AI Article Synopsis

  • - Cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA) is a serious condition linked to Alzheimer's disease and involves dysfunctional blood vessel responses due to oxidative stress from reactive oxygen species (ROS), although the source of ROS was previously unclear.
  • - Researchers investigated whether brain border-associated macrophages (BAM), which are near blood vessels, produce ROS via the CD36 receptor, impacting neurovascular health and cognitive function in mice.
  • - The study found that deleting CD36 in BAM reduced ROS production, improved blood flow and cognitive function, decreased CAA-associated amyloid-beta levels, and enhanced the brain's ability to clear amyloid-beta without affecting other plaque forms.

Article Abstract

Cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA) is a devastating condition common in patients with Alzheimer's disease but also observed in the general population. Vascular oxidative stress and neurovascular dysfunction have been implicated in CAA but the cellular source of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and related signaling mechanisms remain unclear. We tested the hypothesis that brain border-associated macrophages (BAM), yolk sac-derived myeloid cells closely apposed to parenchymal and leptomeningeal blood vessels, are the source of radicals through the Aβ-binding innate immunity receptor CD36, leading to neurovascular dysfunction, CAA, and cognitive impairment. Tg2576 mice and WT littermates were transplanted with CD36 or CD36 bone marrow at 12-month of age and tested at 15 months. This approach enables the repopulation of perivascular and leptomeningeal compartments with CD36 BAM. Neurovascular function was tested in anesthetized mice equipped with a cranial window in which cerebral blood flow was monitored by laser-Doppler flowmetry. Amyloid pathology and cognitive function were also examined. The increase in blood flow evoked by whisker stimulation (functional hyperemia) or by endothelial and smooth muscle vasoactivity was markedly attenuated in WT®Tg2576 chimeras but was fully restored in CD36 ®Tg2576 chimeras, in which BAM ROS production was suppressed. CAA-associated Aβ , but not Aβ , was reduced in CD36 ®Tg2576 chimeras. Similarly, CAA, but not parenchymal plaques, was reduced in CD36 ®Tg2576 chimeras. These beneficial vascular effects were associated with cognitive improvement. Finally, CD36 mice were able to more efficiently clear exogenous Aβ injected into the neocortex or the striatum. CD36 deletion in BAM suppresses ROS production and rescues the neurovascular dysfunction and damage induced by Aβ. CD36 deletion in BAM also reduced brain Aβ and ameliorated CAA without affecting parenchyma plaques. Lack of CD36 enhanced the vascular clearance of exogenous Aβ. Restoration of neurovascular function and attenuation of CAA resulted in a near complete rescue of cognitive function. Collectively, these data implicate CNS BAM in the pathogenesis of CAA and raise the possibility that targeting BAM CD36 is beneficial in CAA and other conditions associated with vascular Aβ deposition and damage.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10168479PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-2719812/v1DOI Listing

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