4.6 Article

Profiling the neurovascular unit unveils detrimental effects of osteopontin on the blood-brain barrier in acute ischemic stroke

期刊

ACTA NEUROPATHOLOGICA
卷 144, 期 2, 页码 305-337

出版社

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00401-022-02452-1

关键词

Neurovascular unit (NVU); Blood-brain barrier (BBB); Stroke; RNA-sequencing; Osteopontin; EPAM-ia

资金

  1. Projekt DEAL
  2. Goethe International Postdoc Program (GO-IN)
  3. EU JUSTBRAIN consortium
  4. Sphingonet consortium of LeducQ foundation
  5. ECCPS/CPI
  6. LOEWE Cepter Program
  7. Edinger Foundation
  8. [SFB 1039]
  9. [SFB TR23]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Dysfunction of the blood-brain barrier (BBB) is an important feature of acute ischemic stroke, and targeting multiple neurovascular unit (NVU) cell types may be a promising strategy. However, methods for isolating multiple NVU cell types are lacking. Researchers have developed a method for simultaneous isolation and analysis of major NVU cell types, and identified a potential therapeutic target for improving BBB function in ischemic stroke.
Blood-brain barrier (BBB) dysfunction, characterized by degradation of BBB junctional proteins and increased permeability, is a crucial pathophysiological feature of acute ischemic stroke. Dysregulation of multiple neurovascular unit (NVU) cell types is involved in BBB breakdown in ischemic stroke that may be further aggravated by reperfusion therapy. Therefore, therapeutic co-targeting of dysregulated NVU cell types in acute ischemic stroke constitutes a promising strategy to preserve BBB function and improve clinical outcome. However, methods for simultaneous isolation of multiple NVU cell types from the same diseased central nervous system (CNS) tissue, crucial for the identification of therapeutic targets in dysregulated NVU cells, are lacking. Here, we present the EPAM-ia method, that facilitates simultaneous isolation and analysis of the major NVU cell types (endothelial cells, pericytes, astrocytes and microglia) for the identification of therapeutic targets in dysregulated NVU cells to improve the BBB function. Applying this method, we obtained a high yield of pure NVU cells from murine ischemic brain tissue, and generated a valuable NVU transcriptome database (https://bioinformatics.mpi-bn.mpg.de/SGD_Stroke). Dissection of the NVU transcriptome revealed Spp1, encoding for osteopontin, to be highly upregulated in all NVU cells 24 h after ischemic stroke. Upregulation of osteopontin was confirmed in stroke patients by immunostaining, which was comparable with that in mice. Therapeutic targeting by subcutaneous injection of an anti-osteopontin antibody post-ischemic stroke in mice resulted in neutralization of osteopontin expression in the NVU cell types investigated. Apart from attenuated glial activation, osteopontin neutralization was associated with BBB preservation along with decreased brain edema and reduced risk for hemorrhagic transformation, resulting in improved neurological outcome and survival. This was supported by BBB-impairing effects of osteopontin in vitro. The clinical significance of these findings is that anti-osteopontin antibody therapy might augment current approved reperfusion therapies in acute ischemic stroke by minimizing deleterious effects of ischemia-induced BBB disruption.

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