| Literature DB >> 30523362 |
Roberto Villaseñor1, Josephine Lampe2,3, Markus Schwaninger2,3, Ludovic Collin4.
Abstract
The blood-brain barrier is a dynamic multicellular interface that regulates the transport of molecules between the blood circulation and the brain parenchyma. Proteins and peptides required for brain homeostasis cross the blood-brain barrier via transcellular transport, but the mechanisms that control this pathway are not well characterized. Here, we highlight recent studies on intracellular transport and transcytosis across the blood-brain barrier. Endothelial cells at the blood-brain barrier possess an intricate endosomal network that allows sorting to diverse cellular destinations. Internalization from the plasma membrane, endosomal sorting, and exocytosis all contribute to the regulation of transcytosis. Transmembrane receptors and blood-borne proteins utilize different pathways and mechanisms for transport across brain endothelial cells. Alterations to intracellular transport in brain endothelial cells during diseases of the central nervous system contribute to blood-brain barrier disruption and disease progression. Harnessing the intracellular sorting mechanisms at the blood-brain barrier can help improve delivery of biotherapeutics to the brain.Entities:
Keywords: Endocytosis; Endothelial cells; Membrane trafficking; Neuroscience
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30523362 PMCID: PMC6513804 DOI: 10.1007/s00018-018-2982-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Mol Life Sci ISSN: 1420-682X Impact factor: 9.261
Fig. 1Intracellular transport pathways in brain endothelial cells. Transport across brain endothelial cells can be divided into three distinct processes: internalization, sorting, and exocytosis. For simplicity, only transport from the luminal (apical) to the abluminal (basolateral) membrane is shown, but the same mechanisms may also occur for basolateral-to-apical trafficking. Internalization into brain endothelial cells can occur via caveolae, clathrin-dependent endocytosis, or clathrin-independent endocytosis pathways such as fast endophilin-mediated endocytosis (FEME) or clathrin-independent carriers/glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored protein-enriched endocytic compartment (CLIC/GEEC). Internalization pathways converge in the early endosome network, which functions as an intracellular sorting station. Caveolae are thought to undergo transcytosis without fusion with early endosomes to promote transport of receptor-independent molecules (e.g., HRP, dextran, and albumin). Clathrin-coated vesicles (CCV) fuse with early endosomes after shedding the clathrin coat. From early endosomes, cargo can be transported via sorting tubules for transcytosis (e.g., Monovalent TfR and cation-independent mannose-6-phosphate receptor (CI-MPR) antibodies). Alternatively, endosomes mature into late endosomes and multi-vesicular bodies (MVB) which undergo fusion with lysosomes for cargo degradation (e.g., Bivalent TfR antibody, IgG). The retrograde transport pathway can shuttle cargo (e.g., CI-MPR antibody) from lysosomes to the Golgi apparatus and early endosomes. Exocytosis occurs when the sorting/transport compartment fuses with the abluminal membrane and is the least characterized process during endothelial transcytosis. Sorting tubules can fuse directly with the abluminal membrane or they can fuse with an intermediate basolateral sorting endosome (BSE) prior to exocytosis, as observed for transcytosis in epithelial cells. From the Golgi, cargo exocytosis can occur directly by polarized secretion to the abluminal membrane or indirectly by transport to early endosomes and subsequent sorting into tubules. A subpopulation of MVBs is thought to promote transcytosis by fusing with the abluminal membrane and releasing cargo (e.g., FC5 antibody) bound to exosomes. Dotted lines reflect pathways or compartments which have not been experimentally verified