Although tight-junctions (TJs) at the blood-brain barrier (BBB) are important to prevent non-specific entry of compounds into the CNS, molecular mechanisms regulating TJ maintenance remain still unclear. The purpose of this study was therefore to identify molecules, which regulate occludin expression, derived from astrocytes and pericytes that ensheathe brain microvessels by using conditionally immortalized adult rat brain capillary endothelial (TR-BBB13), type II astrocyte (TR-AST4) and brain pericyte (TR-PCT1) cell lines. Transfilter co-culture with TR-AST4 cells, and exposure to conditioned medium of TR-AST4 cells (AST-CM) or TR-PCT1 cells (PCT-CM) increased occludin mRNA in TR-BBB13 cells. PCT-CM-induced occludin up-regulation was significantly inhibited by an angiopoietin-1-neutralizing antibody, whereas the up-regulation by AST-CM was not. Immunoprecipitation and western blot analyses confirmed that multimeric angiopoietin-1 is secreted from TR-PCT1 cells, and induces occludin mRNA, acting through tyrosine phosphorylation of Tie-2 in TR-BBB13 cells. A fractionated AST-CM study revealed that factors in the molecular weight range of 30-100 kDa led to occludin induction. Conversely, occludin mRNA was reduced by transforming growth factor b1, the mRNA of which was up-regulated in TR-AST4 cells following hypoxic treatment. In conclusion, in vitro BBB model studies revealed that the pericyte-derived multimeric angiopoietin-1/Tie-2 pathway induces occludin expression. Keywords: astrocyte, blood-brain barrier, multimeric angiopoietin-1, occludin, pericyte, Tie-2. Tight-junctions (TJs) form barriers between adjacent brain capillary endothelial cells (BCECs) at the blood-brain barrier (BBB) and play an important role in preventing non-specific paracellular transport in order to protect the CNS. Brain disorders, such as brain tumors, infarcts and encephalitis, cause TJ disruption to allow BBB leakage (Davies 2002). Therefore, clarifying the mechanism of TJ maintenance is important for understanding and treating CNS diseases associated with BBB leakage.BCECs are surrounded by pericytes and astrocyte foot processes. The overall brain microvascular biology is a function of the paracrine interactions between BCECs and the two other types of cells (Pardridge 1999;Gaillard
The purpose of the present study was to clarify the expression, transport properties and regulation of ATP-binding cassette G2 (ABCG2) transporter at the rat blood-brain barrier (BBB). The rat homologue of ABCG2 (rABCG2) was cloned from rat brain capillary fraction. In rABCG2-transfected HEK293 cells, rABCG2 was detected as a glycoprotein complex bridged by disulfide bonds, possibly a homodimer. The protein transported mitoxantrone and BODIPY-prazosin. In rat brain capillary fraction, rABCG2 protein was also detected as a glycosylated and disulfide-linked complex. Immunohistochemical analysis revealed that rABCG2 was localized mainly on the luminal side of rat brain capillaries, suggesting that rABCG2 is involved in brain-to-blood efflux transport. For the regulation study, conditionally immortalized rat brain capillary endothelial (TR-BBB13), astrocyte (TR-AST4) and pericyte (TR-PCT1) cell lines were used as an in vitro BBB model. Following treatment of TR-BBB13 cells with conditioned medium of TR-AST4 cells, the Ko143 (an ABCG2-specific inhibitor)-sensitive transport activity and rABCG2 mRNA level were significantly increased, whereas conditioned medium of TR-PCT1 cells had no effect. These results suggest that rat brain capillaries express functional rABCG2 protein and that the transport activity of the protein is up-regulated by astrocyte-derived soluble factor(s) concomitantly with the induction of rABCG2 mRNA. Keywords: ABCG2, astrocyte, blood-brain barrier, in vitro BBB model.
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