Mootaz M Salman1, Philip Kitchen2, Andrea Halsey3, Marie Xun Wang4, Susanna Törnroth-Horsefield5, Alex C Conner3, Jerome Badaut6, Jeffrey J Iliff4,7,8, Roslyn M Bill2. 1. Department of Physiology, Anatomy and Genetics, University of Oxford, Oxford OX1 3PT, UK. 2. School of Biosciences, College of Health and Life Sciences, Aston University, Aston Triangle, Birmingham B4 7ET, UK. 3. Institute of Clinical Sciences, College of Medical and Dental Sciences, University of Birmingham, Edgbaston, Birmingham B15 2TT, UK. 4. Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, WA, USA. 5. Department of Biochemistry and Structural Biology, Lund University, PO Box 124, 221 00 Lund, Sweden. 6. CNRS-UMR 5536-Centre de Résonance Magnétique des systèmes Biologiques, Université de Bordeaux, 33076 Bordeaux, France. 7. Department of Neurology, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, WA, USA. 8. VISN 20 Mental Illness Research, Education and Clinical Center, VA Puget Sound Health Care System, Seattle, WA, USA.
Abstract
Aquaporin channels facilitate bidirectional water flow in all cells and tissues. AQP4 is highly expressed in astrocytes. In the CNS, it is enriched in astrocyte endfeet, at synapses, and at the glia limitans, where it mediates water exchange across the blood-spinal cord and blood-brain barriers (BSCB/BBB), and controls cell volume, extracellular space volume, and astrocyte migration. Perivascular enrichment of AQP4 at the BSCB/BBB suggests a role in glymphatic function. Recently, we have demonstrated that AQP4 localization is also dynamically regulated at the subcellular level, affecting membrane water permeability. Ageing, cerebrovascular disease, traumatic CNS injury, and sleep disruption are established and emerging risk factors in developing neurodegeneration, and in animal models of each, impairment of glymphatic function is associated with changes in perivascular AQP4 localization. CNS oedema is caused by passive water influx through AQP4 in response to osmotic imbalances. We have demonstrated that reducing dynamic relocalization of AQP4 to the BSCB/BBB reduces CNS oedema and accelerates functional recovery in rodent models. Given the difficulties in developing pore-blocking AQP4 inhibitors, targeting AQP4 subcellular localization opens up new treatment avenues for CNS oedema, neurovascular and neurodegenerative diseases, and provides a framework to address fundamental questions about water homeostasis in health and disease.
Aquaporin channels facilitate bidirectional water flow in all cells and tissues. AQP4 is highly expressed in astrocytes. In the CNS, it is enriched in astrocyte endfeet, at synapses, and at the glia limitans, where it mediates water exchange across the blood-spinal cord and blood-brain barriers (BSCB/BBB), and controls cell volume, extracellular space volume, and astrocyte migration. Perivascular enrichment of AQP4 at the BSCB/BBB suggests a role in glymphatic function. Recently, we have demonstrated that AQP4 localization is also dynamically regulated at the subcellular level, affecting membrane water permeability. Ageing, cerebrovascular disease, traumatic CNS injury, and sleep disruption are established and emerging risk factors in developing neurodegeneration, and in animal models of each, impairment of glymphatic function is associated with changes in perivascular AQP4 localization. CNS oedema is caused by passive water influx through AQP4 in response to osmotic imbalances. We have demonstrated that reducing dynamic relocalization of AQP4 to the BSCB/BBB reduces CNS oedema and accelerates functional recovery in rodent models. Given the difficulties in developing pore-blocking AQP4 inhibitors, targeting AQP4 subcellular localization opens up new treatment avenues for CNS oedema, neurovascular and neurodegenerative diseases, and provides a framework to address fundamental questions about water homeostasis in health and disease.
The control of water homeostasis is crucial in maintaining normal CNS function.
Dysregulation results in rapid and potentially life-threatening increases in
intracranial or intraspinal pressure,, or the accumulation of toxic waste products. Of the three aquaporins
described in the CNS (AQP1, 4 and 9), AQP4 is the most abundant. It is found in
astrocytes and is enriched at the blood–spinal cord and blood–brain
barriers (BSCB/BBB), tripartite synapses, ventricle lining and the glia limitans
beneath the meninges (Fig. 1). Studies
in transgenic mice have established that AQP4 is a major regulator of CNS water
homeostasis,, where it controls the exchange of CSF with brain
interstitial fluid and facilitates the development (and may also facilitate the
clearance) of CNS oedema.
Figure 1
AQP4 localization in the CNS. (A) AQP4 (blue) is
located within astrocyte endfeet processes surrounding blood vessels in both
brain tissue and the BBB. The inset shows the crystal
structure of human AQP4 (PDB code 3GD8). AQP4 assembles as a tetramer with
each monomer comprising six transmembrane helices and two half-helices
(grey). The two half helices harbour the aquaporin signature motif (NPA) as
well as part of the aromatic-arginine (ar/R) motif that functions as a
selectivity filter. Within the pore, water molecules (red spheres) align in
a single file. (B) AQP4 is localized at the astrocyte component
of the tripartite synapse. During neurotransmission, neurons release
mediators and neurotransmitters from synaptic nerve terminals (affecter
cells) into the synaptic cleft to communicate with other neurons (effector
cells). This synaptic activity induces an increase in intracellular
Ca2+ concentration, which is accompanied by changed
water and solute concentrations in astrocytes, leading to the release of
glutamate and other gliotransmitters. This gliotransmission results in
negative feedback to the presynaptic neurons to modulate neurotransmission.
AQP4 plays an essential role in maintaining water homeostasis during this
process. (C) In ventricles, AQPs are present within ependymal
cells lining the brain-CSF interfaces (left inset). AQP4 is
localized to the basolateral membrane of ependymal cells and the endfeet of
contacting astrocytes (right inset). AQP1 (purple) is
localized to the apical membrane of the choroid plexus epithelium., (D)
CSF within the subarachnoid and cisternal spaces flows into the brain
specifically via periarterial spaces and then exchanges with brain
interstitial fluid facilitated by AQP4 water channels that are positioned
within perivascular astrocyte endfoot processes.
AQP4 localization in the CNS. (A) AQP4 (blue) is
located within astrocyte endfeet processes surrounding blood vessels in both
brain tissue and the BBB. The inset shows the crystal
structure of human AQP4 (PDB code 3GD8). AQP4 assembles as a tetramer with
each monomer comprising six transmembrane helices and two half-helices
(grey). The two half helices harbour the aquaporin signature motif (NPA) as
well as part of the aromatic-arginine (ar/R) motif that functions as a
selectivity filter. Within the pore, water molecules (red spheres) align in
a single file. (B) AQP4 is localized at the astrocyte component
of the tripartite synapse. During neurotransmission, neurons release
mediators and neurotransmitters from synaptic nerve terminals (affecter
cells) into the synaptic cleft to communicate with other neurons (effector
cells). This synaptic activity induces an increase in intracellular
Ca2+ concentration, which is accompanied by changed
water and solute concentrations in astrocytes, leading to the release of
glutamate and other gliotransmitters. This gliotransmission results in
negative feedback to the presynaptic neurons to modulate neurotransmission.
AQP4 plays an essential role in maintaining water homeostasis during this
process. (C) In ventricles, AQPs are present within ependymal
cells lining the brain-CSF interfaces (left inset). AQP4 is
localized to the basolateral membrane of ependymal cells and the endfeet of
contacting astrocytes (right inset). AQP1 (purple) is
localized to the apical membrane of the choroid plexus epithelium., (D)
CSF within the subarachnoid and cisternal spaces flows into the brain
specifically via periarterial spaces and then exchanges with brain
interstitial fluid facilitated by AQP4 water channels that are positioned
within perivascular astrocyte endfoot processes.Aquaporin channels facilitate the bidirectional flow of water and small uncharged
solutes, whose membrane permeability is controlled by aquaporin abundance., The structural biology of
aquaporin transmembrane domains is well-established: six membrane-spanning α-helices and
two half-helices stack around the family’s signature Asn-Pro-Ala (NPA) motifs
(located in the middle of the membrane) to form the water pore (Fig. 1A, inset). Members of the aquaporin family can be
selective for water (e.g. AQP4) or also permit the transport of small neutral
solutes such as glycerol and urea (e.g. AQP9). The substrate traverses the pore in
single file, charged species are excluded by the channel electrostatics, and protons
are excluded by the orientation of water molecules within the pore preventing proton
diffusion along the hydrogen bond network via the Grotthuss mechanism. Less is known
about the structures of the intracellular amino- and carboxy-termini, which are not
usually resolved in crystallography studies, but where many key regulatory interactions are known to
occur. Aquaporins are homotetramers, with each monomer containing an independent
water pore. The functional relevance of the tetramer is unclear, although we have
shown that AQP4 mutants that do not tetramerize are also unable to relocalize to the
plasma membrane.AQP4 exists in two major isoforms, namely AQP4-M1 and AQP4-M23 (indicating the
position of the initiating methionine residue). The shorter AQP4-M23 isoform can be
derived from an alternatively-spliced transcript, or by leaky-scanning of the M1 transcript
whereby the 40S ribosome skips the first (M1) start codon and initiates translation
at the second (M23).
AQP4-M23 forms square arrays in the astrocyte plasma membrane, known as orthogonal
arrays of particles (OAPs). These OAPs can be observed directly by freeze fracture
electron microscopy. OAP
size depends upon the ratio between AQP4-M1 and AQP4-M23, with higher levels of
AQP4-M1 composition reducing OAP size. Notably, OAP disintegration and changes in
the ratio between AQP4-M1 and AQP4-M23 are observed early after stroke, although the (patho)physiological consequences of these
changes are yet to be defined. Recent work suggests that OAP stability can impact
astrocyte process motility and local synaptic activity. A better understanding of OAPs may be
possible in the future with the development of a novel mouse lacking the OAP-forming
AQP4-M23 isoform., An AQP4 isoform (AQPex) has also been reported that
has an extended carboxy-terminus containing a conserved perivascular localization
signal generated by translational read-through., The consequences of this carboxy-terminal
extension are yet to be established.The notable localization of AQP4 to perivascular astrocyte endfoot processes results
from its association with the dystrophin-associated complex (DAC), which anchors
AQP4 intracellularly to the cytoskeleton and extracellularly to the cerebrovascular
basal lamina. Deletion of the Dmd and Snta1 genes
(which encode the DAC proteins, dystrophin and α-syntrophin), or of
Agrn (which encodes the basal lamina protein, agrin) in mice
results in the loss of this perivascular AQP4 localization. A recent study also suggests a potential role
for β-syntrophin in AQP4 anchoring. Changes in perivascular localization of AQP4 have been
reported across myriad pathological conditions, including CNS tumours, neurovascular
disorders, such as ischaemic stroke and traumatic brain injury, and in the setting
of neurodegenerative disease. Perivascular localization of AQP4 may also be regulated by
differential regulation of AQP4-M1 versus AQP4-M23 expression, with
AQP4-M23-enriched OAPs localizing to perivascular astroglial endfoot processes., The degree of enrichment
of AQP4 to perivascular membranes differs between brain regions, although the
molecular basis and physiological consequences of these differences remains
incompletely understood.While studies of AQP4 function have historically focused on this cell-level
localization to perivascular processes, more recent work from our group suggests
that dynamic subcellular relocalization of AQP4, from intracellular vesicles to the
plasma membrane, may play a crucial role in the regulation of AQP4 function. The plasma membrane
abundance of most mammalian aquaporins has been shown to respond to distinct
cellular or environmental triggers, such as hormones or changes in tonicity. This is best described
for AQP2, for which trafficking in response to the pituitary hormone arginine
vasopressin (AVP) involves regulated exocytosis of AQP2-containing storage vesicles
in the kidney collecting duct principal cells. Although the specific triggers will vary
between isoforms and cell types, studies indicate that the dynamic subcellular
relocalization of human aquaporins share several features: (i) a trigger causing a
signalling cascade leading to site-specific aquaporin phosphorylation; (ii) the
subsequent movement of aquaporin-containing vesicles along the microtubule network;
and (iii) vesicle fusion with the plasma membrane. Our recent work has shown that AQP4
plasma membrane abundance is tightly and dynamically regulated at the subcellular
level by relocalization to and from intracellular vesicular pools in response to
non-hormonal stimuli in astrocyte cultures.,, These include the changes in local oxygen tension and
osmolality that are caused by traumatic injury and stroke. Targeting this regulatory
mechanism is a viable anti-oedema therapy in rodent models of spinal cord injury,
traumatic brain injury and stroke.,Pore-blocking molecules for aquaporins remain difficult to develop. The small
diameter of the aquaporin pore (water molecules traverse the pore in single file),
the fact that interactions are limited to hydrogen bonding and a lack of in vitro
assays suitable for screening and validating the pharmacological regulation of
aquaporin function are
all factors. This lack of tool compounds to modulate aquaporin function means that
many fundamental questions about water homeostasis remain unanswered. Here we review
the physiological and pathophysiological roles of AQP4 in the CNS, with a focus on
novel insights into the mechanisms of glymphatic clearance in the maintenance of
brain water homeostasis and new approaches to drug discovery that can be derived
from the discovery of dynamic AQP4 subcellular relocalization.
Physiological roles of AQP4: the glymphatic pathway
Since 2012, AQP4 has been
implicated as a key determinant of glymphatic function (Fig. 2). The glymphatic system (recently and
comprehensively reviewed by Rasmussen and colleagues) is a brain-wide network of perivascular
pathways along which CSF enters the brain and interstitial solutes are cleared., Glymphatic exchange is
driven by arterial pulsation,, is active primarily during sleep, and
contributes to the clearance of interstitial amyloid-β,, tau, and other solutes such as lactate, and inflammatory
cytokines.
Figure 2
The glymphatic pathway. The glymphatic system is a perivascular
network that facilitates fluid exchange between the CSF and interstitial
compartments, supporting the clearance of interstitial solutes. The function
of the glymphatic system relies on perivascular astrocyte AQP4 expression.
In the healthy young brain, AQP4 localizes to the astrocyte endfeet along
the perivascular space (top left, arrows). In the context
of ageing and Alzheimer’s disease, perivascular AQP4 levels are
reduced while cellular AQP4 levels are increased (bottom
left, arrows). The loss of AQP4 from perivascular astrocytic
endfeet slows glymphatic clearance, which may accelerate amyloid-β
accumulation and cognitive decline. The column on the right
details specific findings from studies in rodents (top) and
humans (bottom).
The glymphatic pathway. The glymphatic system is a perivascular
network that facilitates fluid exchange between the CSF and interstitial
compartments, supporting the clearance of interstitial solutes. The function
of the glymphatic system relies on perivascular astrocyte AQP4 expression.
In the healthy young brain, AQP4 localizes to the astrocyte endfeet along
the perivascular space (top left, arrows). In the context
of ageing and Alzheimer’s disease, perivascular AQP4 levels are
reduced while cellular AQP4 levels are increased (bottom
left, arrows). The loss of AQP4 from perivascular astrocytic
endfeet slows glymphatic clearance, which may accelerate amyloid-β
accumulation and cognitive decline. The column on the right
details specific findings from studies in rodents (top) and
humans (bottom).Both glymphatic influx of CSF and interstitial solute clearance are dependent upon
perivascular AQP4. In the initial description of the glymphatic system,
Aqp4 gene deletion was observed to slow CSF tracer influx and
interstitial tracer efflux in mice. Similarly, deletion of the Aqp4
gene slowed the clearance of amyloid-β from the brain, and promoted the formation of amyloid
plaques. Although
one study failed to reproduce this effect of Aqp4 gene deletion on
CSF tracer distribution,
a subsequent study reporting data from five independent laboratories using five
different transgenic mouse lines confirmed the role of AQP4 in perivascular
glymphatic exchange. In
that study, Stna1 gene deletion was observed to impair glymphatic
function, demonstrating that perivascular localization of AQP4 plays a critical role
in AQP4-dependent glymphatic exchange.Under physiological conditions in mice, increasing perivascular AQP4 levels during
rest and declining perivascular AQP4 levels during activity were associated with
increased, and reduced glymphatic function, respectively. Pathologically, glymphatic function is
impaired in ageing mice,
following traumatic brain injury, and in rodent models of cerebrovascular disease. In each case, impairment of perivascular
exchange was associated with a reduction in the cell-level localization of AQP4 to
perivascular processes.,, When this perivascular localization of AQP4 is
disrupted by deletion of the Snta1 gene, glymphatic function is
similarly impaired.
While these findings suggest that one of the roles of perivascular AQP4 is to
facilitate the exchange of CSF and interstitial fluid along the axis of the cerebral
vasculature, thereby supporting solute distribution and waste clearance, the
mechanism controlling changes in the cell-level localization of AQP4 to perivascular
endfeet under physiological and pathological conditions remains to be established.
Importantly, these studies defining the role of perivascular AQP4 in glymphatic
function have not clearly distinguished between AQP4 pools inserted into the endfoot
plasma membrane and those in sub-membrane vesicles. The manner in which cell-level
changes in perivascular AQP4 localization interact with the recently described
dynamic subcellular changes in AQP4 abundance to govern glymphatic function remains to be
explored.
Pathological roles of AQP4
Neurodegenerative disease
Ageing, cerebrovascular disease, prior exposure to traumatic brain injury, and
sleep disruption are established and emerging risk factors for the development
of neurodegenerative conditions, including Alzheimer’s disease. In animal
models of each, glymphatic function is impaired.,, Given the role of perivascular
glymphatic exchange in amyloid-β, and tau, clearance, impairment of glymphatic pathway
function is now proposed to be important in the development of these
conditions.
While imaging of glymphatic function using dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI
(DCE-MRI) has only recently begun,, early studies demonstrate that glymphatic function
in humans is impaired in normal-pressure hydrocephalus, and in the presence of small vessel
disease.The role of glymphatic impairment in the development of other neurodegenerative
diseases has not yet been directly evaluated, but emerging data from studies in
human populations suggest a role for AQP4 in these conditions. In a post-mortem
case series, reduced
perivascular AQP4 abundance was observed in the frontal cortex of subjects
diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease, while preservation of perivascular
AQP4 abundance was observed in subjects remaining cognitively intact over the
age of 85. The reduced perivascular AQP4 abundance was further associated with
increasing amyloid-β and tau pathology, as well as with global measures
of cognitive decline. In three recent genetics studies carried out in distinct
human populations, single nucleotide polymorphisms in the human
AQP4 gene were associated with variation in cognitive
decline, amyloid
burden and clinical status, and an association between sleep disruption and
amyloid burden. A
recent human transcriptomic study further demonstrated that in addition to the
expression of AQP4, differences in the expression of genes
whose products determine perivascular AQP4 localization (specifically genes
encoding elements of the DAC, SNTA1, DTNA,
DMD, DAG1) were associated with dementia
status and temporal cortical tau pathology. These findings suggest that changes
in AQP4 expression and localization may contribute to the development and
progression of neurodegenerative diseases, including Alzheimer’s disease,
in human populations. Understanding the emerging role of dynamic AQP4
subcellular relocalization provides a new framework to understand waste
clearance in the healthy brain and opens up new treatment avenues to slow the
progression of neurodegenerative diseases.
CNS oedema
Following a traumatic primary injury to the brain or spinal cord, a series of
molecular cascades is triggered that results in further neuronal and glial cell
death from inflammation, changes in brain energy metabolism and/or
ischaemia/hypoxia, referred to as secondary damage., These molecular changes have
architectural and functional consequences, including the development of oedema,
the formation of glial scars and cavities, and neuronal cell loss. It is now clear that
no single pathological feature can be explained in isolation in this complex
process, which remains incompletely understood (Fig. 3). It is established that water flows into CNS
tissue through AQP4, but the source of the water (whether the blood column, or
the CSF/perivascular spaces) remains controversial.
Figure 3
The pathogenesis of traumatic injury in the CNS. In the
primary injury phase, the brain or spinal cord is injured following
external insult. This primary injury results in mechanical damage to
neurons, astrocytes, oligodendrocytes and blood vessels. A series of
secondary injury cascades then occurs that potentiates the primary
injury. In the earlier post-injury stages, damaged blood vessels may
haemorrhage, resulting in ischaemia and release of inflammatory
cytokines (e.g. TGF-β, TNF-α, IL-1, and IL-6). These
cytokines attract blood-borne inflammatory cells such as neutrophils,
macrophages and leucocytes, which act both to clear up cellular debris,
but also cause further damage to healthy cells by enhancing local
inflammation, eventually leading to neuronal loss from inflammatory
damage and through Wallerian degeneration following oligodendrocyte
death and demyelination. Damaged neurons may secrete free radicals,
nitric oxide (NO), glutamate, and Ca2+, which further
potentiate cellular damage by causing mitochondrial dysfunction leading
to the loss of ATP, and by causing localized excitotoxicity.
Collectively, these two events result in the loss of
Na+/K+-ATPase activity and the
loss of oxygen tension in astrocytes, which results in cytotoxic oedema
through increased water absorption through AQP4 (blue). This is followed
by ionic dysregulation, eventually leading to swelling via vasogenic
oedema and cavity formation limited by the formation of a glial scar,
which obstructs neuronal regrowth and enhances cell damage. Created
using www.biorender.com.
The pathogenesis of traumatic injury in the CNS. In the
primary injury phase, the brain or spinal cord is injured following
external insult. This primary injury results in mechanical damage to
neurons, astrocytes, oligodendrocytes and blood vessels. A series of
secondary injury cascades then occurs that potentiates the primary
injury. In the earlier post-injury stages, damaged blood vessels may
haemorrhage, resulting in ischaemia and release of inflammatory
cytokines (e.g. TGF-β, TNF-α, IL-1, and IL-6). These
cytokines attract blood-borne inflammatory cells such as neutrophils,
macrophages and leucocytes, which act both to clear up cellular debris,
but also cause further damage to healthy cells by enhancing local
inflammation, eventually leading to neuronal loss from inflammatory
damage and through Wallerian degeneration following oligodendrocyte
death and demyelination. Damaged neurons may secrete free radicals,
nitric oxide (NO), glutamate, and Ca2+, which further
potentiate cellular damage by causing mitochondrial dysfunction leading
to the loss of ATP, and by causing localized excitotoxicity.
Collectively, these two events result in the loss of
Na+/K+-ATPase activity and the
loss of oxygen tension in astrocytes, which results in cytotoxic oedema
through increased water absorption through AQP4 (blue). This is followed
by ionic dysregulation, eventually leading to swelling via vasogenic
oedema and cavity formation limited by the formation of a glial scar,
which obstructs neuronal regrowth and enhances cell damage. Created
using www.biorender.com.Oedema is a particular issue in the injured CNS because of the limited space (in
the skull and spine) into which damaged tissue can swell. This is relevant
following not only traumatic injury, but also in stroke and CNS tumours. In the
last decade, the reclassification of oedema as cytotoxic, ionic or vasogenic
(Fig. 4) based on observed
changes in the brain has been widely adopted. Cytotoxic oedema (Fig. 4A) is defined as intracellular
water accumulation without BBB disruption, usually as a consequence of the loss
of oxygen tension. Morphologically, it is characterized by the swelling of
astrocytes and the focal swelling of neuronal dendrites (known as beading)., Ionic oedema (Fig. 4B) results from influx of water
and sodium ions into the brain parenchyma prior to tight junction dysfunction,
and is usually associated with cytotoxic oedema. Vasogenic oedema is a result of
BBB dysfunction (Fig. 4C). The
sources of water driving the formation of brain oedema remain a topic of
debate.,,, Methodological advances over the past decades,
including two-photon microscopy and MRI, have led to new insights into the role
of fluid in the perivascular spaces and the glymphatic system. In a recent study
using a mouse ischaemic stroke model, the use of 22Na+
suggested that the CSF, not the blood, is the source of sodium ions. CSF was also
identified as a major source of water driving AQP4-dependent oedema. Due to the
incompressibility of CSF, enhanced influx of CSF into the parenchyma must be
balanced either by enhanced secretion of CSF at the choroid plexus, enhanced
drainage of CSF, or a change in the total volume of the ventricles and
perivascular spaces. Temporarily limiting CSF secretion by targeting aquaporins
or ion pumps in the choroid plexus membrane might therefore limit oedema
formation in the short-term.
Figure 4
Classification of CNS oedema. (A) Cytotoxic
oedema is defined by astrocyte swelling (black arrows) followed by
neuronal dendrite swelling. The net entry of water (blue arrows), most
likely from the perivascular space, is caused by disruption of cellular
ion homeostasis (green arrows) following hypoxic insult.
(B) Ionic oedema is characterized by transcapillary sodium
ion and anion fluxes associated with cellular uptake of ions from the
perivascular CSF, and entry of water into the brain parenchyma.
Astrocytes continue to be swollen (black arrows) by water from the
perivascular space and the vascular compartment. Neuronal death produces
cellular debris in the extracellular space (ECS). (C)
Vasogenic oedema is a result of BBB dysfunction, possibly following
ionic oedema. Increased transcytosis may contribute to the entry of
plasma elements (brown), followed by water. Clearance of debris from the
ECS produced by neuronal cell death may also occur by transcytosis
(green). In some severe cases, the tight junctions between the
endothelial cells are weakened leading to increased permeability of
cerebral blood vessels to plasma components. Created using www.biorender.com.
Classification of CNS oedema. (A) Cytotoxic
oedema is defined by astrocyte swelling (black arrows) followed by
neuronal dendrite swelling. The net entry of water (blue arrows), most
likely from the perivascular space, is caused by disruption of cellular
ion homeostasis (green arrows) following hypoxic insult.
(B) Ionic oedema is characterized by transcapillary sodium
ion and anion fluxes associated with cellular uptake of ions from the
perivascular CSF, and entry of water into the brain parenchyma.
Astrocytes continue to be swollen (black arrows) by water from the
perivascular space and the vascular compartment. Neuronal death produces
cellular debris in the extracellular space (ECS). (C)
Vasogenic oedema is a result of BBB dysfunction, possibly following
ionic oedema. Increased transcytosis may contribute to the entry of
plasma elements (brown), followed by water. Clearance of debris from the
ECS produced by neuronal cell death may also occur by transcytosis
(green). In some severe cases, the tight junctions between the
endothelial cells are weakened leading to increased permeability of
cerebral blood vessels to plasma components. Created using www.biorender.com.In traumatic brain injury and spinal cord injury, where the BBB/BSCB can be
damaged directly by the primary injury (i.e. cytotoxic and vasogenic oedema
co-exist), the source of water and sodium ions is likely to be a mixture of CSF
and blood, with the exact ratio depending on the extent of BBB damage. Further
endothelial dysfunction, secondary to the primary insult, leads to vasogenic
oedema (Fig. 4C). For many years,
it was proposed that BBB breakdown is required to facilitate the entry of plasma
proteins into the extracellular space. However, more recent work has shown that
vasogenic oedema can occur without physical rupture of endothelial cells. Although the suppression of
transcellular transport (transcytosis) at the BBB is an active process that
maintains a functional barrier, increased transcytosis observed in injured
capillary endothelial cells may contribute to plasma protein entry, exacerbating
brain swelling.
Transcytosis may also be involved in the elimination of some proteins from the
perivascular space back into the blood stream. Relocalization of AQP4 to the
perivascular astrocyte membrane facilitates cytotoxic oedema, and may also increase
the rate at which ionic oedema develops, both by increasing astrocyte membrane
water permeability and possibly by regulating the endfoot membrane localization
of ion channels via direct interaction (e.g. with Kir4.1, TRPV4,
SUR1-TRPM4).Current available therapies for the treatment of brain oedema are hypertonic
mannitol or saline, steroids for tumour-induced brain swelling and, once the
oedema becomes life-threatening, decompressive craniotomy. The reliability and validity of the
results of high-dose mannitol trials in the treatment of traumatic brain injury
have been questioned; a Cochrane review concluded that insufficient evidence
was available to recommend mannitol for the management of traumatic brain injury
patients.
Although hypertonic saline is used to treat brain oedema following ischaemic
stroke, a
Cochrane review similarly reported that conclusions could not be drawn about the
efficacy and safety of hypertonic saline or other intracranial
pressure‐lowering agents in the management of acute traumatic brain
injury. While
the use of steroids did not reduce oedema following stroke, some success was reported in reducing
brain tumour-associated oedema with dexamethasone. However, the molecular pathogenesis
of tumour-associated oedema is quite different from that of trauma or
stroke-associated oedema, as it is primarily driven by neoangiogenesis of
vessels under-expressing tight junction proteins within the tumour. A recent study
suggested that loss of AQP4 assembly into OAPs may facilitate evasion of
apoptosis and enhanced migration in glioma cells, but how this interacts with
tumour-associated oedema or AQP4 localization remains unexplored.Little is known about mechanisms controlling the resolution of brain oedema.
Early experiments showed that increased AQP4 expression was associated with
oedema resolution,, and in a vasogenic oedema model,
Aqp4−/− mice developed
significantly increased intracranial pressure compared to wild-type mice,
confirming a role for AQP4 in oedema resolution. Understanding this dynamic
mechanism, including the role of the glymphatic system, will guide the
development of new therapeutic approaches to treating oedema.
Neuromyelitis optica
Neuromyelitis optica (NMO) is a rare but severe demyelinating autoimmune
inflammatory condition of the CNS, formerly classified as a type of multiple
sclerosis that primarily affects the optic nerve and spinal cord. The majority of NMO
patients have autoantibodies against AQP4 (termed NMO-IgG) detectable in their
serum. The
mechanisms by which NMO-IgG cause the pathophysiological features of NMO remain
elusive,
although administration of NMO-IgG leads to NMO-like pathology in rodents,, providing strong
evidence that NMO-IgG is causative. However, different NMO-IgGs can have large
differences in their ability to activate complement upon AQP4 binding, with some
epitopes more facilitative for IgG hexamerization, meaning that there is not a
simple relationship between antibody titre and disease severity. There is also
evidence to support the idea that NMO-IgG facilitates both complement-dependent
and complement-independent astrocytopathy., Most NMO-IgGs preferentially bind
the M23 isoform of AQP4, but this selectivity appears to depend on an OAP
assembly-associated conformation of the extracellular loops of AQP4, rather than
a difference between the M1 and M23 proteins per se., The effect of
NMO-IgG on OAP size is unclear; one study reported an increase in average OAP
size following NMO-IgG binding, another found no effect and a third reported a decrease in
average OAP size.
More recent work suggests that changes in the dynamics (rather than the average
size of OAPs) may be altered by NMO-IgG, with potential consequences for
glutamatergic synapse function. Similarly, whether NMO-IgG inhibits AQP4 water
channel function is controversial,; an exquisitely tight seal between
the extracellular domain of AQP4 and NMO-IgG would be required to inhibit water
transport. The potential effects of NMO-IgG on AQP4-mediated glymphatic function
remain unexplored.
Neuroinflammatory disorders
AQP4 may also have a role in CNS inflammation in a manner that is independent of
autoantibody formation. AQP4 expression, either on peripheral immune cells, or
on CNS astrocytes may regulate CNS immune cell migration and trafficking, or
glial activation and cytokine production, respectively. One study using
Aqp4−/− mice reported that the
central neuroinflammatory response to CNS lipopolysaccharide (LPS) injection,
including TNFα release, was reduced, suggesting a pro-inflammatory role
for AQP4. In a
more recent study, Aqp4 gene deletion altered astroglial
cytokine release and exacerbated α-synuclein pathology in a rodent model
of Parkinson’s disease. These studies suggest that AQP4 may function to
regulate CNS cytokine signalling. Given the role of AQP4 in glymphatic
clearance,, one possible explanation for these findings is
that AQP4-dependent glymphatic exchange contributes to the distribution and
clearance of cytokines within the CNS. The impacts that physiological and
pathological changes in AQP4 localization have on its inflammatory roles remain
to be defined.
New horizons for drug discovery
IMD-0354/AER-270, TGN-020, acetazolamide, budesonide, furosemide, and various
anti-epileptics have all been proposed to be AQP4 inhibitors on the basis of
data primarily derived from the Xenopus laevis oocyte swelling
assay. When
retested in transport assays using primary astrocytes expressing endogenous
AQP4, mammalian cell lines overexpressing exogenous AQP4 or recombinant AQP4
protein, many putative pore-blockers have been found to lack AQP4 inhibitory
function.,, It therefore remains unclear, after
several decades of effort, whether a specific AQP4 pore-blocking inhibitor can
be developed, providing impetus to explore alternative strategies, such as
targeting dynamic AQP4 subcellular relocalization.Several lines of evidence over the last decade have also highlighted the diverse
functions of aquaporins beyond water homeostasis. AQP4 has been proposed to associate
with various ion channels in the astrocyte membrane, including the inwardly
rectifying potassium channel Kir4.1, the mechanosensitive cation channel TRPV4, and the ABC
protein/TRP channel complex SUR1-TRPM4. AQP4 and Kir4.1 are co-localized in astrocyte
membranes, and
co-immunoprecipitate from glial cells. This interaction was proposed to support
potassium ion spatial buffering by astrocytes after neuronal activity, and cellular
potassium ion reuptake is delayed in
Aqp4−/− mice in an epilepsy
model,
although it still unclear whether there is a functional relationship between
AQP4 and Kir4.1.
However, there is some evidence that Kir4.1 limits the osmotic swelling of
spinal cord astrocyte processes., In several cell types, TRP channel
plasma membrane trafficking is dependent on the expression of an aquaporin
protein. AQP4
and the SUR1-TRPM4 monovalent cation channel complex co-immunoprecipitated when
overexpressed in COS-7 cells, preactivation of SUR1 with diazoxide increased
astrocyte swelling in response to a calcium ionophore, and SUR1-TRPM4 was
upregulated and TRPM4 knockout blocked astrocyte swelling in a mouse cerebellar
cold injury model.
Furthermore, inhibition of the SUR1-TRMP4 complex using glyburide reduces oedema
formation in multiple rodent models of brain pathology. This work raises the intriguing
possibility that as well as directly regulating astrocyte membrane water
permeability, AQP4 facilitates membrane insertion of oedema-associated TRP
channels. Based on the new molecular understanding of the role and mechanisms of
dynamic AQP4 subcellular relocalization and protein–protein interactions
in CNS oedema, novel anti-oedema therapies are likely to emerge. This is of the
utmost importance because there are currently no pharmacological tools to
prevent or reduce CNS oedema. Treatment therefore focuses on symptom management,
which is only possible after the oedema has developed (and has caused secondary
damage) and which uses interventions developed decades ago. These new
possibilities for drug discovery offer new hope to the millions of people
annually affected by CNS oedema and neurodegenerative diseases.The dependence of the field on static, in vitro models rather
than dynamic, in vivo visualization may have contributed to
both the glymphatic system and AQP4 subcellular relocalization remaining
undiscovered for so long. Recapitulating the complex structure and function of
the BBB in vitro is challenging. Rodent in
vivo studies and slice cultures are anatomically more realistic,
but are hampered by species differences in BBB function and by the isolation of
tissue slices from the blood circulation, peripheral immune actors, and both CSF
and intracranial pressure dynamics. New developments in 3D tissue engineering,
organ-on-a-chip technologies, and induced pluripotent stem cell differentiation
may help the field to begin to address some of these limitations. Future gains in our understanding of
astroglial and AQP4 contributions to CNS physiology, and how their dysfunction
contributes to the development of CNS disease, will likely depend on the
combined use of emerging in vitro techniques, such as
BBB/glymphatics-on-a-chip, to dissect specific physiological processes along
with dynamic in vivo approaches that preserve the full anatomy
and physiology of the glial–vascular unit.
Funding
We acknowledge grants from the Biotechnology and Biosciences Research Council (to
R.M.B., A.C.C., and P.K. through BB/P025927/1), Aston University (to P.K. through a
50th Anniversary Prize Fellowship), the Swedish Research Council (to
S.T.-H. through 2013–05945); the Crafoord Foundation (to S.T.-H. through
20140811 and 20180916) and the Magnus Bergvall Foundation (to S.T.-H. through
2015–01534).
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