Hippocampal neural stem cells facilitate access from circulation via apical cytoplasmic processes
Abstract
Blood vessels (BVs) are considered an integral component of neural stem cells (NSCs) niches. NSCs in the dentate gyrus (DG(have enigmatic elaborated apical cellular processes that are associated with BVs. Whether this contact serves as a mechanism for delivering circulating molecules is not known. Here we uncovered a previously unrecognized communication route allowing exclusive direct access of blood-borne substances to hippocampal NSCs. BBB-impermeable fluorescent tracer injected transcardially to mice is selectively uptaken by DG NSCs within a minute, via the vessel-associated apical processes. These processes, measured >30 nm in diameter, establish direct membrane-to-membrane contact with endothelial cells in specialized areas of irregular endothelial basement membrane and enriched with vesicular activity. Doxorubicin, a brain-impermeable chemotherapeutic agent, is also readily and selectively uptaken by NSCs and reduces their proliferation, which might explain its problematic anti-neurogenic or cognitive side-effect. The newly-discovered NSC-BV communication route explains how circulatory neurogenic mediators are 'sensed' by NSCs.
Introduction
Neural stem cells (NSCs) serve as a source for new neurons in both the developing and adult brain. In the adult rodent brain, NSCs are confined into two locales, namely the subventricular zone (SVZ) of the lateral ventricles and the DG of the hippocampus. NSCs within the DG proliferate and differentiate into granule cells (GCs) eventually integrating into the existing network (van Praag et al., 2002). DG NSCs [also known as radial-glia-like cells (RGLs) (Bonaguidi et al., 2011) are distinguished by a unique, tree-like morphology with soma embedded in the subgranular zone (SGZ), a major shaft extending through the adjacent granule cell layer (GCL) and terminating in a dense network of fine cytoplasmic processes spreading in the inner molecular layer (Gebara et al., 2016). The functional role of these terminal shafts (if any) has remained obscure.
Stem cell functioning in general, and of RGLs in particular, relies on microenvironmental support by various cellular and extracellular components, collectively referred to as the ‘stem cell niche’. Blood vessels (BVs) are considered an integral, indispensable component of stem cell niches, including NSC niches (Licht and Keshet, 2015; Schildge et al., 2014). BV may impact stem cell performance by two different modes: via locally released blood-borne substances or via paracrinically acting factors elaborated by the endothelium ('angiocrine factors')(Rafii et al., 2016).
Adult hippocampal RGLs are mostly quiescent but undergo several rounds of cell division upon activation (Encinas et al., 2011; Pilz et al., 2018). Neurogenic rates are greatly affected by systemic cues, exemplified by exercise-enhanced neurogenesis shown to be mediated by systemic factors (Fabel et al., 2003; Ma et al., 2017; Moon et al., 2016). Likewise, heterochronic parabiosis experiments have demonstrated reciprocal influences on neurogenic rates mediated by systemic factors such as CCl11 or GDF11 (Katsimpardi et al., 2014; Villeda et al., 2011; Villeda and Wyss-Coray, 2013). Because hippocampal BVs (including those of the DG where RGLs reside) are thought to have a fully-functional BBB, the question arises how are circulating substances accessible to the brain parenchyma without a loss of BBB function?
Both SVZ-resident type B NSCs and DG-resident RGLs were shown to be intimately associated with BVs. In the SVZ, NSCs send a cellular process that wraps a capillary in the nearby striatum (Lacar et al., 2012; Licht and Keshet, 2015; Mirzadeh et al., 2008). In the DG, RGLs are physically associated with BVs at both the soma side (Filippov et al., 2003; Licht and Keshet, 2015; Palmer et al., 2000) and the apical side (Licht and Keshet, 2015; Licht et al., 2016; Moss et al., 2016). However, the functional significance of RGL-BV engagements is not well understood. Here we examined the proposition that these RGL processes might serve as a focal conduit through which blood-borne substances can be directly transferred to RGLs in a fully-functional BBB milieu, thereby providing a mechanistic explanation of how can NSCs 'sense' circulating neurogenic mediators. Additionally, we show that systemically-injected doxorubicin (a BBB-impermeable DNA-intercalating agent used for non-cerebral tumors) can be uptaken by RGLs and provide a direct anti-mitotic mechanism for its anti-neurogenic effect.
Results
RGL processes contact endothelial cells in basement membrane-reduced zones
The proposition that the thin processes extended by RGLs can serve as a bridge for transferring blood substances to RGL cell bodies requires that RGL-BV contact points are not separated by pericytes or by a basement membrane (BM) in which endothelial cells are usually invested and also constitutes an important component of the BBB (Thomsen et al., 2017). Previous studies that used Nestin-GFP to label RGLs (Filippov et al., 2003; Moss et al., 2016) were limited by the fact that mural pericytes are also labeled by this reporter (see Figure 1a; Nakazato et al., 2017), which makes perivascular pericytes and RGLs indistinguishable at the electron microscopy (EM) level. To overcome this shortcoming, we used Gli1-creERT2 mice [a mouse line in which inducible Cre is not expressed in DG cells other than RGLs (Ahn and Joyner, 2004) crossed to Ai9 (TdTomato) reporter line. RGLs were then highlighted with anti-RFP antibody and DAB staining (Figure 1b) and the tissue processed for EM imaging. Soma of DAB-labeled RGLs in the SGZ were readily discernible by their DAB dark grains (Figure 1c). At the inner molecular layer in the vicinity of those soma, we identified capillaries that are tightly wrapped by extra-fine (as thin as 30 nm in diameter) RGL processes labeled with DAB (Figure 1d–g).
The BM is visualized in EM images as a grayish 50–100 nm-thick layer surrounding the abluminal aspect of endothelial cells (Figure 2a). This component was found to thoroughly encircle DG capillaries of the hilus and outer molecular layer. Strikingly, however, observing endothelial-RGL processes contact points in the inner molecular layer revealed that engagement with BVs takes place in endothelial surfaces distinguished by irregular BM structures (absence of a classical BM appearance), thus allowing for possible direct membrane-to-membrane contact without the barrier imposed by the BM (Figure 2b). Based on TEM images, we quantified BM coverage at RGL contact points in comparison to areas devoid of RGL and found a significant difference (Fig, 2 c). Only ~30% of vessel abluminal aspect in contact with RGL retain the typical BM structure (as shown in Figure 2c right).
We further examined laminin (a vascular BM component)ith immunofluorescence using confocal microscopy (Figure 3a–d) followed by super-resolution microscopy (stochastic optical reconstruction microscopy – dSTORM, Figure 3d’–m). We analyzed images of Gli+ RFP-labeled RGLs in contact with blood vessels (Figure 3c–i) and found reduced laminin immunofluorescence where RGLs processes were present. In comparison, vessels in the DG not in contact with RGLs (Figure 3j,k) and cortical vessels (Figure 3l,m) had more pronounced laminin immunofluorescence. Quantification of dSTORM laminin signals (normalized to vessel wall length) revealed reduced laminin abundance at vessels which included a contact point with RGL in comparison with DG vessels without RGL process or in comparison with cortical vessels (Figure 3n).
Immunofluorescence for a second major protein of the BM, namely collagen IV, also revealed an apparent reduction in its expression in areas of RGL-BV contact (Figure 3—figure supplement 1).
Vesicular activity at the RGL-BV contact points
The BV-RGL interface was also characterized by robust vesicular activity as many cytoplasmic and abluminal membrane-bound vesicular-like structures (measured 60–100 nm in diameter) were detected there (Figure 4a–c and Figure 4—figure supplement 1a). To highlight the nature of vesicular structures and to verify that these are transcytotic vesicles, we indtrouced HRP into the blood circulation and stain brain slices with DAB to label the transcytotic vesicular trafficking path. TEM images of capillaries at the inner molecular layer revealed luminal, cytoplasmic and abluminal vesicles containing HRP (Figure 4d,e). We next aimed to quantify the numbers of HRP-containing vesicles near an RGL. For this purpose, we injected HRP into the tail vein of a Gli1+ RFP-labeled mouse, and performed DAB histochemistry for both structures. Although this double-labeling procedure impaired the integrity of tissue and washed HRP from the vessel lumen, we were able to image and quantify HRP+ endothelial vesicles near a DAB-labeled RGL (Figure 4—figure supplement 1b,d). The density of these vesicles (vesicles/length of the abluminal boundary (μm)) at the BM-modified RGL-BV interface was greater in comparison with BV segments which did not contain an RGL as well as with BV-RGL interface separated by a clear BM (Figure 4—figure supplement 1c,d).
In view of these findings, this specialized neurovascular unit (NVU) was further tested for allowing the infiltration of additional systemically-derived molecules.
BBB-impermeable circulatory molecular tracer is uptaken exclusively by hippocampal RGLs
Circumventricular organs are known to have permeable vessels to allow for direct exposure of neurons to circulating components. To examine the possibility that other cells in the intact adult brain are 'privileged' in the sense of having access to blood-borne substances, we injected into the systemic circulation a fluorescently-tagged 10Kd dextran tracer previously shown to be fully contained in the lumen of blood vessels with a functional BBB (Ben-Zvi et al., 2014; Licht et al., 2015). The tracer (6 mg/kg) was injected to the left ventricle of the heart (the tracer is rapidly cleared in the urine when injected to the tail vein) and the brain was retrieved one minute later and immediately fixed. Inspection of cryosections, co-stained with CD31 to highlight BVs, confirmed that - with the exception of the median eminence of the hypothalamus (a circumventricular organ) and choroid plexus vessels which are known to lack a functional BBB - the tracer is indeed fully retained in nearly all other cerebral BVs (Figure 5a). As expected, a small population of cells in the DG was labeled (Figure 5a, top left, and Figure 5b). These cells had their soma located in the SGZ, i.e., coinciding with the region where RGLs soma reside, and a major shaft extended towards the molecular layer. In fact, both the location and unique morphology of tracer-labeled cells strongly suggested that these are DG RGLs.
We wished to determine whether these cells serve as a conduit allowing direct transfer from the circulation without extracellular leakage into the parenchymal space. We followed the trajectory of tagged cells from a vessel-associated cellular process to soma. Considering its tortuous path, we used Imaris-aided 3D-reconstructions of serial confocal images. As shown in Figure 5c, there is a clear continuum in tracer presence from the vessel through the major shaft to the soma with no apparent signs of extracellular spillage.
To verify the identity of the tracer-accumulating cells, TRITC-labeled 10Kd tracer was injected into the circulation of mice harboring a Nestin-GFP reporter transgene highlighting RGLs (here, in contrast with EM studies, they can be distinguished from pericytes by their tree-like morphology). As shown in Figure 6a, due to their fineness, the tracer was barely visible in the tree-like processes and most of it accumulated in the major shaft and soma. We wished to re-confirm that RGLs thin processes also possess the tracer. For this purpose, we injected Nestin-GFP mice with biotin-labeled 10Kd dextran and visualized tracer distribution with Cy3-labeled streptavidin (this procedure was preferred to reduce interference of TRITC signal with GFP fluorescence). Co-localization of biotinylated tracer with nestin-GFP RGLs was evident in both the soma and the apical processes (Figure 6b).
Direct uptake of the chemotherapeutic agent doxorubicin by RGLs explains its anti-neurogenic side effects
Doxorubicin (dox) is a widely-used chemotherapeutic agent of the Anthracyclines family of DNA -intercalating agents. While inaccessibility of this small molecule (543 Da) to the brain parenchyma (Ohnishi et al., 1995; Treat et al., 2007) has precluded its use for treating brain tumors, its use against other tumors is often associated with significant cognitive impairment, also known as ‘chemo brain’ (reviewed by El-Agamy et al., 2019). Findings in rodents showing that dox have a dramatic negative effect on DG neurogenesis (Christie et al., 2012; Janelsins et al., 2010; Kitamura et al., 2015; Park et al., 2018) prompted us to examine whether this seemingly paradoxical situation could be explained by direct selective uptake of systemically-administered dox by RGLs. To this end, an experimental protocol similar to the one used for following tracer trafficking was used, except that dox (6 mg/kg) replaced dextran injection. Here we took advantage of the fact that dox have the same fluorescent properties as commonly used red fluorophores thereby enabling its direct visualization in cell nuclei in PFA-fixed brain sections. The fact that systemically-injected dox does not cross to brain parenchyma was validated by showing that in all brain regions known to have a functional BBB, dox was detected only in endothelial cell nuclei (exemplified for the cortex and CA1 region of the hippocampus in Figure 7a), whereas in areas in which the BBB is inactive, dox-labeled nuclei were also readily detected outside the vasculature (shown for the choroid plexus and the median eminence of the hypothalamus in Figure 7a). An outstanding exception was dox uptake by RGLs, evidenced by significant labeling of RGL nuclei within 1–2 min from its injection into the circulation of nestin-GFP mice where co-labeling with GFP confirmed the RGL identity of dox-uptaking cells (Figure 7b and c). We next examined whether dox (being an anti-mitotic agent) has a negative effect on RGL proliferation. For this purpose, we injected dox at the dose of 5 mg/kg into the peritoneal cavity of Nestin-GFP mice (three injections, every other day) followed by three injections of BrdU (50 mg/kg, every 12 hr) to tag proliferating cells (Figure 8a). Notably, this chronic dox application (in comparison with the previously-used intracardial injection) does not allow for its detection in cell nuclei. Dox treatment did not have an effect on the total numbers of Nestin+ RGL population (Figure 8b, right), as the majority of those cells are not proliferating. We immunostained for both the proliferation marker Ki67 (Figure 8b) and for BrdU (Figure 8c) to detect the proliferating RGL populations. In both cases, the numbers of proliferating RGLs have decreased significantly following dox treatment (Figure 8b and c). We, therefore, suggest a direct antimitotic effect of dox as a presumable explanation for reduced neurogenesis reported in rodents treated with dox and as a possible factor in the ‘chemo-brain’ side effect of cancer patients.
Discussion
Findings reported here showing that RGL-type NSCs in the adult hippocampus have a 'privileged' direct access to circulating blood molecules provide a possible mechanistic explanation to the enigmatic situation of NSCs 'sensing' the presence of particular blood components and responding by adjusting neurogenic rate despite the existence of a fully functional BBB milieu. Circulatory molecules were shown to increase (or decrease) neurogenesis include specific cytokines whose circulatory levels change with age, as well as blood components accumulating in plasma following physical exercise and shown to upregulate DG neurogenesis (Castellano et al., 2017; Cooper et al., 2018; Fabel et al., 2003; Leiter et al., 2019; Ozek et al., 2018; Smith et al., 2015; Villeda et al., 2014). It is likely that additional physiologic cues impacting DG neurogenesis are also mediated by systemic factors making use of this direct gateway to DG RGLs.
Our finding showing that the transfer of blood-borne molecules to RGL cell bodies takes place through RGL’s thin cytoplasmic processes ascribes a first known function to the obscure terminal arbor of RGLs. Noteworthy, unlike RGLs, SVZ NSCs failed to uptake injected molecules (Figure 5a) despite the fact that they also contact BV via a single extended process (Mirzadeh et al., 2008). Previously, we and others have shown that cytoplasmic processes extended by RGLs make direct contacts with nearby BVs (Licht and Keshet, 2015; Licht et al., 2016; Moss et al., 2016). Moreover, we showed that VEGF-promoted BV rejuvenation leads to remodeling of the terminal RGL arbor and engagement with even more remote capillaries (Licht et al., 2016). Yet, the functional significance of these physical RGL-BV associations has remained unknown until now.
We show, using EM imaging, that the fine processes of RGLs in the DG make direct contact with the membrane of nearby endothelial cell in the inner molecular layer. This contact takes place in areas with modified/reduced endothelial BM, as shown by both EM imaging and immunofluorescence/super-resolution microscopy. We also highlighted endothelial vesicular activity at the engagement points. While BBB vasculature is known to be poor in vesicular activity (Ben-Zvi et al., 2014), these findings suggest that this unique connection may allow for systemic molecules to be delivered via vesicular transcytosis directly to the membrane of RGLs. Further studies are required to verify how the transfer of molecules takes place and whether this process is discriminative with regards to specific molecules.
Indiscriminative uptake may explain apparent RGL vulnerabilities to otherwise BBB-impermeable molecules. A notable, clinically-relevant example is that of the BBB-impermeable chemotherapeutic agent doxorubicin. A major side effect of dox is a debilitating cognitive decline affecting a considerable fraction of treated cancer patients (El-Agamy et al., 2019) and animal studies have shown that treatment with dox is manifested in impeded neurogenesis (Christie et al., 2012; Janelsins et al., 2010; Kitamura et al., 2015; Rendeiro et al., 2016). However, it has been difficult to reconcile the adverse cerebral side effects of dox with the fact that it is a substrate for p-glycoprotein pumps and is not available to the brain. Our finding that systemically-injected dox is readily and efficiently uptaken by DG RGLs provides a more compelling explanation to this seeming paradox than previous suggestions arguing an indirect mechanism mediated by secondary molecules (Janelsins et al., 2010; Kitamura et al., 2015). We show here that the treatment by dox decreases proliferating RGL numbers thus suggesting a cell-autonomous anti-mitotic mechanism.
We conclude that this unique NVU pathway may serve as a gateway for molecules that need to bypass the barrier or a ‘hole in the fence’ allowing for penetration of molecules that should not enter the brain. We believe that the new mode of delivery of systemic molecules to RGLs uncovered by this study, not only provides a mechanistic explanation to systemic influences on adult hippocampal neurogenesis but may also provide new means of interventional modulations of this important process.
Materials and methods
Mice
All animal procedures were approved by the animal care and use committee of the Hebrew University. Transgenic mouse lines that were used in this study (all of C57Bl/6 background): Ai9 and Gli1-creERT2 lines were purchased from the Jackson Laboratories (strains 007909, 007913). Nestin-GFP line was obtained from Prof. Grigori Enikolopov, CSHL (Mignone et al., 2004). Both males and females aged 2–3 months were used. Animals were grown in SPF housing conditions (4–6 animals per cage) with irradiated rodent food and water ad libitum and 12 hr light/dark cycle. Tamoxifen (Sigma T5648, 40 mg/ml in sunflower seed oil) was administered orally once daily for 2–3 days at a dose of ~8 mg/animal. BrdU (Sigma B5002) was dissolved in saline and injected I.P at 50 mg\kg every 12 hr (3 injections).
Tracer and doxorubicin injection
Request a detailed protocolThe following dextran tracers were used (all are lysine fixable): Tritc-labeled 10kD dextran (Molecular Probes, D1817), biotin-labeled 10Kd dextran (D1956). Doxorubicin was obtained from Sigma-Aldrich (44583). All were dissolved in saline to 2 mg/ml and 100 µl (6 mg/kg) was injected into the left heart ventricle 1–2 min before brain retrieval. For chronic use, doxorubicin was injected I.P. at 5 mg/kg every other day, three times.
Tissue processing for immunofluorescence
Request a detailed protocolBrains were fixed by perfusion and immersion in 4% PFA for 5 hr, incubated in 30% sucrose, embedded in OCT Tissue-Tec and cryosectioned to 50 µm floating sections. Coronal slices from all aspects of the rostral-caudal axis were examined. For BrdU staining, brain slices were incubated for 2 hr in 50% formamide/2xSSC at 65°C, 30 min in 2N HCl at 37°C and 10 min in 0.1M boric acid pH8.5. Staining was done as described (Licht et al., 2010) with the following: anti BrdU (Serotec 1:400 PRID:AB_323427), anti-CD31 (BD 1:50 PRID:AB_393571), anti Laminin (Thermo Scientific 1:200, RRID:AB_60396), Anti Collagen-IV (Abcam 1:200 PRID:AB_305584), Anti Ki67 (Thermo Scientific 1:200, PRID:AB_10979488), anti-GFP (Thermo Scientific 1:200, PRID:AB_221570) and anti-RFP (Abcam 1:400, PRID:AB_945213). Secondary antibodies were as described in Key Resource Table. Sections were mounted with Permafluor mounting medium (Thermo Scientific, TA-030-FM) with Dapi (Sigma, D9542).
Confocal microscopy was done using Olympus FV-1000 on 20X and X60 objectives and 1.46 µm distance between confocal z-slices. 3d reconstruction images were processed by Bitplane IMARIS 7.6.3 software using the Isosurface function.
Cell proliferation quantification
Request a detailed protocol6–7 confocal z-stack images per animal were quantified (N = 4 in every group). The volume of the GCL was calculated by measuring the GCL area in the image (using Olympus FV-10 viewer) and multiplying the measured area by the number of z-axis slices and the distance between slices (1.46 µm). Cells within the GCL (Ki67/CldU/GFP) were counted manually by a blind experimenter (using Olympus FV-10 viewer). Z-plane projections used to verify double labeling. Student’s T-test (SPSS) was used to compare between groups, assuming a normal distribution and unequal variance.
Super-resolution microscopy
Request a detailed protocolWe have used the dSTORM system which allows for approximately 20 nm resolution by using photo-switchable fluorophores. 50μm-thick Gli1-CreERT2; Ai9 mouse brain slices were immunostained with anti-RFP (EnCor 1:300 PRID:AB_2572308), anti laminin (Abcam 1:200, PRID:AB_298179) and anti CD31 (Bio-Rad 1:50, PRID:AB_321653). Secondary antibodies used: donkey Anti Chick Alexa Fluor568, donkey Anti-rabbit Alexa Fluor488 and donkey anti hamster Alexa Fluor647, all from Jackson Immunoresearch. After staining, brain slice was mounted on Poly-D-lysine coated coverslip (1.5H). dSTORM imaging was performed in a freshly prepared imaging buffer that contained 50 mM Tris (pH 8.0), 10 mM NaCl and 10% (w/v) glucose with an oxygen-scavenging GLOX solution (0.5 mg/ml glucose oxidase (Sigma-Aldrich), 40 μg/ml catalase (Sigma-Aldrich), 10 mM cysteamine MEA (Sigma-Aldrich) and 1% β mercaptoethanol Encinas et al., 2011. A Nikon Ti-E inverted microscope was used. The N- STORM Nikon system was built on TIRF illumination using 1.49 × 100 oil immersing objective and ANDOR DU-897 camera. 488, 568 and 647 nm laser line were used for activation with cycle repeat of∼5000 cycles. Nikon NIS Element software was used for collections the data; analysis was performed by ThunderSTORM ImageJ plugin (Ovesný et al., 2014). Images in 2D were Gaussian fit of each localization. dSTORM signal at the ROI (enclosing the entire vessel) was normalized to the length of vessel circumference. All groups were tested for normal distribution using the Kolmogorov-Smirnov test. One-way ANOVA with Tukey’s post-hoc analysis was used to compare between groups.
Tissue processing for electron microscopy
For labeling RGLs
Request a detailed protocolBrains of Gli1-CreERT2; Ai9 mice (3 days post tamoxifen induction) were immersion-fixed by 4% paraformaldehyde (wt/vol); 0.1% glutaraldehyde (vol/vol) in 0.1M phosphate buffer; and kept at 4°C for 24 hr. The brain was then washed in PBS solution, and cut in 50 µm coronal sections with a vibratome (Leica). For the immunoperoxidase process, the tissue was washed 10 min in 3% H2O2 solution, blocked by two washes in 0.5% BSA and the sections were incubated overnight in the primary antibody (anti RFP, Abcam 1:400, PRID:AB_945213) in 0.1% BSA-PBS with shaking at 25°C. Next, sections were washed in PBS solution and incubated in the secondary antibody (anti-rabbit HRP, Vector MP-7451–50) shaking for 2 hr at 25°C. Sections were then washed in PBS solution and incubated in DAB/plus chromogen solution (Abcam ab103723) for 6–10 min, followed by subsequent washes in PBS solution (30 min).
For systemic HRP imaging
Request a detailed protocol10 mg of HRP (Sigma P8250) was dissolved in 0.4 ml of PBS and injected into the tail vein of an adult (p90) mouse. After 30 min of HRP circulation, the brain was dissected and fixed by immersion in a 0.1 M sodium-cacodylate-buffered mixture (5% glutaraldehyde and 4% PFA) for 1 hr at room temperature followed by 5 hr at 4°C. Following fixation, the tissue was washed overnight in 0.1 M sodium cacodylate buffer and then cut in 50-µm-thick free-floating sections using a vibratome (Leica). Sections were incubated in DAB/plus chromogen solution (Abcam ab103723) for 6–10 min, followed by subsequent washes in PBS solution (30 min).
For double-labeling of HRP and RGLs
Request a detailed protocolHRP was injected as above, processing was done as for labeling RGLs.
Stained brain slices were transferred back to the fixative solution, rinsed 4 times, 10 min each, in cacodylate buffer and post-fixed and stained with 1% osmium tetroxide, 1.5% potassium ferricyanide in 0.1M cacodylate buffer for 1 hr. Tissue was then washed 4 times in cacodylate buffer followed by dehydration in increasing concentrations of ethanol consisting of 30%, 50%, 70%, 80%, 90%, 95%, for 10 min each step followed by 100% anhydrous ethanol 3 times, 20 min each, and propylene oxide 2 times, 10 min each. Following dehydration, the tissue was infiltrated with increasing concentrations of Agar 100 resin in propylene oxide, consisting of 25, 50, 75, and 100% resin for 16 hr each step. The tissue was then embedded in fresh resin and let polymerize in an oven at 60°C for 48 hr. Embedded tissues in blocks were sectioned with a diamond knife on a Leica Reichert Ultracut S microtome and ultrathin sections (80 nm) were collected onto 200 Mesh, thin bar copper grids. The sections on grids were sequentially stained with Uranyl acetate for 5 min and Lead citrate for 2 min and viewed with Jeol JEM1400 Plus microscope equipped with Gatan camera.
Quantification of basement membrane coverage and vesicular-like structure
Request a detailed protocol55 EM images containing a blood vessel were used for quantification (N = 2 animals). Out of which, 50 were taken from the inner molecular layer and 5 were taken from the hilus area. The length of the blood vessel abluminal interface was measured by ImageJ (NIH). The length of BM (greyish line of ~50 nm thickness, clearly separating the endothelium from brain parenchyma (as in Figure 2a)) was measured at both RGL contact point and when no RGL was present.
A circular structure of 50–100 nm in the cytoplasm of an endothelial cell encompassing a single membrane was counted as a vesicle. We counted the numbers of these organelles per length unit (μm) of the defined abluminal aspect (RGL/no RGL, BM/no BM). All groups were tested for normal distribution using the Kolmogorov-Smirnov test. One-way ANOVA with Tukey’s post-hoc analysis was used to compare between groups.
Data availability
All data generated or analysed during this study are included in the manuscript.
References
-
Impaired cognitive function and hippocampal neurogenesis following Cancer chemotherapyClinical Cancer Research 18:1954–1965.https://doi.org/10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-11-2000
-
On the run for hippocampal plasticityCold Spring Harbor Perspectives in Medicine 8:a029736.https://doi.org/10.1101/cshperspect.a029736
-
Chemotherapy and cognition: comprehensive review on doxorubicin-induced chemobrainCancer Chemotherapy and Pharmacology 84:1–14.https://doi.org/10.1007/s00280-019-03827-0
-
VEGF is necessary for exercise-induced adult hippocampal neurogenesisEuropean Journal of Neuroscience 18:2803–2812.https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1460-9568.2003.03041.x
-
Doxorubicin and cyclophosphamide treatment produces anxiety-like behavior and spatial cognition impairment in rats: possible involvement of hippocampal neurogenesis via brain-derived neurotrophic factor and cyclin D1 regulationBehavioural Brain Research 292:184–193.https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bbr.2015.06.007
-
Neural progenitor cells regulate capillary blood flow in the postnatal subventricular zoneJournal of Neuroscience 32:16435–16448.https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1457-12.2012
-
Vessel maturation schedule determines vulnerability to neuronal injuries of prematurityJournal of Clinical Investigation 125:1319–1328.https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI79401
-
The vascular niche in adult neurogenesisMechanisms of Development 138:56–62.https://doi.org/10.1016/j.mod.2015.06.001
-
Physical exercise induces hippocampal neurogenesis and prevents cognitive declineBehavioural Brain Research 317:332–339.https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bbr.2016.09.067
-
Neural stem and progenitor cells in nestin-GFP transgenic miceThe Journal of Comparative Neurology 469:311–324.https://doi.org/10.1002/cne.10964
-
Disruption of Bmal1 impairs Blood-Brain barrier integrity via pericyte dysfunctionThe Journal of Neuroscience 37:10052–10062.https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3639-16.2017
-
3.0.CO;2-3" class="reference__title">Vascular niche for adult hippocampal neurogenesisThe Journal of Comparative Neurology 425:479–494.https://doi.org/10.1002/1096-9861(20001002)425:4<479::AID-CNE2>3.0.CO;2-3
-
Instructions from the vascular system - directing neural stem cell fate in health and diseaseCurrent Medicinal Chemistry 21:2190–2207.https://doi.org/10.2174/0929867321666131227162215
-
The vascular basement membrane in the healthy and pathological brainJournal of Cerebral Blood Flow & Metabolism 37:3300–3317.https://doi.org/10.1177/0271678X17722436
-
Targeted delivery of doxorubicin to the rat brain at therapeutic levels using MRI-guided focused ultrasoundInternational Journal of Cancer 121:901–907.https://doi.org/10.1002/ijc.22732
-
Functional neurogenesis in the adult HippocampusNature 415:1030–1034.https://doi.org/10.1038/4151030a
Article and author information
Author details
Funding
H2020 European Research Council (322692)
- Tamar Licht
- Myriam Grunewald
- Saran Kumar
- Eli Keshet
Israel Science Foundation (1882/16)
- Esther Sasson
- Batia Bell
- Ayal Ben-Zvi
Israel Science Foundation (2402/16)
- Esther Sasson
- Batia Bell
- Ayal Ben-Zvi
The funders had no role in study design, data collection and interpretation, or the decision to submit the work for publication.
Acknowledgements
We wish to thank Yuval Dor and Itzhak Dershowitz for helpful suggestions,and assistance, Yael Friedman and Eddie Berenshtein for TEM support. This work was supported by the European Research Council (ERC(grant, project VASNICHE (Grant # 322692) and the Israel Science Foundation (grants # 1882/16 and # 2402/16) to ABZ.
Ethics
Animal experimentation: All animal procedures were approved by the animal care and use committee of the Hebrew University (Protocol MD-14-13900-3). Every effort was made to minimize the numbers of animals and suffering.
Copyright
© 2020, Licht et al.
This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use and redistribution provided that the original author and source are credited.
Metrics
-
- 2,184
- views
-
- 367
- downloads
-
- 31
- citations
Views, downloads and citations are aggregated across all versions of this paper published by eLife.
Download links
Downloads (link to download the article as PDF)
Open citations (links to open the citations from this article in various online reference manager services)
Cite this article (links to download the citations from this article in formats compatible with various reference manager tools)
Further reading
-
- Neuroscience
One of the most fundamental laws of physics is the principle of least action. Motivated by its predictive power, we introduce a neuronal least-action principle for cortical processing of sensory streams to produce appropriate behavioral outputs in real time. The principle postulates that the voltage dynamics of cortical pyramidal neurons prospectively minimizes the local somato-dendritic mismatch error within individual neurons. For output neurons, the principle implies minimizing an instantaneous behavioral error. For deep network neurons, it implies the prospective firing to overcome integration delays and correct for possible output errors right in time. The neuron-specific errors are extracted in the apical dendrites of pyramidal neurons through a cortical microcircuit that tries to explain away the feedback from the periphery, and correct the trajectory on the fly. Any motor output is in a moving equilibrium with the sensory input and the motor feedback during the ongoing sensory-motor transform. Online synaptic plasticity reduces the somatodendritic mismatch error within each cortical neuron and performs gradient descent on the output cost at any moment in time. The neuronal least-action principle offers an axiomatic framework to derive local neuronal and synaptic laws for global real-time computation and learning in the brain.
-
- Neuroscience
Memory impairment in chronic pain patients is substantial and common, and few therapeutic strategies are available. Chronic pain-related memory impairment has susceptible and unsusceptible features. Therefore, exploring the underlying mechanisms of its vulnerability is essential for developing effective treatments. Here, combining two spatial memory tests (Y-maze test and Morris water maze), we segregated chronic pain mice into memory impairment-susceptible and -unsusceptible subpopulations in a chronic neuropathic pain model induced by chronic constrictive injury of the sciatic nerve. RNA-Seq analysis and gain/loss-of-function study revealed that S1P/S1PR1 signaling is a determinant for vulnerability to chronic pain-related memory impairment. Knockdown of the S1PR1 in the dentate gyrus (DG) promoted a susceptible phenotype and led to structural plasticity changes of reduced excitatory synapse formation and abnormal spine morphology as observed in susceptible mice, while overexpression of the S1PR1 and pharmacological administration of S1PR1 agonist in the DG promoted an unsusceptible phenotype and prevented the occurrence of memory impairment, and rescued the morphological abnormality. Finally, the Gene Ontology (GO) enrichment analysis and biochemical evidence indicated that downregulation of S1PR1 in susceptible mice may impair DG structural plasticity via interaction with actin cytoskeleton rearrangement-related signaling pathways including Itga2 and its downstream Rac1/Cdc42 signaling and Arp2/3 cascade. These results reveal a novel mechanism and provide a promising preventive and therapeutic molecular target for vulnerability to chronic pain-related memory impairment.