4.8 Article

Precapillary sphincters and pericytes at first-order capillaries as key regulators for brain capillary perfusion

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2023749118

Keywords

pericytes; vascular smooth muscle; arterioles; capillaries; neurovascular coupling (NVC)

Funding

  1. Lundbeck Foundation
  2. Danish Medical Research Council
  3. Alice Brenaa Foundation
  4. Augustinus Foundation
  5. Carl og Ellen Hertz Familielegat
  6. NOVO Nordisk Foundation
  7. Nordea Foundation

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The study demonstrates that precapillary sphincters and first-order capillaries are more responsive to factors such as synaptic activity, vasoactive molecules, etc., compared to surrounding arterioles and downstream capillaries, with similar kinetics. The role of precapillary sphincters and pericytes on first-order capillaries in regulating capillary blood flow and pressure is crucial in responding to brain-derived vascular signals.
Rises in local neural activity trigger local increases of cerebral blood flow, which is essential to match local energy demands. However, the specific location of microvascular flow control is incompletely understood. Here, we used two-photon microscopy to observe brain microvasculature in vivo. Small spatial movement of a threedimensional (3D) vasculature makes it challenging to precisely measure vessel diameter at a single x-y plane. To overcome this problem, we carried out four-dimensional (x-y-z-t) imaging of brain microvessels during exposure to vasoactive molecules in order to constrain the impact of brain movements on the recordings. We demonstrate that rises in synaptic activity, acetylcholine, nitric oxide, cyclic guanosine monophosphate, ATP-sensitive potassium channels, and endothelin-1 exert far greater effects on brain precapillary sphincters and first-order capillaries than on penetrating arterioles or downstream capillaries, but with similar kinetics. The high level of responsiveness at precapillary sphincters and first-order capillaries was matched by a higher level of alpha-smooth muscle actin in pericytes as compared to penetrating arterioles and downstream capillaries. Mathematical modeling based on 3D vasculature reconstruction showed that precapillary sphincters predominantly regulate capillary blood flow and pressure as compared to penetrating arterioles and downstream capillaries. Our results confirm a key role for precapillary sphincters and pericytes on first-order capillaries as sensors and effectors of endothelium- or brain-derived vascular signals.

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