4.7 Article

Sleep loss disrupts pericyte-brain endothelial cell interactions impairing blood-brain barrier function

期刊

BRAIN BEHAVIOR AND IMMUNITY
卷 89, 期 -, 页码 118-132

出版社

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.bbi.2020.05.077

关键词

Blood-brain barrier; Brain endothelial cells; Connexin 43; PDGFR-beta; Pericytes; Sleep loss; Tight junctions

资金

  1. Universidad Autonoma Metropolitana

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Sleep loss in the rat increases blood-brain barrier permeability to circulating molecules by disrupting inter-endothelial tight junctions. Despite the description of the ultrastructure of cerebral microvessels and the evidence of an apparent pericyte detachment from capillary wall in sleep restricted rats the effect of sleep loss on pericytes is unknown. Here we characterized the interactions between pericytes and brain endothelial cells after sleep loss using male Wistar rats. Animals were sleep-restricted 20 h daily with 4 h sleep recovery for 10 days. At the end of the sleep restriction, brain microvessels (MVs) were isolated from cerebral cortex and hippocampus and processed for Western blot and immunocytochemistry to evaluate markers of pericyte-endothelial cell interaction (connexin 43, PDGFR-beta), tight junction proteins, and proinflammatory mediator proteins (MMP9, A(2A) adenosine receptor, CD73, NF kappa B). Sleep restriction reduced PDGFR-beta and connexin 43 expression in MVs; in addition, scanning electron microscopy micrographs showed that pericytes were detached from capillary walls, but did not undergo apoptosis (as depicted by a reduced active caspase-3 expression). Sleep restriction also decreased tight junction protein expression in MVs and increased BBB permeability to low- and high-molecular weight tracers in in vivo permeability assays. Those alterations seemed to depend on a low-grade inflammatory status as reflected by the increased expression of phosphorylated NF kappa B and A2A adenosine receptor in brain endothelial cells from the sleep-restricted rats. Our data show that pericyte-brain endothelial cell interaction is altered by sleep restriction; this evidence is essential to understand the role of sleep in regulating blood-brain barrier function.

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