4.6 Article

Endothelial cell disruption drives increased blood-brain barrier permeability and cerebral edema in the Dahl SS/jr rat model of superimposed preeclampsia

Journal

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/ajpheart.00383.2020

Keywords

autoregulation; cerebral blood flow; electron microscopy; fluorescent dextran; myogenic tone

Funding

  1. NIH [R01 HL-136684, 1R01 HL-137673, R01 HL-134711, 5T32 HL-105324-10]
  2. American Heart Association [20PRE352000021]
  3. UMMC Medical Student Research Program (MSRP)
  4. NIGMS, including Mississippi INBRE [P20 GM-103476]
  5. Obesity, Cardiorenal and Metabolic Diseases-COBRE [P20 GM-104357]
  6. Mississippi Center of Excellence in Perinatal Research (MS-CEPR)-COBRE [P20 GM-121334]

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Preeclampsia is characterized by hypertension and proteinuria in late pregnancy, with potential neurological symptoms like headaches and vision problems. Using animal models is essential to understanding the pathogenesis of this condition.
Preeclampsia is characterized by increases in blood pressure and proteinuria in late pregnancy, and neurological symptoms can appear in the form of headaches, blurred vision, cerebral edema, and, in the most severe cases, seizures (eclampsia). The causes for these cerebral manifestations remain unknown, so the use of animal models that mimic preeclampsia is essential to understanding its pathogenesis. The Dahl salt-sensitive (Dahl SS/jr) rat model develops spontaneous preeclampsia superimposed on chronic hypertension; therefore, we hypothesized that the Dahi SS/jr rat would display cerebrovascular features similar to those seen in human preeclampsia. Furthermore, we predicted that this model would allow for the identification of mechanisms underlying these changes. The pregnant Dahl SS/jr rat displayed increased cerebral edema and blood-brain barrier disruption despite tighter control of cerebral blood flow autoregulation and vascular smooth muscle myogenic tone. Analysis of cerebral endothelial cell morphology revealed increased opening of tight junctions, basement membrane dissolution, and vesicle formation. RNAseq analysis identified that genes related to endothelial cell tight junctions and blood-brain barrier integrity were differentially expressed in cerebral vessels from pregnant Dahl SS/jr compared with healthy pregnant Sprague Dawley rats. Overall, our data reveal new insights into mechanisms involved in the cerebrovascular dysfunction of preeclampsia. NEW & NOTEWORTHY This study uses the Dahl SS/jr rat as a preclinical model of spontaneous superimposed preeclampsia to demonstrate uncoupling of cerebral vascular permeability and blood-brain barrier disruption from cerebral blood flow autoregulatory dysfunction and myogenic tone. Additionally, the data presented in this study lay the foundational framework on which future experiments assessing specific transcellular transport components such as individual transporter protein expression and components of the vesicular transport system (caveolae) can be built to help reveal a potential direct mechanistic insight into the causes of cerebrovascular complications during preeclamptic pregnancies.

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