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A functional cerebral endothelium is necessary to protect against cognitive decline

Lianne J Trigiani, Miled Bourourou, María Lacalle-Aurioles, Clotilde Lecrux, Amy Hynes, Shoshana Spring, Darren J Fernandes, John G Sled, Frédéric Lesage, Markus Schwaninger, Edith Hamel

2021Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow & Metabolism19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

A vascular insult occurring early in disease onset may initiate cognitive decline leading to dementia, while pharmacological and lifestyle interventions can prevent this progression. Mice with a selective, tamoxifen-inducible deletion of NF-κB essential modulator (Nemo) in brain endothelial cells were studied as a model of vascular cognitive impairment. Groups included Nemo Fl controls and three Nemo beKO groups: One untreated, and two treated with simvastatin or exercise. Social preference and nesting were impaired in Nemo beKO mice and were not countered by treatments. Cerebrovascular function was compromised in Nemo beKO groups regardless of treatment, with decreased changes in sensory-evoked cerebral blood flow and total hemoglobin levels, and impaired endothelium-dependent vasodilation. Nemo beKO mice had increased string vessel pathology, blood-brain barrier disruption, neuroinflammation, and reduced cortical somatostatin-containing interneurons. These alterations were reversed when endothelial function was recovered. Findings strongly suggest that damage to the cerebral endothelium can trigger pathologies associated with dementia and its functional integrity should be an effective target in future therapeutic efforts.

Topics & Concepts

Cognitive declineEndotheliumMedicineVascular dementiaBlood–brain barrierDiseaseNeuroscienceDementiaCerebral blood flowCognitionInternal medicineIschemiaCentral nervous systemVasodilationSimvastatinAgeingVascular diseaseCirculatory systemEndocrinologyAlzheimer's diseaseEndothelial stem cellHypoxia (environmental)Cerebral circulationFunction (biology)Brain functionBlood vesselEndothelial dysfunctionCardiologyPathophysiologyPlateletNeurological Disease Mechanisms and TreatmentsBarrier Structure and Function StudiesNeuroinflammation and Neurodegeneration Mechanisms
A functional cerebral endothelium is necessary to protect against cognitive decline | Litcius