Barkaway Anna, Attwell David, Korte Nils
University College London, Department of Neuroscience, Physiology and Pharmacology, London, United Kingdom.
Neurophotonics. 2022 Jul;9(3):031914. doi: 10.1117/1.NPh.9.3.031914. Epub 2022 May 14.
Brain barriers are crucial sites for cerebral energy supply, waste removal, immune cell migration, and solute exchange, all of which maintain an appropriate environment for neuronal activity. At the capillary level, where the largest area of brain-vascular interface occurs, pericytes adjust cerebral blood flow (CBF) by regulating capillary diameter and maintain the blood-brain barrier (BBB) by suppressing endothelial cell (EC) transcytosis and inducing tight junction expression between ECs. Pericytes also limit the infiltration of circulating leukocytes into the brain where resident microglia confine brain injury and provide the first line of defence against invading pathogens. Brain "waste" is cleared across the BBB into the blood, phagocytosed by microglia and astrocytes, or removed by the flow of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) through perivascular routes-a process driven by respiratory motion and the pulsation of the heart, arteriolar smooth muscle, and possibly pericytes. "Dirty" CSF exits the brain and is probably drained around olfactory nerve rootlets and via the dural meningeal lymphatic vessels and possibly the skull bone marrow. The brain is widely regarded as an immune-privileged organ because it is accessible to few antigen-primed leukocytes. Leukocytes enter the brain via the meninges, the BBB, and the blood-CSF barrier. Advances in genetic and imaging tools have revealed that neurological diseases significantly alter immune-brain barrier interactions in at least three ways: (1) the brain's immune-privileged status is compromised when pericytes are lost or lymphatic vessels are dysregulated; (2) immune cells release vasoactive molecules to regulate CBF, modulate arteriole stiffness, and can plug and eliminate capillaries which impairs CBF and possibly waste clearance; and (3) immune-vascular interactions can make the BBB leaky via multiple mechanisms, thus aggravating the influx of undesirable substances and cells. Here, we review developments in these three areas and briefly discuss potential therapeutic avenues for restoring brain barrier functions.
脑屏障是脑能量供应、废物清除、免疫细胞迁移和溶质交换的关键部位,所有这些都为神经元活动维持适宜的环境。在毛细血管水平,即脑血管界面面积最大的部位,周细胞通过调节毛细血管直径来调节脑血流量(CBF),并通过抑制内皮细胞(EC)转胞吞作用和诱导内皮细胞间紧密连接表达来维持血脑屏障(BBB)。周细胞还限制循环白细胞渗入脑内,而脑内常驻小胶质细胞限制脑损伤并提供抵御入侵病原体的第一道防线。脑“废物”通过血脑屏障进入血液,被小胶质细胞和星形胶质细胞吞噬,或通过脑脊液(CSF)沿血管周围途径流动清除——这一过程由呼吸运动以及心脏、小动脉平滑肌(可能还有周细胞)的搏动驱动。“脏”脑脊液离开脑,可能在嗅神经根周围引流,并通过硬脑膜淋巴管以及可能通过颅骨骨髓引流。脑被广泛认为是一个免疫豁免器官,因为很少有抗原致敏白细胞能够进入。白细胞通过脑膜、血脑屏障和血脑脊液屏障进入脑。基因和成像工具的进展表明,神经疾病至少通过三种方式显著改变免疫 - 脑屏障相互作用:(1)当周细胞丢失或淋巴管功能失调时,脑的免疫豁免状态受损;(2)免疫细胞释放血管活性分子来调节脑血流量,调节小动脉僵硬度,并可阻塞和消除毛细血管,这会损害脑血流量并可能影响废物清除;(3)免疫 - 血管相互作用可通过多种机制使血脑屏障渗漏,从而加剧不良物质和细胞的流入。在这里,我们综述这三个领域的进展,并简要讨论恢复脑屏障功能的潜在治疗途径。