| Literature DB >> 32448916 |
L F M Verscheijden1, A C van Hattem1, J C L M Pertijs1, C A de Jongh1, R M Verdijk2, B Smeets3, J B Koenderink1, F G M Russel1, S N de Wildt4,5.
Abstract
When drugs exert their effects in the brain, linear extrapolation of doses from adults could be harmful for children as the blood-brain barrier (BBB) and blood-CSF barrier (BCSFB) function is still immature. More specifically, age-related variation in membrane transporters may impact brain disposition. As human data on brain transporter expression is scarce, age dependent [gestational age (GA), postnatal age (PNA), and postmenstrual age (PMA)] variation in immunohistochemical localization and staining intensity of the ABC transporters P-glycoprotein (Pgp), breast cancer resistance protein (BCRP), and multidrug resistance-associated proteins 1, 2, 4, and 5 (MRP1/2/4/5) was investigated. Post mortem brain cortical and ventricular tissue was derived from 23 fetuses (GA range 12.9-39 weeks), 17 neonates (GA range 24.6-41.3 weeks, PNA range 0.004-3.5 weeks), 8 children (PNA range 0.1-3 years), and 4 adults who died from a wide variety of underlying conditions. In brain cortical BBB, immunostaining increased with age for Pgp and BCRP, while in contrast, MRP1 and MRP2 staining intensity appeared higher in fetuses, neonates, and children, as compared to adults. BCSFB was positively stained for Pgp, MRP1, and MRP2 and appeared stable across age, while BCRP was not detected. MRP4 and MRP5 were not detected in BBB or BCSFB. In conclusion, human BBB and BCSFB ABC membrane transporters show brain location and transporter-specific maturation.Entities:
Keywords: ATP-binding cassette transporters; Blood–brain barrier; Blood–cerebrospinal fluid barrier; Brain pharmacokinetics; Child; Fetus
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32448916 PMCID: PMC7502061 DOI: 10.1007/s00418-020-01884-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Histochem Cell Biol ISSN: 0948-6143 Impact factor: 4.304
Antibodies used
| Protein | Primary antibody | Antigen retrieval | Dilution | Supplier |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pgp | HPA002199 (host: rabbit) | Citrate buffer (pH 6) | 1:200 | Sigma-Aldrich |
| BCRP | BXP-21 (host: mouse) | Citrate buffer (pH 6) | 1:250 | Kamiya biomedical |
| MRP1 | QCRL-1 (host: mouse) | Tris–EDTA (pH 9) | 1:66 | Sigma-Aldrich |
| MRP2 | M2 III-6 (host: mouse) | Tris | 1:50 | Millipore |
| MRP4 | M4I-80 (host: rat) | Tris–EDTA (pH 9) | 1:20 | Abcam |
| MRP4 | M4I-10 (host: rat) | Tris–EDTA (pH 9) | 1:75 | Santa Cruz |
| MRP5 | M5II-54 (host: rat) | Tris–EDTA (pH 9) | 1:25 | ThermoFisher |
| MRP5 | AMF (host: rabbit) | Citrate buffer (pH 6) | 1:20 | Jedlitschky et al. ( |
Fig. 1Pgp staining intensity scores in BBB against a postmenstrual age, b gestational age, and c postnatal age. wks indicates age in weeks
Correlation of BBB staining intensity score with age
| Transporter protein | PMA | GA | PNA |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pgp | |||
| BCRP | |||
| MRP1 | |||
| MRP2 |
PMA postmenstrual age, GA gestational age, PNA postnatal age
ρ = Spearman’s correlation coefficient. Bold = statistically significant (p < 0.05)
Fig. 2Postmenstrual age (PMA) versus staining intensity score in BBB for a BCRP, b MRP1, c MRP2 and postmenstrual age versus staining intensity score in BCSFB for d Pgp, e MRP1, f MRP2. In panel d black dots indicate scoring of ventricle ependymal cells and gray dots scoring of choroid plexus. wks indicates age in weeks
Fig. 3Representative images from fetal and neonatal brain samples for Pgp, BCRP, MRP1, and MRP2 in microvessels (a, d, g, and j), choroid plexus (b, e, h, and k), and ventricle (c, f, i, and l). All tissues were from children < 45 weeks PMA. Arrows highlight locations of interest. Scale bar 50 μm