Abbott N Joan
Centre for Neuroscience Research, King's College London, UK.
J Anat. 2002 Jun;200(6):629-38. doi: 10.1046/j.1469-7580.2002.00064.x.
The blood-brain barrier (BBB) is formed by brain endothelial cells lining the cerebral microvasculature, and is an important mechanism for protecting the brain from fluctuations in plasma composition, and from circulating agents such as neurotransmitters and xenobiotics capable of disturbing neural function. The barrier also plays an important role in the homeostatic regulation of the brain microenvironment necessary for the stable and co-ordinated activity of neurones. The BBB phenotype develops under the influence of associated brain cells, especially astrocytic glia, and consists of more complex tight junctions than in other capillary endothelia, and a number of specific transport and enzyme systems which regulate molecular traffic across the endothelial cells. Transporters characteristic of the BBB phenotype include both uptake mechanisms (e.g. GLUT-1 glucose carrier, L1 amino acid transporter) and efflux transporters (e.g. P-glycoprotein). In addition to a role in long-term barrier induction and maintenance, astrocytes and other cells can release chemical factors that modulate endothelial permeability over a time-scale of seconds to minutes. Cell culture models, both primary and cell lines, have been used to investigate aspects of barrier induction and modulation. Conditioned medium taken from growing glial cells can reproduce some of the inductive effects, evidence for involvement of diffusible factors. However, for some features of endothelial differentiation and induction, the extracellular matrix plays an important role. Several candidate molecules have been identified, capable of mimicking aspects of glial-mediated barrier induction of brain endothelium; these include TGFbeta, GDNF, bFGF, IL-6 and steroids. In addition, factors secreted by brain endothelial cells including leukaemia inhibitory factor (LIF) have been shown to induce astrocytic differentiation. Thus endothelium and astrocytes are involved in two-way induction. Short-term modulation of brain endothelial permeability has been shown for a number of small chemical mediators produced by astrocytes and other nearby cell types. It is clear that endothelial cells are involved in both long- and short-term chemical communication with neighbouring cells, with the perivascular end feet of astrocytes being of particular importance. The role of barrier induction and modulation in normal physiology and in pathology is discussed.
血脑屏障(BBB)由衬于脑微血管系统的脑内皮细胞形成,是保护大脑免受血浆成分波动影响以及免受能够干扰神经功能的循环因子(如神经递质和外源性物质)影响的重要机制。该屏障在对神经元稳定且协调活动所必需的脑微环境的稳态调节中也起着重要作用。血脑屏障表型在相关脑细胞,尤其是星形胶质细胞的影响下发育形成,其紧密连接比其他毛细血管内皮细胞的更复杂,还具有一些调节分子通过内皮细胞转运的特定转运和酶系统。血脑屏障表型的特征性转运体包括摄取机制(如GLUT-1葡萄糖载体、L1氨基酸转运体)和外排转运体(如P-糖蛋白)。除了在长期屏障诱导和维持中发挥作用外,星形胶质细胞和其他细胞还能释放化学因子,在数秒到数分钟的时间尺度上调节内皮细胞通透性。原代细胞和细胞系的细胞培养模型已被用于研究屏障诱导和调节的各个方面。取自生长中的胶质细胞的条件培养基可以重现一些诱导作用,这证明了可扩散因子的参与。然而,对于内皮细胞分化和诱导的某些特征,细胞外基质起着重要作用。已经鉴定出几种候选分子,它们能够模拟胶质细胞介导的脑内皮屏障诱导的某些方面;这些分子包括转化生长因子β、胶质细胞源性神经营养因子、碱性成纤维细胞生长因子、白细胞介素-6和类固醇。此外,脑内皮细胞分泌的因子,包括白血病抑制因子(LIF),已被证明可诱导星形胶质细胞分化。因此,内皮细胞和星形胶质细胞参与双向诱导。已表明,星形胶质细胞和其他附近细胞类型产生的多种小分子化学介质可对脑内皮通透性进行短期调节。很明显,内皮细胞参与了与相邻细胞的长期和短期化学通讯,其中星形胶质细胞的血管周足尤为重要。本文讨论了屏障诱导和调节在正常生理学和病理学中的作用。