| Literature DB >> 29983707 |
Yinan Zhao1, Yanguo Xin2, Zhiyi He1, Wenyu Hu3.
Abstract
Neuronal signaling together with synapse activity in the central nervous system requires a precisely regulated microenvironment. Recently, the blood-brain barrier is considered as a "neuro-glia-vascular unit," a structural and functional compound composed of capillary endothelial cells, glial cells, pericytes, and neurons, which plays a pivotal role in maintaining the balance of the microenvironment in and out of the brain. Tight junctions and adherens junctions, which function as barriers of the blood-brain barrier, are two well-known kinds in the endothelial cell junctions. In this review, we focus on the less-concerned contribution of gap junction proteins, connexins in blood-brain barrier integrity under physio-/pathology conditions. In the neuro-glia-vascular unit, connexins are expressed in the capillary endothelial cells and prominent in astrocyte endfeet around and associated with maturation and function of the blood-brain barrier through a unique signaling pathway and an interaction with tight junction proteins. Connexin hemichannels and connexin gap junction channels contribute to the physiological or pathological progress of the blood-brain barrier; in addition, the interaction with other cell-cell-adhesive proteins is also associated with the maintenance of the blood-brain barrier. Lastly, we explore the connexins and connexin channels involved in the blood-brain barrier in neurological diseases and any programme for drug discovery or delivery to target or avoid the blood-brain barrier.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29983707 PMCID: PMC6015683 DOI: 10.1155/2018/6323901
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neural Plast ISSN: 1687-5443 Impact factor: 3.599
Figure 1Connexin-based channels in BBB. A functional unit composed of capillary endothelial cells (ECs), glial cells, pericytes, neurons, and interaction with local segments of blood vessels.
Figure 2Cx channels form the intercellular junctional complex. TJ contains a complex of proteins spanning the intercellular cleft (occludin and claudin). The ZO protein family plays a role in anchoring the occludin and claudin to the cytoskeleton via interaction with actin. The AJ protein, cadherin, spans the intercellular cleft and provides structural support. Transmembrane Cx proteins constitute a third partner in the intercellular junctional complex. GJ is formed by two HCs located on the opposing cell membranes, which are composed of six transmembrane Cx proteins.
Figure 3Schematic representation of connexins. Each Cx is a four-pass transmembrane (red frame) protein comprising two extracellular loops (EL1, purple region; EL2, green region) and a C-terminal cytoplasmic tail. The domains and motifs of connexins are depicted according to the size.
Connexin inhibitors link to the BBB permeability in vitro.
| Cell type | Stimulus | Treatment | Main outcome | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Porcine BBB ECs | 18 | Inhibits the barrier function of TJs and GJIC without morphological change | [ | |
| Mouse brain CCM3KD ECs | Gap27 | Inhibits BBB hyperpermeability through blocking Cx43 GJs, restoring ZO-1 to TJ structures | [ | |
| Rat brain RBE4 cells | Bradykinin | Gap27, | Inhibits endothelial hyperpermeability through reducing intracellular calcium oscillations | [ |
| Rat brain RBE4 cells | A reduction in extracellular Ca2+ concentration | Gap27 | Inhibits endothelial hyperpermeability through blocking the intercellular Ca2+ waves and repressing PKC, CaMKII, and actomyosin contraction | [ |
| Rat brain (RBE4, GP8 cells) | TNF- | Gap26 | No effect on the elevated baseline ATP release from rat brain endothelial cells treated by TNF- | [ |
| Rat brain GP8 cells | Gap26 and Gap27 | Inhibits intracellular ATP release through blocking Cx43-HCs which contribute to the intercellular propagation of calcium signals | [ | |
| Organotypic hippocampal slices from 7-day-old Wistar rats | Albumin | Carbenoxolone, Gap27, and SLS peptide | In developing hippocampal networks, the generation and initiation of spontaneous recurrent seizure-like activity depend on the opening of glial GJs | [ |
| Astrocytes from the cortex and spinal cord of the SCI mouse model | TNF- | Gap26, Gap27, and | TNF- | [ |
| Astrocytes from cortex of Sprague-Dawley rat | A | Octanol (an uncoupler of gap junctions) | Functional GJs are not required for calcium-wave propagation; they play a role in the enhancement of calcium waves induced by A | [ |
ECs: endothelial cells; SCI: spinal cord injury; TJs: tight junctions; GJs: gap junctions; ZO: zona occludin; PKC: protein kinase C; CaMKII: Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent kinase II; HCs: hemichannels; GJIC: gap junction intercellular communication; Aβ: amyloid β.
Connexin inhibitors link to the BBB permeability in vivo.
| Disease model | Interference | Main outcome | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Spinal cord | SCI | Cx43-asODN | Reduce vascular permeability and invasion of neutrophils in spinal cord injury | [ |
| BBB | Neuroinflammation | Gap27 | Gap27 coadministered together with bradykinin reduced leakage of reporter dye from the vascular lumen into the tissue | [ |
| BBB | Global | Systemic astrocyte endfeet swell and increased BBB permeability with the increase in vascular and shear stress | [ | |
| BBB | Global | Not affecting organization or permeability of BBB | [ | |
| BBB | Astrocytic-specific | Compromises the ability of the brain to maintain immune quiescence and recruitment of immune cells without BBB breakdown | [ | |
| Embryo |
| Migration impairment of neurons through adhesive interaction with radial fibers | [ | |
| Brain | AD | INI-1602 (microglia HC blocker) | Improve memory deficits | [ |
SCI: spinal cord injury; HCs: hemichannels; BBB: brain-blood barrier.
Cxs/Cx-channels in BBB in CNS pathology.
| CNS pathology | Cxs/Cx channel remodeling | BBB dysfunction | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| MOG-induced EAE mouse model | Deletion of both | None | [ |
| Carrageenan-induced inflammatory pain rat model | Not mentioned | Increased expression of ZO-1 in TJs and permeability of the BBB | [ |
| MCAO mouse model |
| Weakened barrier function of BBB and exacerbated ischemic injury | [ |
| Age-related neurodegenerative disease mouse model | Increased expression and relocalization of Cx43 in ECs | An increase in the permeability of the BBB without change of ZO-1 | [ |
| 4-AP-induced epilepsy rat model | Gradually elevated expression of Cx43 and GJIC remodeling | Not mentioned | [ |
| HIV-infected neuroAIDS macaque model | HIV amplified by GJs | Compromised BBB integrity | [ |
Cx: connexin; TJs: tight junctions; GJs: gap junctions; ZO: Zona occludin; GJIC: gap junction intercellular communication; BBB: brain-blood barrier; 4-AP: 4-aminopyridine.