TY - JOUR
T1 - Turnover of rat brain perivascular cells
AU - Bechmann, Ingo
AU - Kwidzinski, Erik
AU - Kovac, Adam D.
AU - Simbürger, Eva
AU - Horvath, Tamas
AU - Gimsa, Ulrike
AU - Dirnagl, Ulrich
AU - Priller, Josef
AU - Nitsch, Robert
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors thank Professor Dr. R. Veh and Professor Dr. W. Richter (Institute of Anatomy, Department of Electron Microscopy and Molecular Neuroanatomy, Humboldt-University, Berlin) and PD Dr. D. A. Angelov (Institute of Anatomy, Cologne) for helpful discussion of this study. Thanks to Shula Sarner, Ph.D., for criticism and in depth discussion of our data. The excellent technical help of G. Duwe, J. Mahlo, D. Wachenschwanz, and S. Lewandowsky is also gratefully acknowledged. This study was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft DFG Be 2272/1-1. I.B. is Habilitation Scholar at the Charité.
PY - 2001
Y1 - 2001
N2 - Brain perivascular spaces harbor a population of cells which exhibit high phagocytic capacity. Therefore, these cells can be labeled by intraventricular injection of tracers. Such perivascular cells at the interface between blood and brain are believed to belong to the monocyte/macrophage lineage and to be involved in antigen presentation. Currently, it is unclear whether these cells undergo a continuous turnover by entering and leaving the bloodstream. Using bone-marrow-chimeric animals, migration of donor macrophages into brain perivascular spaces has been reported. On the other hand, following intracerebral injection of india ink into nontransplanted animals, ink-labeled perlvascular cells were still found 2 years after injection, suggesting a high stability of this cell pool. Thus, the turnover of perivascular cells observed in chimeras might be a result of bone marrow transplantation rather than a physiological occurrence. To address this issue, we monitored de novo invasion of macrophages into perivascular spaces of apparently healthy adult rats by applying techniques other than bone marrow transplantation, (i) consecutive injections of different tracers and (ii) ex vivo isolation of macrophages from the blood, cell labeling, and reinjection into the same animal to avoid MHC mismatch. Both approaches revealed vivid de novo invasion of macrophages into perivascular spaces, but not into brain parenchyma, rendering untenable the concept of perivascular cells forming a stable population of macrophages in the brain. Thus, brain perivascular spaces are under permanent immune surveillance of blood borne macrophages in normal adult rats.
AB - Brain perivascular spaces harbor a population of cells which exhibit high phagocytic capacity. Therefore, these cells can be labeled by intraventricular injection of tracers. Such perivascular cells at the interface between blood and brain are believed to belong to the monocyte/macrophage lineage and to be involved in antigen presentation. Currently, it is unclear whether these cells undergo a continuous turnover by entering and leaving the bloodstream. Using bone-marrow-chimeric animals, migration of donor macrophages into brain perivascular spaces has been reported. On the other hand, following intracerebral injection of india ink into nontransplanted animals, ink-labeled perlvascular cells were still found 2 years after injection, suggesting a high stability of this cell pool. Thus, the turnover of perivascular cells observed in chimeras might be a result of bone marrow transplantation rather than a physiological occurrence. To address this issue, we monitored de novo invasion of macrophages into perivascular spaces of apparently healthy adult rats by applying techniques other than bone marrow transplantation, (i) consecutive injections of different tracers and (ii) ex vivo isolation of macrophages from the blood, cell labeling, and reinjection into the same animal to avoid MHC mismatch. Both approaches revealed vivid de novo invasion of macrophages into perivascular spaces, but not into brain parenchyma, rendering untenable the concept of perivascular cells forming a stable population of macrophages in the brain. Thus, brain perivascular spaces are under permanent immune surveillance of blood borne macrophages in normal adult rats.
KW - Antigen presentation
KW - Immune privilege
KW - Meninges
KW - Microglia
KW - Neuroimmunology
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0035071610&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1006/exnr.2000.7618
DO - 10.1006/exnr.2000.7618
M3 - Article
C2 - 11259112
AN - SCOPUS:0035071610
SN - 0014-4886
VL - 168
SP - 242
EP - 249
JO - Experimental Neurology
JF - Experimental Neurology
IS - 2
ER -