4.7 Article

Venular degeneration leads to vascular dysfunction in a transgenic model of Alzheimer's disease

Journal

BRAIN
Volume 138, Issue -, Pages 1046-1058

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/brain/awv023

Keywords

cerebral amyloid angiopathy; mural cells; venules; arterioles; amyloid-beta peptide

Funding

  1. CIHR MOP [102467]
  2. Partnership for Stroke Recovery
  3. CIHR Fellowship
  4. Cryptic Rite Charitable Foundation

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Most studies of vascular pathology in Alzheimer's disease have focused on amyloid-induced damage to capillaries and arterioles. Using the TgCRND8 mouse model, Lai et al. show that pathology also extends to the draining vasculature. Venules are depleted of their ensheathing contractile mural cells, resulting in a reduction in vascular reactivity.Most patients with Alzheimer's disease exhibit accumulation of amyloid-beta peptide on leptomeningeal and cortical arterioles, or cerebral amyloid angiopathy, which is associated with impaired vascular reactivity and accelerated cognitive decline. Despite widespread recognition of the significance of vascular dysfunction in Alzheimer's disease aetiology and progression, much uncertainty still surrounds the mechanism underlying Alzheimer's disease vascular injury. Studies to date have focused on amyloid-beta-induced damage to capillaries and plaque-associated arterioles, without examining effects across the entire vascular bed. In the present study, we investigated the structural and functional impairment of the feeding arteriolar versus draining venular vessels in a transgenic murine Alzheimer's disease model, with a particular focus on the mural cell populations that dictate these vessels' contractility. Although amyloid-beta deposition was restricted to arterioles, we found that vascular impairment extended to the venules, which showed significant depletion of their mural cell coverage by the mid-stage of Alzheimer's disease pathophysiology. These structural abnormalities were accompanied by an abolishment of the normal vascular network flow response to hypercapnia: this functional impairment was so severe as to result in hypercapnia-induced flow decreases in the arterioles. Further pharmacological depletion of mural cells using SU6668, a platelet-derived growth factor receptor-beta antagonist, resulted in profound structural abnormalities of the cortical microvasculature, including vessel coiling and short-range looping, increased tortuosity of the venules but not of the arterioles, increased amyloid-beta deposition on the arterioles, and further alterations of the microvascular network cerebral blood flow response to hypercapnia. Together, this work shows hitherto unrecognized structural alterations in penetrating venules, demonstrates their functional significance and sheds light on the complexity of the relationship between vascular network structure and function in Alzheimer's disease.

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