| Literature DB >> 31934612 |
David Dubayle1,2, Arnaud Vanden-Bossche3, Mathieu Beraneck1,2, Laurence Vico3, Jean-Luc Morel4,5.
Abstract
Modifications of gravity levels induce generalized adaptation of mammalian physiology, including vascular, brain, muscle, bone and immunity functions. As a crucial interface between the vascular system and the brain, the blood-brain barrier (BBB) acts as a filter to protect neurons from pathogens and inflammation. Here we compare the effects of several protocols of hypergravity induced by centrifugation and whole-body vibrations (WBV) on BBB integrity. The immunohistochemistry revealed immunoglobulin G (IgG) extravasation from blood to hippocampal parenchyma of mice centrifuged at 2 × g during 1 or 50 days, whereas short exposures to higher hypergravity mimicking the profiles of spaceflight landing and take-off (short exposures to 5 × g) had no effects. These results suggest prolonged centrifugation (>1 days) at 2 × g induced a BBB leakage. Moreover, WBV were similarly tested. The short exposure to +2 × g vibrations (900 s/day at 90 Hz) repeated for 63 days induced IgG extravasation in hippocampal parenchyma, whereas the progressive increase of vibrations from +0.5 to +2 × g for 63 days was not able to affect the IgG crossing through the BBB. Overall, these results suggest that the BBB permeability is sensitive to prolonged external accelerations. In conclusion, we advise that the protocols of WBV and centrifugation, proposed as countermeasure to spaceflight, should be designed with progressively increasing exposure to reduce potential side effects on the BBB.Entities:
Keywords: Neuroscience; Physiology
Year: 2020 PMID: 31934612 PMCID: PMC6946672 DOI: 10.1038/s41526-019-0094-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: NPJ Microgravity ISSN: 2373-8065 Impact factor: 4.415
Fig. 1Alterations of body weight and food intake in hypergravity-exposed mice.
a Body weight of control mice (Ctrl-HG) and mice exposed to long-term hypergravity (Long-HG), before (left panel) and at the end of the experiment (right panel, here stars indicate p < 0.001). b Difference of body weight after 50 days in the Ctrl-HG and Long-HG groups. c Total food intake in Ctrl-HG and Long-HG. d Body weight in Ctrl-HG and after short-term exposure to hypergravity (Short-HG); e body weight in Ctrl-HG and landing and take-off HG protocols.
Fig. 2Effects of centrifugation and WBV on IgG extravasation in the hippocampus.
a IgG extravasation expressed as the percentage of labelling observed in Long-HG and Ctrl-HG groups for the entire surface of hippocampus. b Comparison of the surfaces of hippocampus in Long-HG and Ctrl-HG groups. c IgG extravasation expressed as the percentage of labelling for the constant area of hippocampus in the Long-HG and Ctrl-HG groups. d, e IgG extravasation expressed as the percentage of labelling observed in the Short-HG, landing and take-off groups in comparison with their control. f, g IgG extravasation expressed as the percentage of labelling observed in the WBV groups in comparison with their control. Statistical significant differences are reported. The star indicates p < 0.05.
Fig. 3Hypergravity and whole-body vibration protocols.
a Picture of the centrifuge. Bottom panels, profiles of gravity levels of the centrifuge reproducing those measured during landing and take-off of the Soyuz mission. b Vibration protocols of WBV (one dot = one day of vibration) and picture of mice on the device. c Example of the imaging process to interpret the immunostaining with, from left to right, typical imaging generated by Nanozoomer on one slide of brain (IgG coupled with FITC appears in green), the magnification of this image for fluorescence evaluation, and the image of a labelled area after application of the threshold on the analysed area (in red).