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J Cereb Blood Flow Metab
Published

Blood-CNS barrier dysfunction in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis: Proposed mechanisms and clinical implications.

Authors

Moritz Steinruecke, Rebecca Murphy Lonergan, Bhuvaneish T Selvaraj, Siddharthan Chandran, Blanca Diaz-Castro, Maria Stavrou

Abstract

There is strong evidence for blood-brain and blood-spinal cord barrier dysfunction at the early stages of many neurodegenerative diseases, including amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). Since impairment of the blood-central nervous system barrier (BCNSB) occurs during the pre-symptomatic stages of ALS, the mechanisms underlying this pathology are likely also involved in the ALS disease process. In this review, we explore how drivers of ALS disease, particularly mitochondrial dysfunction, astrocyte pathology and neuroinflammation, may contribute to BCNSB impairment. Mitochondria are highly abundant in BCNSB tissue and mitochondrial dysfunction in ALS contributes to motor neuron death. Likewise, astrocytes adopt key physical, transport and metabolic functions at the barrier, many of which are impaired in ALS. Astrocytes also show raised expression of inflammatory markers in ALS and ablating ALS-causing transgenes in astrocytes slows disease progression. In addition, key drivers of neuroinflammation, including TAR DNA-binding protein 43 (TDP-43) pathology, matrix metalloproteinase activation and systemic inflammation, affect BCNSB integrity in ALS. Finally, we discuss the translational implications of BCNSB dysfunction in ALS, including the development of biomarkers for disease onset and progression, approaches aimed at restoring BCNSB integrity and in vitro modelling of the neurogliovascular system.

PMID:36704819 | DOI:

UK DRI Authors

Siddharthan Chandran

Prof Siddharthan Chandran

Director & CEO

Dissecting a genetic cause of ALS and FTD and identifying ways to help protect neurons

Prof Siddharthan Chandran
Dr Blanca Diaz Castro profile picture

Dr Blanca Díaz-Castro

Group Leader

Understanding the molecular and cellular mechanisms that link brain blood vessel dysfunction and dementia

Dr Blanca Díaz-Castro