Litcius/Paper detail

Tight Junctions of the Neurovascular Unit

Natalie Hudson, Matthew Campbell

2021Frontiers in Molecular Neuroscience43 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The homeostatic balance of the brain and retina is maintained by the presence of the blood-brain and inner blood-retinal barrier (BBB/iBRB, respectively) which are highly specialized barriers. Endothelial cells forming the lining of these blood vessels are interconnected by the presence of tight junctions which form the BBB and iBRB. These tight junctions, formed of numerous interacting proteins, enable the entry of molecules into neural tissues while restricting the entry of harmful material such as anaphylatoxins, bacteria and viruses. If the tight junction complex becomes dysregulated due to changes in expression levels of one or more of the components, this can have detrimental effects leading to brain and retinal pathology.

Topics & Concepts

Tight junctionBlood–brain barrierBlood–retinal barrierRetinaNeuroscienceNeurovascular bundleHomeostasisBiologyNeuroinflammationRetinalCell biologyChemistryAnatomyCentral nervous systemInflammationImmunologyEndocrinologyBiochemistryDiabetes mellitusDiabetic retinopathyBarrier Structure and Function StudiesConnexins and lens biologyIntracerebral and Subarachnoid Hemorrhage Research