scholarly journals ACKR1 favors transcellular over paracellular T‐cell diapedesis across the blood‐brain barrier in neuroinflammation in vitro

Author(s):  
Luca Marchetti ◽  
David Francisco ◽  
Sasha Soldati ◽  
Neda Haghayegh Jahromi ◽  
Sara Barcos ◽  
...  
2021 ◽  
Vol 134 (8) ◽  
Author(s):  
Mariana Castro Dias ◽  
Adolfo Odriozola Quesada ◽  
Sasha Soldati ◽  
Fabio Bösch ◽  
Isabelle Gruber ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT The migration of activated T cells across the blood–brain barrier (BBB) is a critical step in central nervous system (CNS) immune surveillance and inflammation. Whereas T cell diapedesis across the intact BBB seems to occur preferentially through the BBB cellular junctions, impaired BBB integrity during neuroinflammation is accompanied by increased transcellular T cell diapedesis. The underlying mechanisms directing T cells to paracellular versus transcellular sites of diapedesis across the BBB remain to be explored. By combining in vitro live-cell imaging of T cell migration across primary mouse brain microvascular endothelial cells (pMBMECs) under physiological flow with serial block-face scanning electron microscopy (SBF-SEM), we have identified BBB tricellular junctions as novel sites for T cell diapedesis across the BBB. Downregulated expression of tricellular junctional proteins or protein-based targeting of their interactions in pMBMEC monolayers correlated with enhanced transcellular T cell diapedesis, and abluminal presence of chemokines increased T cell diapedesis through tricellular junctions. Our observations assign an entirely novel role to BBB tricellular junctions in regulating T cell entry into the CNS. This article has an associated First Person interview with the first author of the paper.


2016 ◽  
Vol 46 (9) ◽  
pp. 2187-2203 ◽  
Author(s):  
Henriette Rudolph ◽  
Armelle Klopstein ◽  
Isabelle Gruber ◽  
Claudia Blatti ◽  
Ruth Lyck ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 1 (5) ◽  
pp. 2170051
Author(s):  
Christina L. Schofield ◽  
Aleixandre Rodrigo-Navarro ◽  
Matthew J. Dalby ◽  
Tom Van Agtmael ◽  
Manuel Salmeron-Sanchez

Pharmaceutics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (6) ◽  
pp. 892
Author(s):  
Elisa L. J. Moya ◽  
Elodie Vandenhaute ◽  
Eleonora Rizzi ◽  
Marie-Christine Boucau ◽  
Johan Hachani ◽  
...  

Central nervous system (CNS) diseases are one of the top causes of death worldwide. As there is a difficulty of drug penetration into the brain due to the blood–brain barrier (BBB), many CNS drugs treatments fail in clinical trials. Hence, there is a need to develop effective CNS drugs following strategies for delivery to the brain by better selecting them as early as possible during the drug discovery process. The use of in vitro BBB models has proved useful to evaluate the impact of drugs/compounds toxicity, BBB permeation rates and molecular transport mechanisms within the brain cells in academic research and early-stage drug discovery. However, these studies that require biological material (animal brain or human cells) are time-consuming and involve costly amounts of materials and plastic wastes due to the format of the models. Hence, to adapt to the high yields needed in early-stage drug discoveries for compound screenings, a patented well-established human in vitro BBB model was miniaturized and automated into a 96-well format. This replicate met all the BBB model reliability criteria to get predictive results, allowing a significant reduction in biological materials, waste and a higher screening capacity for being extensively used during early-stage drug discovery studies.


2021 ◽  
Vol 34 ◽  
pp. 102377
Author(s):  
Laís Ribovski ◽  
Edwin de Jong ◽  
Olga Mergel ◽  
Guangyue Zu ◽  
Damla Keskin ◽  
...  

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