The Role of Pericytes in Neurovascular Unit Remodeling in Brain Disorders
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<p>The role of pericytes at the neurovascular unit (NVU) in the healthy brain. The NVU is constituted by specialized endothelial cells, which form the blood-brain barrier (BBB), that actively interact with the basal lamina, pericytes, astrocyte-endfeet, microglia and neurons. The pericytes play an important role in maintaining NVU physiological functions by controlling tight junction (TJ) protein expression and BBB induction, microvascular stability and microvessel diameter. Pericytes might act as pluripotent cells and might have immune function at the NVU.</p> ">
<p>Pericyte physical and biochemical interactions at the NVU. Pericytes are embedded within the basal lamina structure and project elongated processes that wrap endothelial cells, thus establishing specialized cell-cell contacts. These contacts are mainly from peg-socket types, where cell-cell contacts are established when pericyte cell membrane protrusion-like structures (pegs) are inserted into endothelial cell membrane invaginations (pockets) cells (outlined by dashed circles). The peg-socket contacts contain cell-to-cell junction proteins, such as N-cadherin and CX43 hemichannels. CX43 hemichannels form gap junctions that allow the biochemical exchange between pericytes and endothelial cells. In parallel, several autocrine and paracrine signaling pathways govern the interaction between pericytes and endothelial cells, such as the PDGFBB/PDGFRβ signaling pathway (paracrine pathway: PDGFBB secreted by endothelial cells binds to PDGFRβ expressed on pericytes), the TGFβ signaling pathway (paracrine and autocrine pathway: TGFβ secreted by endothelial cells and pericytes binds to TGFβR2 expressed on both cell types), the Ang1/Tie2 signaling pathway (paracrine pathway: Ang1 is secreted by pericytes binds to Tie2 expressed on endothelial cells), and the Notch signaling pathway (cleavage-induced signaling pathway: the sequential proteolytic cleavage and release in the intracellular space of the Notch intracellular domain (NICD) that translocates to the nucleus and controls downstream gene expression).</p> ">
<p>Pericyte responses upon NVU remodeling in ischemic stroke. Upon stroke, the ischemic cascade induces NVU remodeling that causes its loss of function, thus leading to the accumulation of blood-borne molecules into the brain. This loss of function is translated by (a) an impaired rCBF; (b) astrocyte-endfeet detachment; (c) pericyte detachment and migration; (d) microglia activation; (e) vasoconstriction and (f) pericyte contraction. Targeting NVU remodeling, in order to repair, stabilize and restitute the function of the NVU, constitutes a novel approach in developing successful strategies for treating ischemic stroke. This could be achieved by enhancing pericyte survival and in parallel by decreasing their contractility.</p> ">
<p>Pericyte responses upon NVU remodeling in Alzheimer’s disease (AD). In AD, the neurodegenerative cascade has been shown to be initiated by NVU remodeling that triggers its loss of function, leading to the accumulation of blood-borne molecules into the brain. This loss of function is translated by (a) rCBF dysfunction; (b) astrocyte-endfeet detachment; (c) pericyte detachment and migration; (d) microglia activation and (e) pericyte loss. Targeting NVU remodeling in order to repair, stabilize and restitute the function of the NVU, would constitute a novel approach in developing successful strategies for treating AD.</p> ">
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Pericytes
3. Pericyte Function in the Healthy Brain
3.1. Brain Vessels Sprouting
3.2. BBB Formation and Induction
3.3. Brain Vessel Diameter and CBF Regulations
3.4. Immune Function
3.5. Pluripotent Cells
4. Pericyte Interactions at the Neurovascular Unit
4.1. Cell-to-Cell Interactions
4.2. Signaling Pathways
- (a)
- PDGFBB/PDGFRβ: The platelet-derived growth factor B (PDGFB) signaling through PDGFRβ plays a crucial role in endothelial-to-pericyte interaction, specifically in the recruitment of brain pericytes into the abluminal side of endothelial cells [50]. In angiogenic context, endothelial cells secrete PDGFB in an active homodimer form (PDGFBB), promoting the proliferation and migration of PDGFRβ-expressing pericytes within the angiogenic endothelial sprouts [51]. PDGFRβ is a tyrosine kinase receptor that is expressed on developing and mature pericytes [11]. PDGFBB binding to PDGFRβ induces the latter’s dimerization, autophosphorylation, activating several downstream signaling cascades that include survival pathways [20,51]. Moreover, it has been shown that the recruitment and attachment of pericytes to the abluminal side of the nascent blood vessels requires the interaction between the C-terminal retention motif of the PDGFB and the heparan sulfate proteoglycans contained within the basal lamina, thus activating PDGFRβ signal transduction [20,50,52]. More importantly, it has been demonstrated that the complete deletion of PDGFB or PDGFRβ in transgenic mice results in a perinatal lethality that was partly caused by a pronounced vascular leakage due to a mural cells deficiency [8,53]. It is noteworthy here to mention that pericytic PDGFRβ signaling seems to play an important role, not only in the brain microvasculature, but also in coronary microvasculature, as the blockade of PDGFRβ signaling with tyrosine kinase inhibitor such as Sunitinib lead to pericyte loss [54], outlining the importance of this pathway in pericyte survival and function in other vascular systems.
- (b)
- TGFβ: TGFβ has a pivotal role in vascular development including the induction of pericytes differentiation and adhesion to brain microvessels, and the regulation of endothelial cell proliferation and differentiation [13,50]. Endothelial cells, neurons, glial cells and pericytes secrete the latent form of TGFβ, which is activated by thrombospondin or integrins [13,50]. In both pericytes and endothelial cells, activated TGFβ can bind to TGFβ receptor type II (TGFβR2) leading to the recruitment and the activation of the TGFβ receptor type I (TGFβR1) and activin-like kinase 1 or 5 (ALK1/5), thus inducing the activation and the nuclear translocation of Smad proteins that promotes transcriptional changes [13,55]. It has been shown that binding of endothelially secreted TGFβ to pericytic TGFβR2 inhibits their proliferation while inducing the expression of contractile proteins and promoting the production of extracellular matrix proteins [56]. In fact, genetic deletions within TGFβ signaling pathway components lead to a faulty vascular development resulting in embryonic lethality [13,50]. More precisely, specific knockout of the Smad4 gene in the brain endothelium leads to several vascular defects, such as pericyte detachment and reduced capillary coverage, increased endothelial cell proliferation, vasodilatation and intraventricular hemorrhage during the perinatal period [57]. Interestingly, these results were associated with a reduction in N-cadherin expression, which is an important adhesion molecule implicated in endothelium-pericyte interaction.
- (c)
- Ang1/Tie2: Ang1 has been shown to be predominantly expressed in perivascular mesenchymal cells, including pericytes [50]. On the other hand, the Ang1 receptor, Tie2, has been shown to be predominantly expressed on endothelial cells [50]. As such, Ang1/Tie2 signaling pathway forms a paracrine loop that has inverted orientation in comparison with PDGFB/PDGFRβ. The Ang1/Tie2 signaling pathway has been reported to play an important role in inducing endothelial cell maturation and stability, thus decreasing vascular permeability [50,58].
- (d)
- Notch: The role of Notch signaling is well defined in neurovascular development. Establishing a cell-to-cell contact is a prerequisite for an efficient Notch signal transduction, as Notch forms heterodimeric transmembrane receptors with the transmembrane ligands delta-like (DLL) and jagged (JAG) on neighboring cells. Signal transduction is induced when the receptors and ligands bind, thus triggering the sequential proteolytic cleavage and release in the intracellular space the Notch intracellular domain (NICD), which translocates to the nucleus and binds the transcription factor recombination signal binding protein Jκ (RBPJκ), leading to downstream transcriptional changes [59]. More recently, it has been suggested that Notch signaling contribute to pericyte attachment and alignment at the abluminal side of brain endothelial cells, thus enhancing endothelial cell survival [60]. Moreover, Notch signaling has been demonstrated to play an important role in the regulation of PDGFRβ in vascular smooth muscle cell (VSMC), and probably pericytes [61]. However, more work is still required to fully address and decipher Notch signaling pathway at the NVU.
5. Pericytes in Brain Diseases
5.1. Ischemic Stroke
5.2. Alzheimer’s Disease (AD)
6. Pericytes in Neurovascular Unit Repair: Therapeutic Implications and Perspectives
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
- Author ContributionsA.E.A., P.T. and S.R. contributed to writing and finalizing the review.
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ElAli, A.; Thériault, P.; Rivest, S. The Role of Pericytes in Neurovascular Unit Remodeling in Brain Disorders. Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2014, 15, 6453-6474. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms15046453
ElAli A, Thériault P, Rivest S. The Role of Pericytes in Neurovascular Unit Remodeling in Brain Disorders. International Journal of Molecular Sciences. 2014; 15(4):6453-6474. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms15046453
Chicago/Turabian StyleElAli, Ayman, Peter Thériault, and Serge Rivest. 2014. "The Role of Pericytes in Neurovascular Unit Remodeling in Brain Disorders" International Journal of Molecular Sciences 15, no. 4: 6453-6474. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms15046453
APA StyleElAli, A., Thériault, P., & Rivest, S. (2014). The Role of Pericytes in Neurovascular Unit Remodeling in Brain Disorders. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 15(4), 6453-6474. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms15046453