| Literature DB >> 32605602 |
Charly Abi-Ghanem1, Lisa S Robison1, Kristen L Zuloaga2.
Abstract
Androgens affect the cerebral vasculature and may contribute to sex differences in cerebrovascular diseases. Men are at a greater risk for stroke and vascular contributions to cognitive impairment and dementia (VCID) compared to women throughout much of the lifespan. The cerebral vasculature is a target for direct androgen actions, as it expresses several sex steroid receptors and metabolizing enzymes. Androgens' actions on the cerebral vasculature are complex, as they have been shown to have both protective and detrimental effects, depending on factors such as age, dose, and disease state. When administered chronically, androgens are shown to be pro-angiogenic, promote vasoconstriction, and influence blood-brain barrier permeability. In addition to these direct effects of androgens on the cerebral vasculature, androgens also influence other vascular risk factors that may contribute to sex differences in cerebrovascular diseases. In men, low androgen levels have been linked to metabolic and cardiovascular diseases including hypertension, diabetes, hyperlipidemia, and obesity, which greatly increase the risk of stroke and VCID. Thus, a better understanding of androgens' interactions with the cerebral vasculature under physiological and pathological conditions is of key importance.Entities:
Keywords: Androgens; Blood-brain barrier; Cerebral vasculature; Cerebrovascular disease; Dihydrotestosterone; Endothelial; Hormone therapy; Stroke; Testosterone; Vascular contributions to cognitive impairment and dementia
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32605602 PMCID: PMC7328272 DOI: 10.1186/s13293-020-00309-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biol Sex Differ ISSN: 2042-6410 Impact factor: 5.027
Fig. 1Androgen metabolism and signaling in the cerebral vasculature. Signaling pathways are indicated using green arrows. Metabolic pathways are indicated using blue arrows, and metabolizing enzymes are in purple. Confirmed expression in cells of the cerebral vasculature is indicated by cartoon cell types (see key). AR, androgen receptor; ER, estrogen receptor; HSD, Hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase; ZIP9, Zrt- and Irt-like protein 9; GPRC6a, G-protein-coupled receptor C6A; GPER1, G-protein-coupled estrogen receptor
Effects of androgens on functions of the cerebral vasculature
| Function | Subjects/cells | Androgen | Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Angiogenesis | EPC (healthy male donors) | Methyltrienolone (synthetic androgen) | Dose-dependent increase in proliferation, migration and colony formation. Effect is AR-dependent (blocked by flutamide). | Foresta et al. [ |
| Angiogenesis | EPC (healthy male donors) | DHT | Dose- and time-dependent increase in VEGF and proliferative, migratory, and adhesive abilities of EPCs. Via RhoA/ROCK pathway. | Zhang et al. [ |
| Angiogenesis | EPC (healthy male donors) | DHT | Dose- and time-dependent increase in proliferative activity and adhesive ability of EPCs. The PI3-K/Akt pathway plays a role. | Liu et al. [ |
| Angiogenesis | Healthy adult males | N/A | T/E2 ratio negatively correlated with number of EPCs. | Fadini et al. [ |
| Angiogenesis | EPC (healthy male donors) | T or DHT | No effect on expansion and function of late EPCs; increase generation of early EPCs | Fadini et al. [ |
| Angiogenesis | Adult male SD rats (intact & GDX) | T or DHT replacement | T & DHT replacement unable to restore reduced EPC levels in GDX males | Fadini et al. [ |
| Angiogenesis | Adult female canaries | T | Increased angiogenesis and endothelial BDNF, VEGF, and VEGF-R in the brain | Louissaint et al. [ |
| Cerebrovascular reactivity | Adult male Fisher 344 rats (intact & GDX) | T replacement | Endothelium-dependent myogenic tone is reduced in GDX rats, which is NOS-independent and reversed by T replacement. | Geary et al. [ |
| Cerebrovascular reactivity | Adult male Fisher 344 rats (GDX) | T replacement | T replacement increased vascular tone in endothelium-dependent manner of isolated MCA, independent of COX, NOS, and endothelin. Effect may be through suppression of EDHF-like vasodilator. | Gonzales et al. [ |
| Cerebrovascular reactivity | Adult male Fisher 344 rats (GDX) | T replacement | T replacement increased vascular tone of MCA, likely by increasing synthesis of thromboxane A2. | Gonzales et al. 2005 [ |
| BBB function and inflammation | Adult male C57BL/6J mice (intact & GDX) | T replacement | GDX increased BBB permeability and inflammation; reduced EC TJ proteins. Effects reversed by T replacement. | Atallah et al. [ |
| Blood-spinal cord barrier | Young adult male Wistar rats | T | T treatment decreased some TJ proteins in spinal cord and increased P-gp expression. | Nierwinska et al. [ |
| Inflammation | Adult male Wistar rats (GDX) | DHT replacement | DHT stimulated CBV inflammation by increasing COX-2, iNOS, and NFkB levels in cerebral arteries (ex vivo and in vivo). Effect is AR-dependent (blocked by flutamide). | Gonzales et al. [ |
| Inflammation | Adult male Wistar rats (GDX) | DHT (in vivo or ex vivo) | DHT increases COX-2 under normoxia but decreases COX-2 under hypoxia in cerebral arteries. DHT blunts HIF-1a following hypoxia. | Zuloaga & Gonzales [ |
| Inflammation | Primary human brain VSMC | DHT | DHT increases COX-2 under normoxia but decreases COX-2 under hypoxia. DHT blunts HIF-1a following hypoxia (AR-independent). | Zuloaga & Gonzales [ |
| Inflammation | Primary human brain VSMC | DHT | Anti-inflammatory effect of DHT (reduction of COX-2) is mediated by ER-beta, likely via conversion to 3β-diol | Zuloaga et al. [ |
| Inflammation | Adult male Fisher 344 rats (intact & GDX) | T (in vivo) or ex vivo T treatment | T increases LPS-induced CBV inflammation (COX-2, iNOS, PGE2). | Razmara et al. [ |
| EC senescence | Adult male SAMP8, control SAMR 1 mice | DHT | DHT treatment decreases hippocampal endothelial cell senescence. | Ota et al. [ |
Fig. 2Effects of androgens on cerebrovascular function. Green arrows represent promotion of the function, while red lines with rectangles at ends represent inhibition of the function. Mechanisms by which these effects have been shown to occur in the cerebral vasculature are listed along the lines. COX-2, cyclooxygenase 2; CLDN5, claudin-5; EPC, endothelial progenitor cell; HIF-1α, hypoxia- inducible factor 1-alpha; iNOS, inducible nitric oxide synthase; TXA2, thromboxane A2; SRT1, Sirtuin 1; VCID, vascular contributions to cognitive impairment and dementia; VEGF, vascular endothelial growth factor; VEGF-R2, vascular endothelial growth factor receptor 2; ZO1, tight junction protein ZO-1
Androgens’ effects on outcomes of the MCAO model of stroke in male rodents
This table summarizes the outcomes of androgens’ modifications (removal by GDX or supplementation after GDX) on the MCAO model of stroke in young (< 6 months) versus old (12+ mo) rodents. Positive effects are indicated in green and negative effects are in red. GDX: gonadectomy; DHT: 5α-dihydrotestosterone; T: testosterone; MCAO: middle cerebral artery occlusion
Fig. 3Interaction between androgens and cerebrovascular disease risk factors. a Schematic representation of risk factors influencing or correlating with androgen levels in males and females. b Schematic representation of how androgen levels affect/correlate with risk factors for cerebrovascular diseases. Relations are shown in pink in females, and those in males are shown in blue. T/E2, testosterone to estrogen ratio increases after menopause in females
Fig. 4Schematic representation of testosterone levels during adulthood. Plasma testosterone levels (relative to those found in young men) are plotted during adulthood in men (blue) and women (pink)