AI Article Synopsis

  • Astrocytes, neurons, and microvessels form a neurovascular unit that regulates blood flow based on neuronal activity, with adenosine diphosphate (ADP) acting as a key signaling molecule that triggers astrocyte-dependent dilation in brain blood vessels.
  • The study involved anesthetized piglets and examined how ADP influences carbon monoxide (CO) production in astrocytes, finding that astrocyte injury blocked the ability of ADP to stimulate CO production and blood vessel dilation.
  • The results indicate that glia limitans astrocytes release CO in response to ADP, acting as a gasotransmitter that facilitates the dilation of pial arterioles, crucial for maintaining proper cerebral blood flow.

Article Abstract

Background And Purpose: Astrocytes, neurons, and microvessels together form a neurovascular unit allowing blood flow to match neuronal activity. Adenosine diphosphate (ADP) is an important signaling molecule in the brain, and dilation in response to ADP is astrocyte-dependent in rats and newborn pigs. Carbon monoxide (CO), produced endogenously by catabolism of heme to CO, iron, and biliverdin via heme oxygenase, is an important cell-signaling molecule in the neonatal cerebral circulation. We hypothesize ADP stimulates CO production by glia limitans astrocytes and that this CO causes pial arteriolar dilation.

Methods: Experiments were performed using anesthetized piglet with closed cranial windows, and freshly isolated piglet astrocytes and microvessels. Astrocyte injury was caused by topical application of L-2-alpha aminoadipic acid (2 mmol/L, 5 hours). Cerebrospinal fluid was collected from under the cranial windows for measurement of ADP-stimulated CO production. CO was measured by gas chromatography-mass spectroscopy analysis.

Results: Before, but not after, astrocyte injury in vivo, topical ADP stimulated both CO production and dilation of pial arterioles. Astrocyte injury did not block dilation to isoproterenol or bradykinin. Chromium mesoporphyrin, an inhibitor of heme oxygenase, also prevented the ADP-induced increase in cerebrospinal fluid CO and pial arteriolar dilation caused by ADP, but not dilation to sodium nitroprusside. ADP also increased CO production by freshly isolated piglet astrocytes and cerebral microvessels, although the increase was smaller in the microvessels.

Conclusions: These data suggest that glia limitans astrocytes use CO as a gasotransmitter to cause pial arteriolar dilation in response to ADP.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2647584PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/STROKEAHA.108.533786DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

pial arteriolar
16
glia limitans
12
limitans astrocytes
12
arteriolar dilation
12
astrocyte injury
12
carbon monoxide
8
newborn pigs
8
dilation response
8
response adp
8
heme oxygenase
8

Similar Publications

L-Arginine and Taurisolo Effects on Brain Hypoperfusion-Reperfusion Damage in Hypertensive Rats.

Int J Mol Sci

October 2024

Department of Translational Medicine and New Technologies in Medicine and Surgery, University of Pisa, 56127 Pisa, Italy.

Acute and chronic hypertension causes cerebral vasculopathy, increasing the risk of ischemia and stroke. Our study aimed to compare the effects of arterial pressure reduction on the pial microvascular responses induced by hypoperfusion and reperfusion in spontaneously hypertensive Wistar rats, desamethasone-induced hypertensive Wistar rats and age-matched normotensive Wistar rats fed for 3 months with a normal diet or normal diet supplemented with L-arginine or Taurisolo or L-arginine plus Taurisolo. At the end of treatments, the rats were submitted to bilateral occlusion of common carotid arteries for 30 min and reperfusion.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Cerebrovascular autoregulation (CA) can be disrupted after acute brain injuries, and different levels of carbon dioxide (PaCO₂) influence this regulation, though the specifics are not well understood.
  • This study aimed to examine how changes in PaCO₂ affect pial vasodynamics using a porcine model, preparing for further research on cerebral blood flow (CBF) under varying PaCO₂ levels.
  • Results showed that modifying respiratory rates to adjust PaCO₂ was effective, and while there were changes in pial arteriolar diameter with PaCO₂ variations, significant vasodilation only occurred in a hypercapnic environment, indicating a non-linear relationship.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background And Objectives: Pressure reactivity index (PRx) has been proposed as a metric associated with cerebrovascular autoregulatory (CA) function and has been thoroughly investigated in clinical research. In this study, PRx is validated in a porcine cranial window model, developed to visualize pial arteriolar autoregulation and its limits.

Methods: We measured arterial blood pressure, intracranial pressure, pial arteriolar diameter, and red blood cell (RBC) velocity in a closed cranial window piglet model during gradual balloon catheter-induced arterial hypotension (n = 10) or hypertension (n = 10).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA) is a cerebral small vessel disease in which amyloid-β accumulates in vessel walls. CAA is a leading cause of symptomatic lobar intracerebral hemorrhage and an important contributor to age-related cognitive decline. Recent work has suggested that vascular dysfunction may precede symptomatic stages of CAA, and that spontaneous slow oscillations in arteriolar diameter (termed vasomotion), important for amyloid-β clearance, may be impaired in CAA.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background And Objectives: Hydrocephalus is characterized by progressive enlargement of cerebral ventricles, resulting in impaired microvasculature and cerebral hypoperfusion. This study aimed to demonstrate the microvascular changes in hydrocephalic rats and the effects of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) release on cerebral blood flow (CBF).

Methods: On postnatal day 21 (P21), male Wistar rats were intracisternally injected with either a kaolin suspension or saline.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!