British Heart Foundation Glasgow Cardiovascular Research Centre, Institute of Cardiovascular & Medical Sciences, University of Glasgow, Glasgow G12 8TA, United Kingdom.
British Heart Foundation Glasgow Cardiovascular Research Centre, Institute of Cardiovascular & Medical Sciences, University of Glasgow, Glasgow G12 8TA, United Kingdom.
Pharmacol Ther. 2022 Dec;240:108220. doi: 10.1016/j.pharmthera.2022.108220. Epub 2022 Jun 3.
CNS border-associated macrophages (BAMs) are a small population of specialised macrophages localised in the choroid plexus, meningeal and perivascular spaces. Until recently, the function of this elusive cell type was poorly understood and largely overlooked, especially in comparison to microglia, the primary brain resident immune cell. However, the recent single cell immunophenotyping or transcriptomic analysis of BAM subsets in the homeostatic brain, coupled with the rapid emergence of new studies exploring BAM functions in various cerebral pathologies, including Alzheimer's disease, hypertension-induced neurovascular and cognitive dysfunction, and ischaemic stroke, has unveiled previously unrecognised heterogeneity and spatial-temporal complexity in BAM populations as well as their contributions to brain homeostasis and disease. In this review, we discuss the implications of this new-found knowledge on our current understanding of BAM function in ischaemic stroke. We first provide a comprehensive overview and discussion of the cell-surface expression profiles, transcriptional signatures and potential functional phenotypes of homeostatic BAM subsets described in recent studies. Evidence for their putative physiological roles is examined, including their involvement in immunological surveillance, waste clearance, and vascular permeability. We discuss the evidence supporting the accumulation and genetic transformation of BAMs in response to ischaemia and appraise the experimental evidence that BAM function might be deleterious in the acute phase of stroke, while considering the mechanisms by which BAMs may influence stroke outcomes in the longer term. Finally, we review the therapeutic potential of immunomodulatory strategies as an approach to stroke management, highlighting current challenges in the field and key issues relating to BAMs, and how BAMs could be harnessed experimentally to support future translational research.
CNS 边界相关巨噬细胞(BAMs)是一种定位于脉络丛、脑膜和血管周围间隙的特殊巨噬细胞小群体。直到最近,这种难以捉摸的细胞类型的功能才被人们所了解,而且在很大程度上被忽视了,尤其是与小胶质细胞相比,小胶质细胞是大脑中主要的常驻免疫细胞。然而,最近对静息状态下 BAM 亚群的单细胞免疫表型或转录组分析,以及迅速出现的新研究探索 BAM 在各种脑病理学中的功能,包括阿尔茨海默病、高血压引起的神经血管和认知功能障碍以及缺血性中风,揭示了 BAM 群体以前未被识别的异质性和时空复杂性,以及它们对大脑内稳态和疾病的贡献。在这篇综述中,我们讨论了这一新发现的知识对我们目前对 BAM 在缺血性中风中功能的理解的影响。我们首先全面概述和讨论了最近研究中描述的静息状态 BAM 亚群的细胞表面表达谱、转录特征和潜在的功能表型。我们研究了它们潜在生理作用的证据,包括它们在免疫监视、废物清除和血管通透性方面的作用。我们讨论了支持 BAMs 对缺血的积累和遗传转化的证据,并评估了 BAM 功能在中风急性期可能有害的实验证据,同时考虑了 BAMs 可能在更长期内影响中风结果的机制。最后,我们综述了免疫调节策略作为中风治疗方法的治疗潜力,强调了该领域当前的挑战和与 BAMs 相关的关键问题,以及如何通过实验利用 BAMs 来支持未来的转化研究。