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代谢紊乱对血脑屏障的结构、功能和免疫完整性的影响:治疗途径。

Impact of metabolic disorders on the structural, functional, and immunological integrity of the blood-brain barrier: Therapeutic avenues.

机构信息

William Harvey Research Institute, Barts and The London School of Medicine and Dentistry, Queen Mary University of London, London, UK.

Department of Basic Medical Sciences, Neurosciences and Sensory Organs, University of Bari School of Medicine, Bari, Italy.

出版信息

FASEB J. 2022 Jan;36(1):e22107. doi: 10.1096/fj.202101297R.

Abstract

Mounting evidence has linked the metabolic disease to neurovascular disorders and cognitive decline. Using a murine model of a high-fat high-sugar diet mimicking obesity-induced type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) in humans, we show that pro-inflammatory mediators and altered immune responses damage the blood-brain barrier (BBB) structure, triggering a proinflammatory metabolic phenotype. We find that disruption to tight junctions and basal lamina due to loss of control in the production of matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) and their inhibitors (TIMPs) causes BBB impairment. Together the disruption to the structural and functional integrity of the BBB results in enhanced transmigration of leukocytes across the BBB that could contribute to an initiation of a neuroinflammatory response through activation of microglia. Using a humanized in vitro model of the BBB and T2DM patient post-mortem brains, we show the translatable applicability of our results. We find a leaky BBB phenotype in T2DM patients can be attributed to a loss of junctional proteins through changes in inflammatory mediators and MMP/TIMP levels, resulting in increased leukocyte extravasation into the brain parenchyma. We further investigated therapeutic avenues to reduce and restore the BBB damage caused by HFHS-feeding. Pharmacological treatment with recombinant annexin A1 (hrANXA1) or reversion from a high-fat high-sugar diet to a control chow diet (dietary intervention), attenuated T2DM development, reduced inflammation, and restored BBB integrity in the animals. Given the rising incidence of diabetes worldwide, understanding metabolic-disease-associated brain microvessel damage is vital and the proposed therapeutic avenues could help alleviate the burden of these diseases.

摘要

越来越多的证据将这种代谢疾病与神经血管紊乱和认知能力下降联系起来。我们使用高脂肪高糖饮食的小鼠模型模拟人类肥胖引起的 2 型糖尿病(T2DM),结果表明促炎介质和免疫反应改变会损害血脑屏障(BBB)结构,引发促炎代谢表型。我们发现,由于基质金属蛋白酶(MMPs)及其抑制剂(TIMPs)产生失控导致紧密连接和基底层破坏,从而破坏 BBB。紧密连接和 BBB 结构和功能完整性的破坏导致白细胞穿过 BBB 的迁移增加,这可能通过激活小胶质细胞引发神经炎症反应。通过使用体外 BBB 人源化模型和 T2DM 患者死后大脑,我们证明了我们的研究结果具有可转化的适用性。我们发现 T2DM 患者的 BBB 渗漏表型可归因于通过炎症介质和 MMP/TIMP 水平的变化导致连接蛋白丢失,从而导致白细胞渗出到脑实质增加。我们进一步研究了减少和恢复 HFHS 喂养引起的 BBB 损伤的治疗途径。用重组 annexin A1(hrANXA1)进行药物治疗或从高脂肪高糖饮食恢复为对照饮食(饮食干预),均可减轻 T2DM 的发展,减轻炎症并恢复动物 BBB 的完整性。鉴于糖尿病在全球的发病率不断上升,了解与代谢疾病相关的脑微血管损伤至关重要,所提出的治疗途径可能有助于减轻这些疾病的负担。

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