模拟人体组织工程离体脑微血管内的高渗血脑屏障开放

Raleigh M. Linville, Jackson G. DeStefano, Matt B Sklar, C. Chu, P. Walczak, P. Searson
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引用次数: 34

摘要

由于大多数治疗药物不能穿过血脑屏障(BBB),短暂血脑屏障打开(BBBO)是一种使药物进入大脑以有效治疗中枢神经系统疾病的策略。动脉内输注高渗剂甘露醇可逆地打开血脑屏障;然而,由于结果的可变性,广泛的临床应用受到限制。目前的甘露醇诱导BBBO模型假设渗透率瞬态但均匀增加;然而,人们对其中的细节知之甚少。为了阐明细胞水平上高渗打开的机制,我们用临床相关甘露醇剂量扰动的干细胞来源的人脑微血管内皮细胞(BMECs)建立了一个组织工程微血管模型。该模型概括了生理剪切应力、屏障功能、微血管几何和细胞-基质相互作用。通过活细胞成像,我们发现甘露醇通过形成瞬时病灶渗漏导致细胞旁通透性的剂量依赖性和空间异质性增加。此外,我们发现血脑屏障的开放程度和随后的恢复是由碱性成纤维细胞生长因子治疗调节的。这些结果表明,组织工程血脑屏障模型可以深入了解血脑屏障的机制,从而提高高渗疗法治疗中枢神经系统疾病的可重复性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Modeling hyperosmotic blood–brain barrier opening within human tissue-engineered in vitro brain microvessels
As the majority of therapeutic agents do not cross the blood–brain barrier (BBB), transient BBB opening (BBBO) is one strategy to enable delivery into the brain for effective treatment of CNS disease. Intra-arterial infusion of the hyperosmotic agent mannitol reversibly opens the BBB; however, widespread clinical use has been limited due to the variability in outcomes. The current model for mannitol-induced BBBO assumes a transient but homogeneous increase in permeability; however, the details are poorly understood. To elucidate the mechanism of hyperosmotic opening at the cellular level, we developed a tissue-engineered microvessel model using stem cell-derived human brain microvascular endothelial cells (BMECs) perturbed with clinically relevant mannitol doses. This model recapitulates physiological shear stress, barrier function, microvessel geometry, and cell-matrix interactions. Using live-cell imaging, we show that mannitol results in dose-dependent and spatially heterogeneous increases in paracellular permeability through the formation of transient focal leaks. Additionally, we find that the degree of BBB opening and subsequent recovery is modulated by treatment with basic fibroblast growth factor. These results show that tissue-engineered BBB models can provide insight into the mechanisms of BBBO and hence improve the reproducibility of hyperosmotic therapies for treatment of CNS disease.
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