Background and ObjectivesBlood-brain barrier (BBB) dysfunction is an integral feature of neurological disorders and involves the action of multiple proinflammatory cytokines on the microvascular endothelial cells lining cerebral capillaries. There is still however, considerable ambiguity throughout the scientific literature regarding the mechanistic role(s) of cytokines in this context, thereby warranting a comprehensive in vitro investigation into how different cytokines may cause dysregulation of adherens and tight junctions leading to BBB permeabilization.MethodsThe present study employs human brain microvascular endothelial cells (HBMvECs) to compare/contrast the effects of TNF-α and IL-6 on BBB characteristics ranging from the expression of interendothelial junction proteins (VE-cadherin, occludin and claudin-5) to endothelial monolayer permeability. The contribution of cytokine-induced NADPH oxidase activation to altered barrier phenotype was also investigated.ResultsIn response to treatment with either TNF-α or IL-6 (0–100 ng/ml, 0–24 hrs), our studies consistently demonstrated significant dose- and time-dependent decreases in the expression of all interendothelial junction proteins examined, in parallel with dose- and time-dependent increases in ROS generation and HBMvEC permeability. Increased expression and co-association of gp91 and p47, pivotal NADPH oxidase subunits, was also observed in response to either cytokine. Finally, cytokine-dependent effects on junctional protein expression, ROS generation and endothelial permeability could all be attenuated to a comparable extent using a range of antioxidant strategies, which included ROS depleting agents (superoxide dismutase, catalase, N-acetylcysteine, apocynin) and targeted NADPH oxidase blockade (gp91 and p47 siRNA, NSC23766).ConclusionA timely and wide-ranging investigation comparing the permeabilizing actions of TNF-α and IL-6 in HBMvECs is presented, in which we demonstrate how either cytokine can similarly downregulate the expression of interendothelial adherens and tight junction proteins leading to elevation of paracellular permeability. The cytokine-dependent activation of NADPH oxidase leading to ROS generation was also confirmed to be responsible in-part for these events.
An intact functioning blood-brain barrier (BBB) is fundamental to proper homoeostatic maintenance and perfusion of the central nervous system (CNS). Inflammatory damage to the unique microvascular endothelial cell monolayer that constitutes the luminal BBB surface, leading to elevated capillary permeability, has been linked to various neurological disorders ranging from ischaemic stroke and traumatic brain injury, to neurodegenerative disease and CNS infections. Moreover, the neuroinflammatory cascade that typically accompanies BBB failure in these circumstances has been strongly linked to elevated levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines such as tumour necrosis factor-α (TNF-α) and interleukin-6 (IL-6). This mini review will examine our current knowledge of how cytokines may dysregulate the interendothelial paracellular pathway leading to elevated BBB permeability. The mechanistic role of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate oxidase (NADPH oxidase)-induced oxidative stress in these events will also be addressed.
Blood-brain barrier (BBB) regulation involves the coordinated interaction of intercellular adherens and tight junctions in response to stimuli. One such stimulus, shear stress, has been shown to upregulate brain microvascular endothelial cell (BMvEC) barrier function, although our knowledge of the signaling mechanisms involved is limited. In this article, we examined the hypothesis that VE-cadherin can transmit shear signals to tight junction occludin with consequences for pTyr-occludin and barrier function. In initial studies, chronic shear enhanced membrane localization of ZO-1 and claudin-5, decreased pTyr-occludin (in part via a dephostatin-sensitive mechanism), and reduced BMvEC permeability, with flow reduction in pre-sheared BMvECs having converse effects. In further studies, VE-cadherin inhibition (VE-cad ΔEXD) blocked shear-induced Rac1 activation, pTyr-occludin reduction, and barrier upregulation, consistent with an upstream role for VE-cadherin in transmitting shear signals to tight junctions through Rac1. As VE-cadherin is known to mediate Rac1 activation via Tiam1 recruitment, we subsequently confirmed that Tiam1 inhibition (Tiam1-C580) could elicit effects similar to VE-cad ΔEXD. Finally, the observed attenuation of shear-induced changes in pTyr-occludin level and barrier phenotype following Rac1 inhibition (NSC23766, T17N) establishes a downstream role for Rac1 in this pathway. In summary, we describe for the first time in BMvECs a role for VE-cadherin in the transmission of physiological shear signals to tight junction occludin through engagement of Tiam1/Rac1 leading to barrier stabilization. A downstream role is also strongly indicated for a protein tyrosine phosphatase in pTyr-occludin modulation. Importantly, these findings suggest an important route of inter-junctional signaling cross-talk during BBB response to flow.
The co-involvement of tumour necrosis factor-α (TNF-α) and interleukin-6 (IL-6) during blood-brain barrier (BBB) injury has been reported in various models of neuroinflammation, although the precise functional interplay between these archetypal proinflammatory cytokines remains largely undefined within this context. In the current paper, we tested the hypothesis that TNF-α-mediated BBB disruption is measurably attributable in-part to induction of microvascular endothelial IL-6 production. In initial experiments, we observed that treatment of human brain microvascular endothelial cells (HBMvECs) with TNF-α (0-100 ng/mL, 0-24 h) robustly elicited both time- and dose-dependent induction of IL-6 expression and release, as well as expression of the IL-6 family receptor, GP130. Further experiments demonstrated that the TNF-α-dependent generation of reactive oxygen species, down-regulation of adherens/tight junction proteins, and concomitant elevation of HBMvEC permeability, were all significantly attenuated by blockade of IL-6 signalling using either an anti-IL-6 neutralizing antibody or an IL-6 siRNA. Based on these observations, we conclude that TNF-α treatment of HBMvECs in vitro activates IL-6 production and signalling, events that were shown to synergize with TNF-α actions to elicit HBMvEC permeabilization. These novel findings offer a constructive insight into the specific contribution of downstream cytokine induction to the injurious actions of TNF-α at the BBB microvascular endothelium interface. The co-involvement of tumour necrosis factor-α (TNF-α) and interleukin-6 (IL-6) during blood-brain barrier (BBB) injury has been widely reported. Using human brain microvascular endothelial cells (HBMvEC), we show that TNF-α-mediated BBB disruption is measurably attributable in-part to induction of endothelial IL-6 production and signalling. We demonstrate that the TNF-α-dependent generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS), down-regulation of interendothelial junctions, and concomitant elevation of HBMvEC permeability, could be significantly attenuated by using either an IL-6 neutralizing antibody or an IL-6-specific siRNA. These findings provide insight into the complex nature of proinflammatory cytokine injury at the BBB microvascular endothelium interface.
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