Plasma CRP production increases markedly over the 48 hours to 72 hours period following sICH and is related to outcome. CRP is also present in large amounts around the hemorrhagic lesion and within neurons and glia of patients who died within 12 hours of sICH.
Aquaporin-4 (AQP4) and glutamate transporter-1 (GLT-1) represent the major water and glutamate astrocyte buffering gateways in the brain. Utilizing perilesional ischemic human cortices, we have performed here for the first time an integrative assessment on both AQP4 and GLT-1, and on their proximity to blood vessels and neurons. Counting the relative number of AQP4±/GLT-1±/glial fibrillary acidic protein± cells showed that double-positive variants were overall most frequent, and their number tended to decrease from organized and recent perilesional cortices to controls. AQP4/GLT-1 colocalization showed higher coefficients for the perilesional cortices compared with controls, suggesting an increased water/glutamate-buffering capability. Distance frequency analysis of AQP4/GLT-1 in relationship to neurons showed that both markers were concentrated at 20-40 μm around the perikarya; with AQP4 being more abundant in close proximity, these differences were not being driven by changes in neuropil density alone. Our study suggests a dual, simultaneous astrocytic function depending on the relative distance to neurons and vessels, with increased water and glutamate-buffering capability in the mid perineuronal space, and an increased water-buffering capability in the immediate perineuronal space, even higher than around vessels. Thus, adding specific AQP4/GLT-1 modulator agents selectively depending on the acute/chronic phase of stroke might increase the efficacy of existing treatments.
Aquaporin-4 (AQP4) is located mainly in the astrocytic end-feet around cerebral blood vessels and regulates ion and water homeostasis in the brain. While deletion of AQP4 is shown to reduce amyloid-β (Aβ) clearance and exacerbate Aβ peptide accumulation in plaques and vessels of Alzheimer’s disease mouse models, the mechanism and clearing pathways involved are debated. Here, we investigated how inhibiting the function of AQP4 in healthy male C57BL/6 J mice impacts clearance of Aβ40, the more soluble Aβ isoform. Using two-photon in vivo imaging and visualizing vessels with Sulfurodamine 101 (SR101), we first showed that Aβ40 injected as a ≤ 0.5-μl volume in the cerebral cortex diffused rapidly in parenchyma and accumulated around blood vessels. In animals treated with the AQP4 inhibitor TGN-020, the perivascular Aβ40 accumulation was significantly (P < 0.001) intensified by involving four times more vessels, thus suggesting a generalized clearance defect associated with vessels. Increasing the injecting volume to ≥ 0.5 ≤ 1 μl decreased the difference of Aβ40-positive vessels observed in non-treated and AQP4 inhibitor-treated animals, although the difference was still significant (P = 0.001), suggesting that larger injection volumes could overwhelm intramural vascular clearance mechanisms. While both small and large vessels accumulated Aβ40, for the ≤ 0.5-μl volume group, the average diameter of the Aβ40-positive vessels tended to be larger in control animals compared with TGN-020-treated animals, although the difference was non-significant (P = 0.066). Using histopathology and ultrastructural microscopy, no vascular structural change was observed after a single massive dose of TGN-020. These data suggest that AQP4 deficiency is directly involved in impaired Aβ brain clearance via the peri-/para-vascular routes, and AQP4-mediated vascular clearance might counteract blood-brain barrier abnormalities and age-related vascular amyloidopathy.
Background and purpose In the central nervous system, a multitude of changes have been described associated with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS‐CoV‐2) infection, such as microglial activation, perivascular lymphocyte cuffing, hypoxic‐ischaemic changes, microthrombosis, infarcts or haemorrhages. It was sought here to assess the vascular basement membranes (vBMs) and surrounding perivascular astrocytes for any morphological changes in acute respiratory syndrome (coronavirus disease 2019, COVID‐19) patients. Methods The light microscopy morphology of the vBMs and perivascular astrocytes from brains of 14 patients with confirmed SARS‐CoV‐2 infection was analysed and compared to four control patients utilizing fluorescent immunohistochemistry for collagen IV and astrocytes (GFAP), endothelia (CD31), tight junction 1 (TJ1) adhesion protein, as well as the aquaporin 4 (AQP4) water channel. On 2D and 3D deconvoluted images from the cortex and white matter, vessel densities, diameters, degree of gliosis, collagen IV/GFAP and GFAP/AQP4 colocalizations were calculated, as well as the fractal dimension of astrocytes and vBMs viewed in tangential planes. Results Fractal dimension analysis of the GFAP‐stained astrocytes revealed lower branching complexities and decreased GFAP/collagen IV colocalization for COVID‐19 patients. Interestingly, vBMs showed significantly increased irregularities (fractal dimension values) compared to controls. Vessel diameters were increased in COVID‐19 cases, especially for the white matter, TJ1 protein decreased its colocalization with the endothelia, and AQP4 reduced its co‐expression in astrocytes. Conclusions Our data on the irregularity of the basement membranes, loss of endothelial tight junction, reduction of the astrocyte end‐feet and decrease of AQP4 suggest subtle morphological changes of the blood–brain barrier in COVID‐19 brains that could be linked with indirect inflammatory signalling or hypoxia/hypercapnia.
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