| Literature DB >> 32698806 |
Wandong Zhang1, Qing Yan Liu2, Arsalan S Haqqani2, Sonia Leclerc2, Ziying Liu3, François Fauteux3, Ewa Baumann2, Christie E Delaney2, Dao Ly2, Alexandra T Star2, Eric Brunette2, Caroline Sodja2, Melissa Hewitt2, Jagdeep K Sandhu2, Danica B Stanimirovic4.
Abstract
Receptor-mediated transcytosis (RMT) is a principal pathway for transport of macromolecules essential for brain function across the blood-brain barrier (BBB). Antibodies or peptide ligands which bind RMT receptors are often co-opted for brain delivery of biotherapeutics. Constitutively recycling transferrin receptor (TfR) is a prototype receptor utilized to shuttle therapeutic cargos across the BBB. Several other BBB-expressed receptors have been shown to mediate transcytosis of antibodies or protein ligands including insulin receptor (INSR) and insulin-like growth factor-1 receptor (IGF1R), lipid transporters LRP1, LDLR, LRP8 and TMEM30A, solute carrier family transporter SLC3A2/CD98hc and leptin receptor (LEPR). In this study, we analyzed expression patterns of genes encoding RMT receptors in isolated brain microvessels, brain parenchyma and peripheral organs of the mouse and the human using RNA-seq approach. IGF1R, INSR and LRP8 were highly enriched in mouse brain microvessels compared to peripheral tissues. In human brain microvessels only INSR was enriched compared to either the brain or the lung. The expression levels of SLC2A1, LRP1, IGF1R, LRP8 and TFRC were significantly higher in the mouse compared to human brain microvessels. The protein expression of these receptors analyzed by Western blot and immunofluorescent staining of the brain microvessels correlated with their transcript abundance. This study provides a molecular transcriptomics map of key RMT receptors in mouse and human brain microvessels and peripheral tissues, important to translational studies of biodistribution, efficacy and safety of antibodies developed against these receptors.Entities:
Keywords: Blood–brain barrier; IGF1R; Isolated brain microvessels; Mouse and human species; RNAseq; Receptor-mediated transcytosis; Transferrin receptor
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32698806 PMCID: PMC7376922 DOI: 10.1186/s12987-020-00209-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Fluids Barriers CNS ISSN: 2045-8118
Fig. 1Immunofluorescence analysis of isolated brain microvessels and capillaries (BMV) from the mouse (a–e) and human (f–i) brain. a CD31 immunofluorescence (red) in mouse BMV; b GSL-I lectin staining (green) in mouse BMV. c A composite image of CD31, GSL-I and Hoechst-stained nuclei (blue) of the same BMV. d Collagen IV immunofluorescence (green) in mouse BMV. e A composite image of collagen IV (green) and GFAP (red) immunofluorescence and Hoechst-stained nuclei (blue) in mouse BMV. f Collagen IV immunofluorescence of human BMV. g GFAP immunofluorescence of human BMV. h A composite image of of collagen IV (green) and GFAP (red) immunofluorescence and f Hoechst-stained nuclei (blue) in human BMV. i Hoechst staining of nuclei in human BMV. The scale bar is 20 µm
Fig. 2The enrichment of the blood–brain barrier (BBB)-related proteins in mouse brain microvessels (BMV) compared to brain parenchyma. BMVs and vessel-free brain parenchyma were isolated as described in Materials and Methods and relative enrichment of key protein markers in each fractions was determined by proteomics. Shown are Log2 ratios between levels of various proteins in purified vessels and vessel-depleted parenchyma. Protein markers correspond to: (1) Endothelial cell markers: Slc2a1, Glucose transporter (Glut1); F8, Coagulation factor VIII-related antigen; Sele, E-selectin; Cdh5, VE-cadherin; Pecam1, CD31; (2) Pericyte markers: Pdgfrb, Platelet-derived growth factor receptor beta; Des, Desmin; Acta2, smooth muscle actin; Anpep: CD13 pericyte marker (Aminopeptidase N); (3) Astrocyte markers: Gfap, Glial fibrillary acidic protein; S100β, Protein S100-beta; Slc4a4, Electrogenic sodium bicarbonate cotransporter 1; Gja1, Gap junction alpha-1 protein; Aqp4, Aquaporin-4; (4) Structural proteins: Actb, Cytoplasmic actin; Tubb1, beta tubulin. Error bars represent mean ± SD of three biological replicates
Fig. 3The enrichment of transcript for specific cell types in isolated mouse and human brain microvessels (BMV) compared to whole brain. BMVs and whole brain extracts were isolated as described in Materials and Methods and subjected to RNASeq analyses. aEndothelial cell/BBB markers: tight-junction protein 1 (TJP1)/ZO1, Occludin (OCLN), VE-cadherin, transporters (GLUT1, ABCG2), enzymes (ALP, γ-GTPase), and endothelial cell markers (E-selectin, CD31). bAstrocyte-specific markers: GLAST1 and SLC1A2; Pericyte–specific markers: PDGFRB, DES; ACTA2, ANPEP in human and mouse BMVs and total brain tissue. Each bar represents three biological replicates (Mean ± SEM). The enrichment of a gene transcript in mouse BMV vs. whole brain and in human BMV vs. whole brain was analyzed by two-tailed student t-test. Data are shown as Log2 ratios of various genes between levels in vessels and total brain
Expression levels of genes encoding RMT receptors in isolated human brain microvessels (BMV), brain and lung (RNAseq normalized read counts; average ± SD)
| Receptors/proteins | Human BMV | Human brain | Human lung |
|---|---|---|---|
| TFRC | 1645.22 ± 249.68 | 1560.20 ± 520.04 | 7856.4 ± 6648.12 |
| INSR | 3010.84 ± 1158.90* | 854.14 ± 81.00 | 1260.72 ± 106.44 |
| IGF1R | 1304.87 ± 746.61 | 905.46 ± 229.11 | 800.57 ± 198.75 |
| IGF2R | 602.08 ± 550.37 | 613.27 ± 194.15 | 4162.89 ± 2237.01* |
| LRP1 | 6896.83 ± 2520.15 | 5797.91 ± 1220.33 | 12,733.83 ± 4968.54 |
| LDLR | 1424.41 ± 2003.73* | 294.13 ± 121.19 | 6952.95 ± 2791.13 |
| LRP8 (ApoER2) | 695.27 ± 650.56 | 734.55 ± 153.52 | 116.66 ± 69.72 |
| CDC50A/TMEM30A | 5578.82 ± 1174.14 | 7977.31 ± 2267.54 | 7621.38 ± 3189.82 |
| SLC2A1/GLUT1 | 9579.89 ± 7741.88# | 3110.7 ± 1033.78 | 472.20 ± 217.86 |
| SLC3A2/CD98hc | 6527.14 ± 3983.38 | 4619.39 ± 509.35 | 5088.29 ± 425.63 |
| LEPR | 1131.17 ± 617.91* | 1932.75 ± 612.91 | 3549.49 ± 132.05 |
Comparison of gene expression (transcript abundance) across isolated human BMVs, brain and lung was performed using One-way ANOVA, followed by Tukey’s multiple comparisons test. Significant difference was indicated by (*). For simplicity, statistical significance was shown only for comparisons of BMV against other tissues (but not among other tissues)
*INSR expression in BMV was significantly (p < 0.05) higher compared to either brain or lung
*IGF2R expression in lung tissue was significantly (p < 0.05) higher compared to either brain vessels or brain
*LDLR expression in BMV was significantly higher (p < 0.001) compared to brain and significantly lower (p < 0.05) compared to lung
#SLC2A1/GLUT1: one sample out of 3 showed low transcript level, causing high SD. Therefore, despite overall high abundance, there was no significant difference compared to brain and lung. *LEPR expression in BMV was significantly lower compared to lung (p < 0.001)
Fig. 4The abundance of RMT receptor and transporter gene transcripts in human (a) and mouse (b) brain microvessels (BMV). BMVs were isolated as described in Materials and Methods and subjected to RNASeq analyses. Data are shown as normalized read counts (Mean ± SD from three biological replicates). Statistical analyses was performed using one-way ANOVA, followed by Tukey’s multiple comparisons test and p < 0.05 was considered significant. For human BMV (a), the level of SLC2A1/GLUT1 is significantly higher than those of IGF2R, LRP8, and LEPR (p < 0.05). The level of SLC3A2/CD98hc is significantly higher than those of LDLR, LRP8, IGFR, IGF2R and LEPR (p < 0.05). The level of LRP1 is significantly higher than those of TFRC, LDLR, IGF1R and LEPR (p < 0.05) and LRP8 and IGF2R (p < 0.01). For mouse BMV (b), the level of SLC2A1/GLUT1 is significantly higher than those of TFRC, INSR, IGF1R, IGF2R, LDLR, LRP8, CDC50A, and LEPR (p < 0.0001), and LRP1 (p < 0.001). The level of SLC3A2/CD98hc is significantly higher than those of TFRC and INSR (p < 0.05), LDLR, IGF2R and LEPR (p < 0.0001). The level of LRP1 is significantly higher than those of TFRC, INSR, IGF2R, LDLR, LRP8 and LEPR (p < 0.0001) and CDC50A (p < 0.001). The level of IGF1R is significantly higher than those of TFRC and INSR (p < 0.01), CDC50A (p < 0.05), IGF2R and LEPR (p < 0.0001). The level of TFRC is significantly higher than those of IGF2R (p < 0.05) and LEPR (p < 0.01). The level of LRP8 is significantly higher than those of IGF2R (p < 0.05) and LEPR (p < 0.01). The level of CDC50A is significantly higher than those of IGF2R and LEPR (p < 0.01)
Expression levels of mouse genes encoding RMT receptors in isolated brain microvessels (BMV), whole brain, liver, spleen and lung vessels (RNAseq normalized read counts; average ± SD)
| Receptors/proteins | BMV | Brain | Liver | Spleen | Lung vessels |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TFRC | 3690.57 ± 1577.32* | 1366.54 ± 198.69 | 824.73 ± 70.64 | 3112.77 ± 1853.22 | 358.11 ± 79.98 |
| INSR | 3577.43 ± 889.85* | 956.02 ± 215.79 | 1219.83 ± 877.37 | 561.32 ± 212.32 | 1475.28 ± 84.75 |
| IGF1R | 6876.68 ± 1430.93* | 1102.77 ± 297.56 | 38.19 ± 27.33 | 386.79 ± 70.17 | 1920.06 ± 367.45 |
| IGF2R | 952.45 ± 129.07 | 705.28 ± 248.38 | 413.13 ± 188.02 | 926.11 ± 358.19 | 1531.46 ± 133.94* |
| LRP1 | 11,506.40 ± 833.68* | 8489.28 ± 1692.30 | 4448.88 ± 920.24 | 3403.74 ± 934.22 | 6397.87 ± 829.14 |
| LDLR | 1015.42 ± 223.35 | 584.67 ± 170.78 | 2210.82 ± 1160.86 | 850.94 ± 230.47 | 1062.21 ± 116.65 |
| LRP8 (ApoER2) | 3937.6 ± 777.50* | 1318.88 ± 271.37 | 15.31 ± 20.31 | 310.13 ± 107.61 | 36.57 ± 12.07 |
| CDC50A/TMEM30A | 4159.55 ± 119.32* | 8495.71 ± 1376.15 | 13,191.59 ± 2020.86 | 2457.55 ± 424.88 | 3534.28 ± 715.38 |
| SLC2A1/GLUT1 | 33,418.54 ± 13,876.59*# | 2127.85 ± 246.70 | 216.14 ± 34.86 | 1164.86 ± 192.17 | 478.96 ± 48.42 |
| SLC3A2/CD98hc | 6369.22 ± 1046.86* | 2665.44 ± 27.16 | 979.66 ± 147.88 | 7792.42 ± 1947.03 | 5596.12 ± 929.74 |
| LEPR/leptin receptor | 356.37 ± 14.03* | 90.68 ± 1.77 | 107.97 ± 9.58 | 667.06 ± 116.16 | 1917.86 ± 469.42 |
Comparisons of gene expression (transcript abundance) across isolated mouse BMVs and peripheral tissues was performed using one-way ANOVA, followed by Tukey’s multiple comparisons test. For simplicity, statistical significance was shown only for comparisons of BMVs against other tissues (but not among peripheral tissues)
*TFRC expression in BMV was significantly (p < 0.05) higher compared to lung vessels
*INSR expression in BMV was significantly higher (p < 0.01) compared to brain, liver, lung vessels or spleen
*IGF1R expression in BMV was significantly (p < 0.0001) higher compared to brain, liver, spleen or lung vessels
*IGF2R expression in lung vessels was significantly higher compared to brain tissue (p < 0.01) and liver (p < 0.001)
*LRP1 expression in BMV was significantly (p < 0.01) higher compared to liver, spleen, or lung vessels
*LRP8 expression in BMV was significantly (p < 0.0001) higher compared to brain, liver, spleen or lung vessels
*CDC50A/TMEM30A expression in BMV was significantly (p < 0.01) lower compared to brain or liver
*SLC2A1/GLUT1 expression in brain vessels was significantly (p < 0.001) higher compared to brain tissue, liver, spleen and lung vessels
#SLC2A1/GLUT1 expression was significantly (p < 0.001) higher in BMV compared to the expression off all other genes shown in Table 2
*SLC3A2/CD98hc expression in BMV was significantly higher (p < 0.01) compared to brain or liver
*LEPR expression in BMV was significantly (p < 0.0001) lower compared to lung vessels or spleen and significantly (p < 0.001) higher compared to brain or liver
Expression levels of genes encoding RMT receptors in isolated human and mouse brain microvessels (BMV) and whole brain tissues [RNAseq normalized for transcript per million (TPM); Mean ± SD]
| Receptors/proteins | Human BMVs | Human brain | Mouse BMV | Mouse brain |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| TFRC | 8.81 ± 4.43 | 11.25 ± 2.80 | 70.53 ± 32.21* | 20.85 ± 4.41# |
| INSR | 5.44 ± 3.70 | 4.75 ± 0.49 | 33.09 ± 8.63* | 8.08 ± 3.31 |
| IGF1R | 2.38 ± 1.65 | 2.86 ± 0.69 | 61.06 ± 13.70* | 7.36 ± 2.33# |
| IGF2R | 3.09 ± 3.42 | 3.88 ± 2.06 | 9.88 ± 1.40* | 5.86 ± 2.57 |
| LRP1 | 21.18 ± 16.53 | 28.80 ± 6.61 | 179.85 ± 15.66* | 69.87 ± 15.36# |
| LDLR | 14.04 ± 19.25 | 5.19 ± 1.55 | 21.21 ± 5.00 | 9.67 ± 3.66 |
| LRP8 (ApoER2) | 6.09 ± 6.13 | 5.58 ± 1.75 | 20.66 ± 5.65 | 89.11 ± 20.41# |
| CDC50A/TMEM30A | 28.62 ± 16.30 | 68.42 ± 15.01 | 98.36 ± 1.58* | 158.57 ± 13.88# |
| SLC2A1/GLUT1 | 86.20 ± 88.50 | 41.64 ± 12.54 | 1314.53 ± 559.01* | 64.62 ± 1.08# |
| SLC3A2/CD98hc | 86.68 ± 75.46 | 89.37 ± 3.74 | 406.81 ± 66.31* | 138.96 ± 14.72# |
| LEPR/leptin receptor | 2.25 ± 1.96 | 1.19 ± 0.32 | 1.35 ± 1.35 | 2.10 ± 0.71 |
| GAPDH | 1563.77 ± 301.52 | 3924.81 ± 295.78 | 1571.31 ± 237.26 | 2824.45 ± 442.70& |
| S100B | 520.09 ± 180.37 | 1005.79 ± 308.03 | 547.96 ± 5.82 | 231.91 ± 33.28& |
| TUBB4A | 328.93 ± 126.15 | 363.04 ± 92.13 | 357.16 ± 110.37 | 552.25 ± 194.57 |
Statistical comparison of gene expression (transcript abundance) between human and mouse BMVs and human and mouse brain was performed using two-tailed student t-test. Significant difference between human and mouse BMVs was indicated by (*) and significant difference between human and mouse brain is indicated by (#), *Receptor abundance is significantly higher (TFRC p < 0.01; INSR p < 0.001; IGF1R p < 0.01; IGF2R p < 0.05; LRP1 p < 0.001; LRP8 p < 0.001; CDC50A p < 0.01; SLC3A2 p < 0.01; SLC2A1 p < 0.01) in mouse compared to human BMVs
#Receptor expression is significantly higher (TFRC p < 0.05; IGF1R p < 0.05; LRP1 p < 0.05; LRP8 p < 0.005; CDC50A p < 0.002; SLC2A1 p < 0.05; SLC3A2 p < 0.01) in mouse compared to human brain
&Genes encoding structural proteins: S100B is significantly (p < 0.001) lower in mouse compared to human brain; GAPDH is significantly lower in mouse compared to human brain (p < 0.05)
Fig. 5TfR protein expression in isolated brain microvessels (BMVs). a Wes™ band density of TfR expression in human (h) and mouse (m) BMVs. b Quantification of TfR expression by Wes™ TfR in each lane is normalized to β-actin in the same lane; the fold-change of human TfR is relative to mouse TfR (set as one). Bars are mean ± SD of three biological replicates. The level of mTfR is significantly higher than hTfR (p < 0.05; unpaired two-tailed t-test). c–f Collagen IV (green) and TfR (red) immunofluorescence in human BMV. g–j CD31 (green) and TfR (red) immunofluorescence in mouse BMV. Nuclei are stained with Hoechst (blue) (f and j). k Negative controls for G–J. The scale bar is 20 µm
Fig. 6LRP-1 protein expression in isolated brain micrvessels (BMVs). a Wes™ band density of LRP-1 expression in human (h) and mouse (m) BMVs. b Quantification of LRP1 expression by Wes™. LRP-1 in each lane is normalized to β-actin in the same lane; the fold-change of human LRP-1 is relative to mouse LRP-1 (set as one). Bars are mean ± SD of three biological replicates. The level of mLRP-1 is significantly higher than hLRP-1 (p < 0.05; unpaired two-tailed t-test). c–f Collagen IV (green) and LRP-1 (red) immunofluorescence in human BMV. g–i Collagen IV (green) and LRP-1 (red) immunofluorescence in mouse BMV. j Nuclei are stained with Hoechst (blue). k Negative controls for G-J. The scale bar is 20 µm
Fig. 7IGF1R protein expression in brain microvessels (BMVs). a Wes™ band density of IGF1R expression in human (h) and mouse (m) BMVs. b Quantification of IGF1R expression by Wes™. IGF1R in each lane is normalized to β-actin in the same lane; the fold-change of human IGF1R is relative to mouse IGF1R (set as one). Bars are mean ± SD of three biological replicates. The level of mIGF1R is significantly than hIGF1R (p < 0.0001; unpaired two-tailed t-test). c–e IGF1R (red) immunofluorescence in mouse BMV. f–g IGF1R immunofluorescence in human BMVs. Nuclei were stained with Hoechst (blue). The scale bar is 20 µm (unless indicated differently in the micrographs). h IGF1R expression (brown) in human BMVs detected by immunohistochemistry. i Negative control (no primary antibody) for Panel H. Scale bar for H and I is 10 µm