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Transcellular blood–brain barrier disruption in malaria-induced reversible brain edema

Brain swelling occurs in cerebral malaria (CM) and may either reverse or result in fatal outcome. It is currently unknown how brain swelling in CM reverses, as brain swelling at the acute stage is difficult to study in humans and animal models with reliable induction of reversible edema are not know...

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Autores principales: Jin, Jessica, Ba, Mame Aida, Wai, Chi Ho, Mohanty, Sanjib, Sahu, Praveen K, Pattnaik, Rajyabardhan, Pirpamer, Lukas, Fischer, Manuel, Heiland, Sabine, Lanzer, Michael, Frischknecht, Friedrich, Mueller, Ann-Kristin, Pfeil, Johannes, Majhi, Megharay, Cyrklaff, Marek, Wassmer, Samuel C, Bendszus, Martin, Hoffmann, Angelika
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Life Science Alliance LLC 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8905774/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35260473
http://dx.doi.org/10.26508/lsa.202201402
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author Jin, Jessica
Ba, Mame Aida
Wai, Chi Ho
Mohanty, Sanjib
Sahu, Praveen K
Pattnaik, Rajyabardhan
Pirpamer, Lukas
Fischer, Manuel
Heiland, Sabine
Lanzer, Michael
Frischknecht, Friedrich
Mueller, Ann-Kristin
Pfeil, Johannes
Majhi, Megharay
Cyrklaff, Marek
Wassmer, Samuel C
Bendszus, Martin
Hoffmann, Angelika
author_facet Jin, Jessica
Ba, Mame Aida
Wai, Chi Ho
Mohanty, Sanjib
Sahu, Praveen K
Pattnaik, Rajyabardhan
Pirpamer, Lukas
Fischer, Manuel
Heiland, Sabine
Lanzer, Michael
Frischknecht, Friedrich
Mueller, Ann-Kristin
Pfeil, Johannes
Majhi, Megharay
Cyrklaff, Marek
Wassmer, Samuel C
Bendszus, Martin
Hoffmann, Angelika
author_sort Jin, Jessica
collection PubMed
description Brain swelling occurs in cerebral malaria (CM) and may either reverse or result in fatal outcome. It is currently unknown how brain swelling in CM reverses, as brain swelling at the acute stage is difficult to study in humans and animal models with reliable induction of reversible edema are not known. In this study, we show that reversible brain swelling in experimental murine CM can be induced reliably after single vaccination with radiation-attenuated sporozoites as proven by in vivo high-field magnetic resonance imaging. Our results provide evidence that brain swelling results from transcellular blood–brain barrier disruption (BBBD), as revealed by electron microscopy. This mechanism enables reversal of brain swelling but does not prevent persistent focal brain damage, evidenced by microhemorrhages, in areas of most severe BBBD. In adult CM patients magnetic resonance imaging demonstrate microhemorrhages in more than one third of patients with reversible edema, emphasizing similarities of the experimental model and human disease. Our data suggest that targeting transcellular BBBD may represent a promising adjunct therapeutic approach to reduce edema and may improve neurological outcome.
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spelling pubmed-89057742022-03-25 Transcellular blood–brain barrier disruption in malaria-induced reversible brain edema Jin, Jessica Ba, Mame Aida Wai, Chi Ho Mohanty, Sanjib Sahu, Praveen K Pattnaik, Rajyabardhan Pirpamer, Lukas Fischer, Manuel Heiland, Sabine Lanzer, Michael Frischknecht, Friedrich Mueller, Ann-Kristin Pfeil, Johannes Majhi, Megharay Cyrklaff, Marek Wassmer, Samuel C Bendszus, Martin Hoffmann, Angelika Life Sci Alliance Research Articles Brain swelling occurs in cerebral malaria (CM) and may either reverse or result in fatal outcome. It is currently unknown how brain swelling in CM reverses, as brain swelling at the acute stage is difficult to study in humans and animal models with reliable induction of reversible edema are not known. In this study, we show that reversible brain swelling in experimental murine CM can be induced reliably after single vaccination with radiation-attenuated sporozoites as proven by in vivo high-field magnetic resonance imaging. Our results provide evidence that brain swelling results from transcellular blood–brain barrier disruption (BBBD), as revealed by electron microscopy. This mechanism enables reversal of brain swelling but does not prevent persistent focal brain damage, evidenced by microhemorrhages, in areas of most severe BBBD. In adult CM patients magnetic resonance imaging demonstrate microhemorrhages in more than one third of patients with reversible edema, emphasizing similarities of the experimental model and human disease. Our data suggest that targeting transcellular BBBD may represent a promising adjunct therapeutic approach to reduce edema and may improve neurological outcome. Life Science Alliance LLC 2022-03-08 /pmc/articles/PMC8905774/ /pubmed/35260473 http://dx.doi.org/10.26508/lsa.202201402 Text en © 2022 Jin et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This article is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution 4.0 International, as described at https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Research Articles
Jin, Jessica
Ba, Mame Aida
Wai, Chi Ho
Mohanty, Sanjib
Sahu, Praveen K
Pattnaik, Rajyabardhan
Pirpamer, Lukas
Fischer, Manuel
Heiland, Sabine
Lanzer, Michael
Frischknecht, Friedrich
Mueller, Ann-Kristin
Pfeil, Johannes
Majhi, Megharay
Cyrklaff, Marek
Wassmer, Samuel C
Bendszus, Martin
Hoffmann, Angelika
Transcellular blood–brain barrier disruption in malaria-induced reversible brain edema
title Transcellular blood–brain barrier disruption in malaria-induced reversible brain edema
title_full Transcellular blood–brain barrier disruption in malaria-induced reversible brain edema
title_fullStr Transcellular blood–brain barrier disruption in malaria-induced reversible brain edema
title_full_unstemmed Transcellular blood–brain barrier disruption in malaria-induced reversible brain edema
title_short Transcellular blood–brain barrier disruption in malaria-induced reversible brain edema
title_sort transcellular blood–brain barrier disruption in malaria-induced reversible brain edema
topic Research Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8905774/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35260473
http://dx.doi.org/10.26508/lsa.202201402
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