Cargando…

Ventriculomegaly associated with ependymal gliosis and declines in barrier integrity in the aging human and mouse brain

Age-associated ventriculomegaly is typically attributed to neurodegeneration; however, additional factors might initiate or contribute to progressive ventricular expansion. By directly linking postmortem human MRI sequences with histological features of periventricular tissue, we show that substanti...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Shook, Brett A, Lennington, Jessica B, Acabchuk, Rebecca L, Halling, Meredith, Sun, Ye, Peters, John, Wu, Qian, Mahajan, Amit, Fellows, Douglas W, Conover, Joanne C
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BlackWell Publishing Ltd 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3954884/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24341850
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/acel.12184
_version_ 1782307519134171136
author Shook, Brett A
Lennington, Jessica B
Acabchuk, Rebecca L
Halling, Meredith
Sun, Ye
Peters, John
Wu, Qian
Mahajan, Amit
Fellows, Douglas W
Conover, Joanne C
author_facet Shook, Brett A
Lennington, Jessica B
Acabchuk, Rebecca L
Halling, Meredith
Sun, Ye
Peters, John
Wu, Qian
Mahajan, Amit
Fellows, Douglas W
Conover, Joanne C
author_sort Shook, Brett A
collection PubMed
description Age-associated ventriculomegaly is typically attributed to neurodegeneration; however, additional factors might initiate or contribute to progressive ventricular expansion. By directly linking postmortem human MRI sequences with histological features of periventricular tissue, we show that substantial lateral ventricle surface gliosis is associated with ventriculomegaly. To examine whether loss of ependymal cell coverage resulting in ventricle surface glial scarring can lead directly to ventricle enlargement independent of any other injury or degenerative loss, we modeled in mice the glial scarring found along the lateral ventricle surface in aged humans. Neuraminidase, which cleaves glycosidic linkages of apical adherens junction proteins, was administered intracerebroventricularly to denude areas of ependymal cells. Substantial ependymal cell loss resulted in reactive gliosis rather than stem cell-mediated regenerative repair of the ventricle lining, and the gliotic regions showed morphologic and phenotypic characteristics similar to those found in aged humans. Increased levels of aquaporin-4, indicative of edema, observed in regions of periventricular gliosis in human tissue were also replicated in our mouse model. 3D modeling together with volume measurements revealed that mice with ventricle surface scarring developed expanded ventricles, independent of neurodegeneration. Through a comprehensive, comparative analysis of the lateral ventricles and associated periventricular tissue in aged humans and mouse, followed by modeling of surface gliosis in mice, we have demonstrated a direct link between lateral ventricle surface gliosis and ventricle enlargement. These studies highlight the importance of maintaining an intact ependymal cell lining throughout aging.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-3954884
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2014
publisher BlackWell Publishing Ltd
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-39548842015-02-19 Ventriculomegaly associated with ependymal gliosis and declines in barrier integrity in the aging human and mouse brain Shook, Brett A Lennington, Jessica B Acabchuk, Rebecca L Halling, Meredith Sun, Ye Peters, John Wu, Qian Mahajan, Amit Fellows, Douglas W Conover, Joanne C Aging Cell Original Articles Age-associated ventriculomegaly is typically attributed to neurodegeneration; however, additional factors might initiate or contribute to progressive ventricular expansion. By directly linking postmortem human MRI sequences with histological features of periventricular tissue, we show that substantial lateral ventricle surface gliosis is associated with ventriculomegaly. To examine whether loss of ependymal cell coverage resulting in ventricle surface glial scarring can lead directly to ventricle enlargement independent of any other injury or degenerative loss, we modeled in mice the glial scarring found along the lateral ventricle surface in aged humans. Neuraminidase, which cleaves glycosidic linkages of apical adherens junction proteins, was administered intracerebroventricularly to denude areas of ependymal cells. Substantial ependymal cell loss resulted in reactive gliosis rather than stem cell-mediated regenerative repair of the ventricle lining, and the gliotic regions showed morphologic and phenotypic characteristics similar to those found in aged humans. Increased levels of aquaporin-4, indicative of edema, observed in regions of periventricular gliosis in human tissue were also replicated in our mouse model. 3D modeling together with volume measurements revealed that mice with ventricle surface scarring developed expanded ventricles, independent of neurodegeneration. Through a comprehensive, comparative analysis of the lateral ventricles and associated periventricular tissue in aged humans and mouse, followed by modeling of surface gliosis in mice, we have demonstrated a direct link between lateral ventricle surface gliosis and ventricle enlargement. These studies highlight the importance of maintaining an intact ependymal cell lining throughout aging. BlackWell Publishing Ltd 2014-04 2013-12-17 /pmc/articles/PMC3954884/ /pubmed/24341850 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/acel.12184 Text en © 2013 The Authors. Aging Cell published by the Anatomical Society and John Wiley & Sons Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Articles
Shook, Brett A
Lennington, Jessica B
Acabchuk, Rebecca L
Halling, Meredith
Sun, Ye
Peters, John
Wu, Qian
Mahajan, Amit
Fellows, Douglas W
Conover, Joanne C
Ventriculomegaly associated with ependymal gliosis and declines in barrier integrity in the aging human and mouse brain
title Ventriculomegaly associated with ependymal gliosis and declines in barrier integrity in the aging human and mouse brain
title_full Ventriculomegaly associated with ependymal gliosis and declines in barrier integrity in the aging human and mouse brain
title_fullStr Ventriculomegaly associated with ependymal gliosis and declines in barrier integrity in the aging human and mouse brain
title_full_unstemmed Ventriculomegaly associated with ependymal gliosis and declines in barrier integrity in the aging human and mouse brain
title_short Ventriculomegaly associated with ependymal gliosis and declines in barrier integrity in the aging human and mouse brain
title_sort ventriculomegaly associated with ependymal gliosis and declines in barrier integrity in the aging human and mouse brain
topic Original Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3954884/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24341850
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/acel.12184
work_keys_str_mv AT shookbretta ventriculomegalyassociatedwithependymalgliosisanddeclinesinbarrierintegrityintheaginghumanandmousebrain
AT lenningtonjessicab ventriculomegalyassociatedwithependymalgliosisanddeclinesinbarrierintegrityintheaginghumanandmousebrain
AT acabchukrebeccal ventriculomegalyassociatedwithependymalgliosisanddeclinesinbarrierintegrityintheaginghumanandmousebrain
AT hallingmeredith ventriculomegalyassociatedwithependymalgliosisanddeclinesinbarrierintegrityintheaginghumanandmousebrain
AT sunye ventriculomegalyassociatedwithependymalgliosisanddeclinesinbarrierintegrityintheaginghumanandmousebrain
AT petersjohn ventriculomegalyassociatedwithependymalgliosisanddeclinesinbarrierintegrityintheaginghumanandmousebrain
AT wuqian ventriculomegalyassociatedwithependymalgliosisanddeclinesinbarrierintegrityintheaginghumanandmousebrain
AT mahajanamit ventriculomegalyassociatedwithependymalgliosisanddeclinesinbarrierintegrityintheaginghumanandmousebrain
AT fellowsdouglasw ventriculomegalyassociatedwithependymalgliosisanddeclinesinbarrierintegrityintheaginghumanandmousebrain
AT conoverjoannec ventriculomegalyassociatedwithependymalgliosisanddeclinesinbarrierintegrityintheaginghumanandmousebrain