4.7 Article

Cerebral Pericytes and Endothelial Cells Communicate through Inflammasome-Dependent Signals

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms22116122

Keywords

blood-brain barrier; brain pericyte; cerebral endothelial cell; interleukin-1 beta; inflammasome; neuroinflammation; neurovascular unit; tight junctions

Funding

  1. National Research, Development and Innovation Office (NKFIH, Hungary) [PD121130, FK132638, FK124114, K135425, K135475, GINOP2.3.2-15-2016-00034]
  2. Executive Agency for Higher Education, Research, Development and Innovation Funding (UEFISCDI, Romania) [PN-III-P1-1.1-TE-2019-1302, PN-IIIP4-ID-PCE-2020-1529]
  3. Ministry for Innovation and Technology of Hungary [UNKP-20-4-SZTE-138]
  4. Hungarian Academy of Sciences [BO/00213/19/8]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Cells in the neurovascular unit actively participate in neuroinflammatory reactions by upregulating cell adhesion molecules and secreting proinflammatory cytokines. Both pericytes and endothelial cells can activate inflammasomes, with the noncanonical pathway being demonstrated in both types of cells. This activation leads to increased secretion of interleukin-1 beta and disruption of tight junctions. Overall, mutual activation of pericytes and endothelial cells occurs in inflammation, with inflammatory responses and barrier properties being affected.
By upregulation of cell adhesion molecules and secretion of proinflammatory cytokines, cells of the neurovascular unit, including pericytes and endothelial cells, actively participate in neuroinflammatory reactions. As previously shown, both cell types can activate inflammasomes, cerebral endothelial cells (CECs) through the canonical pathway, while pericytes only through the noncanonical pathway. Using complex in vitro models, we demonstrate here that the noncanonical inflammasome pathway can be induced in CECs as well, leading to a further increase in the secretion of active interleukin-1 beta over that observed in response to activation of the canonical pathway. In parallel, a more pronounced disruption of tight junctions takes place. We also show that CECs respond to inflammatory stimuli coming from both the apical/blood and the basolateral/brain directions. As a result, CECs can detect factors secreted by pericytes in which the noncanonical inflammasome pathway is activated and respond with inflammatory activation and impairment of the barrier properties. In addition, upon sensing inflammatory signals, CECs release inflammatory factors toward both the blood and the brain sides. Consequently, CECs activate pericytes by upregulating their expression of NLRP3 (NOD-, LRR-, and pyrin domain-containing protein 3), an inflammasome-forming pattern recognition receptor. In conclusion, cerebral pericytes and endothelial cells mutually activate each other in inflammation.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available