| Literature DB >> 32677965 |
Anuska V Andjelkovic1, Svetlana M Stamatovic2, Chelsea M Phillips3, Gabriela Martinez-Revollar2, Richard F Keep4,5.
Abstract
The complexity of the blood-brain barrier (BBB) and neurovascular unit (NVU) was and still is a challenge to bridge. A highly selective, restrictive and dynamic barrier, formed at the interface of blood and brain, the BBB is a "gatekeeper" and guardian of brain homeostasis and it also acts as a "sensor" of pathological events in blood and brain. The majority of brain and cerebrovascular pathologies are associated with BBB dysfunction, where changes at the BBB can lead to or support disease development. Thus, an ultimate goal of BBB research is to develop competent and highly translational models to understand mechanisms of BBB/NVU pathology and enable discovery and development of therapeutic strategies to improve vascular health and for the efficient delivery of drugs. This review article focuses on the progress being made to model BBB injury in cerebrovascular diseases in vitro.Entities:
Keywords: Blood–brain barrier; Brain vascular malformation; In vitro models; Neurovascular units; Stroke; Vascular dementia
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32677965 PMCID: PMC7367394 DOI: 10.1186/s12987-020-00202-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Fluids Barriers CNS ISSN: 2045-8118
Fig. 1Flowchart summarizing clinical classification of cerebrovascular disease
Fig. 2Blood brain barrier (BBB) and neurovascular unit. a Schematic representation of cellular structure of BBB/NVU. b Brain endothelial cells have a wide range of transporters and carriers that build BBB influx (blood–brain) and BBB efflux (brain-blood) systems. c The BBB-endowed brain endothelial cells are characterized by a junctional complex that completely occludes the paracellular space and restricts paracellular movement from blood to brain. The junctional complex is composed from tight junctions (TJ), adherens junctions (AdJ) and gap junctions (GJ). These structures are generated by a complex network of protein–protein interactions between transmembrane proteins (e.g. claudin-5, occludin, junctional adhesion molecules [JAM], Ve-cadherin and Cx43) with scaffolding proteins (i.e. ZO-1) and the actin cytoskeletons
Fig. 3Current models of blood–brain barrier (BBB)/neurovascular unit (NVU) in vitro. The flowchart summarizes the advantages and disadvantages of the current 2-D and 3-D models of BBB/NVU. BEC, brain endothelial cell; iPSC, induced pluripotent stem cell, DIV-BBB, dynamic in vitro BBB model; μBBB, microfluidic-based BBB; SyM-BBB, synthetic microvascular model of BBB
Modeling cerebrovascular disease (CVD) in culture. Summary of current in vitro models of CVD that include the modeled in vitro condition, blood brain barrier (BBB) pathology and utilized in vitro BBB model
| CVD | In vitro model condition | BBB pathology | Utilized in vitro BBB model | Refs. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stroke | ||||
| Ischemic | OGD (1–5 h) OGD + Reperfusion (reoxygenation + normal glucose level) (1–5 h + 1–96 h) Chemical ischemia ( Enzymatic ( | Hyperpermeability Cytotoxicity Inflammation BBB recovery Angiogenesis | BEC monolayer 2-D model DIV-BBB 3-D model | [ [ [ [ [ |
| Hemorrhagic | hemin/hemoglobin +/OGD thrombin ± OGD | Hyperpermeability Cytotoxicity Inflammation | BEC monolayer 2-D model | [ [ |
| Vascular dementia | ||||
| CADASIL | Replicative senescence H2O2 (50 μM) modification of telomerase DNA damage NOTCH3 mutation | Senescence Hyperpermeability Inflammation | BEC monolayer hiPSC | [ [ |
| Vascular malformation | ||||
| CCM 1-3 | Gene silencing | Hyperpermeability signaling | BEC monolayer | [ |
BEC brain endothelial cell, CAT catalase, CCM cerebral cavernous malformation, GOX glucose oxidase, hiPSC human induced pluripotent stem cell, OGD oxygen glucose deprivation