Purpose: To examine mural cell differentiation and pericyte ensheathment during human choroidal vascular formation and into adulthood.
Methods: Triple- and double-labeled immunohistochemistry (alpha-smooth muscle actin [αSMA], desmin, NG2, calponin, caldesmon, CD44, CD34, and CD39) were applied to human fetal (8-32 weeks' gestation) and adult choroidal and retinal wholemounts and histologic cross-sections. Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) was also undertaken.
Results: Early in development CD44+ stem cells also stained with αSMA and CD39, suggesting a common precursor. At 12 weeks' gestation, αSMA+ mural precursor cells, confirmed by TEM, were found scattered and isolated over the primordial vascular tree. During development, αSMA+ cells formed a continuous sheath around large arterioles; in veins there were gaps in αSMA expression. The choriocapillaris had an extensive vascular bed but limited coverage by αSMA+ and NG2+ mural cells. Calponin was expressed only on large vessels, and no caldesmon was detected. Pericyte ensheathment of adult capillaries was 11% for choroid versus 94% for retina. Remarkably, choroidal pericytes had no visible intermediate filaments (IFs) on TEM, though IFs were present in retinal pericytes. Neither retinal nor choroidal pericytes stained with desmin.
Conclusions: CD44+ stem cells are involved in the formation of mural cells in the human choroidal vasculature. A marked reduction in pericyte ensheathment of human choroidal vessels suggests a permanently open "plasticity window" and a predisposition to vascular instability and poor autoregulatory ability.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1167/iovs.10-5403 | DOI Listing |
Geroscience
November 2024
Institute of Biophysics, HUN-REN Biological Research Centre, Szeged, Hungary.
Cerebral pericytes are mural cells covering brain microvessels, organized as ensheathing, mesh and thin-strand pericytes. These latter two, together called capillary pericytes, have low levels of alpha smooth muscle actin (α-SMA), regulating basal vascular tone and applying a slow influence on cerebral blood flow. Pericytes are subject to alterations in ageing which may be even more pronounced in age-related pathologies, including microinfarcts, which usually affect a large number of vessels in the ageing brain.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Histochem Cytochem
October 2024
Samuel Oschin Comprehensive Cancer Institute, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, California.
Heterotrimeric extracellular matrix proteins laminins are mostly deposited at basal membranes and are important in repair and neoplasia. Here, we localize laminin beta 2 () at the sites of blood-brain barrier (BBB). Microvasculature (MV) of normal brain is endowed with complete coverage.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClin Sci (Lond)
August 2024
Department of Pathology & Laboratory Medicine, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC, U.S.A.
bioRxiv
May 2024
Synaptic Physiology Section, National Institute of Neurological Disorder and Stroke, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD.
The neurovascular unit (NVU), comprising vascular, glial and neural elements, supports the energetic demands of neural computation, but this aspect of the retina's trilaminar vessel network is poorly understood. Only the innermost vessel layer - the superficial vascular plexus (SVP) - is ensheathed by astrocytes, like brain capillaries, whereas glial ensheathment in other layers derives from radial Müller glia. Using serial electron microscopy reconstructions from mouse and primate retina, we find that Müller processes cover capillaries in a tessellating pattern, mirroring the tiled astrocytic endfeet wrapping brain capillaries.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCommun Biol
May 2023
Department of Stomatology, Faculty of Dental Medicine, Université de Montréal, Montréal, QC, H3C3J7, Canada.
Pericytes are multifunctional cells of the vasculature that are vital to brain homeostasis, yet many of their fundamental physiological properties, such as Ca signaling pathways, remain unexplored. We performed pharmacological and ion substitution experiments to investigate the mechanisms underlying pericyte Ca signaling in acute cortical brain slices of PDGFRβ-Cre::GCaMP6f mice. We report that mid-capillary pericyte Ca signalling differs from ensheathing type pericytes in that it is largely independent of L- and T-type voltage-gated calcium channels.
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