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Vascular and neural transcriptomics reveal stage-dependent pathways to inflammation and cognitive dysfunction in a rat model of hypertension

Authors :
Philipp Ulbrich
Lorena Morton
Michael Briese
Naomi Lämmlin
Hendrik Mattern
Md. Hasanuzzaman
Melina Westhues
Mahsima Khoshneviszadeh
Silke Appenzeller
Daniel Gündel
Magali Toussaint
Peter Brust
Torsten Kniess
Anja Oelschlegel
Jürgen Goldschmidt
Sven Meuth
Hans-Jochen Heinze
Grazyna Debska-Vielhaber
Stefan Vielhaber
Axel Becker
Alexander Dityatev
Solveig Jandke
Michael Sendtner
Ildiko Dunay
Stefanie Schreiber
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2023.

Abstract

Chronic arterial hypertension causes cerebral microvascular dysfunction and doubles dementia risk in aging. However, cognitive health preservation by therapeutic blood pressure lowering alone is limited and depends on disease duration, the degree of irreversible tissue damage and whether microvascular function can be restored. This study aimed to understand molecular and cellular temporo-spatial pathomechanisms in the course of hypertension. We investigated the effects of initial, early chronic and late chronic hypertension in the frontal brain of rats by applying behavioral tests, histopathology, immunofluorescence, FACS, microvascular/neural tissue RNA sequencing as well as18F-FDG PET imaging. Chronic hypertension caused frontal brain-specific behavioral deficits. Our results highlight stage-dependent responses to continuous microvascular stress and wounding by hypertension. Early responses included a fast recruitment of activated microglia to the blood vessels, immigration of peripheral immune cells, blood-brain-barrier leakage and an energy-demanding hypermetabolic state. Vascular adaptation mechanisms were observed in later stages and included angiogenesis and vessel wall strengthening by upregulation of cellular adhesion molecules and extracellular matrix. Additionally, we identified late chronic accumulation of Igfbp-5 in the brains of hypertensive rats, which is also a signature of Alzheimer’s dementia and attenuates protective Igf-1 signaling. Our study advances the knowledge of involved pathomechanisms and highlights the stage-dependent nature of hypertensive pathobiology. This groundwork might be helpful for basic and clinical research to identify stage-dependent markers in the human disease course, investigate stage-dependent interventions besides blood pressure lowering and better understand the relationship between poor vascular health and neurodegenerative diseases.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........c1099a4ecd522621afe81e01e6f9f610
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2023.01.20.524921