Xiong Huaqi, Callaghan Debbie, Jones Aimee, Bai Jianying, Rasquinha Ingrid, Smith Catherine, Pei Ke, Walker Douglas, Lue Lih-Fen, Stanimirovic Danica, Zhang Wandong
Neurobiology Program, Institute for Biological Sciences, National Research Council of Canada, Ottawa, Ontario K1A 0R6, Canada.
J Neurosci. 2009 Apr 29;29(17):5463-75. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.5103-08.2009.
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is characterized by accumulation and deposition of Abeta peptides in the brain. Abeta deposition in cerebrovessels occurs in many AD patients and results in cerebral amyloid angiopathy (AD/CAA). Since Abeta can be transported across blood-brain barrier (BBB), aberrant Abeta trafficking across BBB may contribute to Abeta accumulation in the brain and CAA development. Expression analyses of 273 BBB-related genes performed in this study showed that the drug transporter, ABCG2, was significantly upregulated in the brains of AD/CAA compared with age-matched controls. Increased ABCG2 expression was confirmed by Q-PCR, Western blot, and immunohistochemistry. Abcg2 was also increased in mouse AD models, Tg-SwDI and 3XTg. Abeta alone or in combination with hypoxia/ischemia failed to stimulate ABCG2 expression in BBB endothelial cells; however, conditioned media from Abeta-activated microglia strongly induced ABCG2 expression. ABCG2 protein in AD/CAA brains interacted and coimmunoprecipitated with Abeta. Overexpression of hABCG2 reduced drug uptake in cells; however, interaction of Abeta(1-40) with ABCG2 impaired ABCG2-mediated drug efflux. The role of Abcg2 in Abeta transport at the BBB was investigated in Abcg2-null and wild-type mice after intravenous injection of Cy5.5-labeled Abeta(1-40) or scrambled Abeta(40-1). Optical imaging analyses of live animals and their brains showed that Abcg2-null mice accumulated significantly more Abeta in their brains than wild-type mice. The finding was confirmed by immunohistochemistry. These results suggest that ABCG2 may act as a gatekeeper at the BBB to prevent blood Abeta from entering into brain. ABCG2 upregulation may serve as a biomarker of CAA vascular pathology in AD patients.
阿尔茨海默病(AD)的特征是大脑中β淀粉样肽(Aβ)的积累和沉积。许多AD患者的脑血管中会出现Aβ沉积,进而导致脑淀粉样血管病(AD/CAA)。由于Aβ能够穿过血脑屏障(BBB),异常的Aβ跨血脑屏障转运可能导致大脑中Aβ的积累以及CAA的发展。本研究对273个与血脑屏障相关的基因进行了表达分析,结果显示,与年龄匹配的对照组相比,药物转运体ABCG2在AD/CAA患者大脑中显著上调。通过定量聚合酶链反应(Q-PCR)、蛋白质免疫印迹法(Western blot)和免疫组织化学法证实了ABCG2表达的增加。在小鼠AD模型Tg-SwDI和3XTg中,Abcg2也有所增加。单独的Aβ或与缺氧/缺血联合使用均未能刺激血脑屏障内皮细胞中ABCG2的表达;然而,来自Aβ激活的小胶质细胞的条件培养基强烈诱导了ABCG2的表达。AD/CAA大脑中的ABCG2蛋白与Aβ相互作用并进行了共免疫沉淀。hABCG2的过表达降低了细胞对药物的摄取;然而,Aβ(1-40)与ABCG2的相互作用损害了ABCG2介导的药物外排。在向Abcg2基因敲除小鼠和野生型小鼠静脉注射Cy5.5标记的Aβ(1-40)或乱序Aβ(40-1)后,研究了Abcg2在血脑屏障处Aβ转运中的作用。对活体动物及其大脑的光学成像分析表明,Abcg2基因敲除小鼠大脑中积累的Aβ明显多于野生型小鼠。免疫组织化学法证实了这一发现。这些结果表明,ABCG2可能作为血脑屏障的守门人,防止血液中的Aβ进入大脑。ABCG2的上调可能作为AD患者CAA血管病变的生物标志物。