Astrocyte glutathione maintains endothelial barrier stability


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Date

2020-07

Publication Type

Journal Article

ETH Bibliography

yes

Citations

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Data

Abstract

Blood-brain barrier (BBB) impairment clearly accelerates brain disease progression. As ways to prevent injury-induced barrier dysfunction remain elusive, better understanding of how BBB cells interact and modulate barrier integrity is needed. Our metabolomic profiling study showed that cell-specific adaptation to injury correlates well with metabolic reprogramming at the BBB. In particular we noted that primary astrocytes (AC) contain comparatively high levels of glutathione (GSH)-related metabolites compared to primary endothelial cells (EC). Injury significantly disturbed redox balance in EC but not AC motivating us to assess 1) whether an AC-EC GSH shuttle supports barrier stability and 2) the impact of GSH on EC function. Using an isotopic labeling/tracking approach combined with Time-of-Flight Mass Spectrometry (TOF-MS) we prove that AC constantly shuttle GSH to EC even under resting conditions - a flux accelerated by injury conditions in vitro. In correlation, co-culture studies revealed that blocking AC GSH generation and secretion via siRNA-mediated γ-glutamyl cysteine ligase (GCL) knockdown significantly compromises EC barrier integrity. Using different GSH donors, we further show that exogenous GSH supplementation improves barrier function by maintaining organization of tight junction proteins and preventing injury-induced tight junction phosphorylation. Thus the AC GSH shuttle is key for maintaining EC redox homeostasis and BBB stability suggesting GSH supplementation could improve recovery after brain injury.

Publication status

published

Editor

Book title

Journal / series

Volume

34

Pages / Article No.

101576

Publisher

Elsevier

Event

Edition / version

Methods

Software

Geographic location

Date collected

Date created

Subject

Neurovascular unit; Metabolic communication; Barrier stability; Tight junction; Blood-brain barrier; Redox balance

Organisational unit

08839 - Zamboni, Nicola (Tit.-Prof.) check_circle

Notes

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