closely associated with the blood vasculature, but may be affected by trophic factors produced in the CSF, and therefore exist in a neuroglial-CSF niche. Cells from the ventricular zone migrate toward the neurovascular niche, before differentiating and migrating to outer cortical layers of the brain.