| Literature DB >> 34951586 |
Esther Sasson1, Shira Anzi1, Batia Bell1, Oren Yakovian2, Meshi Zorsky3, Urban Deutsch4, Britta Engelhardt4, Eilon Sherman2, Gad Vatine3, Ron Dzikowski5, Ayal Ben-Zvi1.
Abstract
Tight junctions (TJs) between blood-brain barrier (BBB) endothelial cells construct a robust physical barrier, whose damage underlies BBB dysfunctions related to several neurodegenerative diseases. What makes these highly specialized BBB-TJs extremely restrictive remains unknown. Here, we use super-resolution microscopy (dSTORM) to uncover new structural and functional properties of BBB TJs. Focusing on three major components, Nano-scale resolution revealed sparse (occludin) vs. clustered (ZO1/claudin-5) molecular architecture. In mouse development, permeable TJs become first restrictive to large molecules, and only later to small molecules, with claudin-5 proteins arrangement compacting during this maturation process. Mechanistically, we reveal that ZO1 clustering is independent of claudin-5 in vivo. In contrast to accepted knowledge, we found that in the developmental context, total levels of claudin-5 inversely correlate with TJ functionality. Our super-resolution studies provide a unique perspective of BBB TJs and open new directions for understanding TJ functionality in biological barriers, ultimately enabling restoration in disease or modulation for drug delivery.Entities:
Keywords: blood-brain-barrier; cell biology; developmental biology; endothelium; mouse; super-resolution; tight-junction
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34951586 PMCID: PMC8747500 DOI: 10.7554/eLife.63253
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Elife ISSN: 2050-084X Impact factor: 8.140