4.6 Article

Stress does not increase blood-brain barrier permeability in mice

Journal

JOURNAL OF CEREBRAL BLOOD FLOW AND METABOLISM
Volume 36, Issue 7, Pages 1304-1315

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/0271678X16647739

Keywords

blood-brain barrier; basic science stress; hippocampus; hypothermia; neurovascular unit

Funding

  1. Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich postdoc fellowship
  2. Roche fellowship
  3. University of Zurich
  4. Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich
  5. Swiss National Science Foundation
  6. Roche

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Several studies have reported that exposure to acute psychophysiological stressors can lead to an increase in blood-brain barrier permeability, but these findings remain controversial and disputed. We thoroughly examined this issue by assessing the effect of several well-established paradigms of acute stress and chronic stress on blood-brain barrier permeability in several brain areas of adult mice. Using cerebral extraction ratio for the small molecule tracer sodium fluorescein (NaF, 376 Da) as a sensitive measure of blood-brain barrier permeability, we find that neither acute swim nor restraint stress lead to increased cerebral extraction ratio. Daily 6-h restraint stress for 21 days, a model for the severe detrimental impact of chronic stress on brain function, also does not alter cerebral extraction ratio. In contrast, we find that cold forced swim and cold restraint stress both lead to a transient, pronounced decrease of cerebral extraction ratio in hippocampus and cortex, suggesting that body temperature can be an important confounding factor in studies of blood-brain barrier permeability. To additionally assess if stress could change blood-brain barrier permeability for macromolecules, we measured cerebral extraction ratio for fluorescein isothiocyanate-dextran (70kDa). We find that neither acute restraint nor cold swim stress affected blood-brain barrier permeability for macromolecules, thus corroborating our findings that various stressors do not increase blood-brain barrier permeability.

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