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Publication : Differential Effects of Retinoic Acid Concentrations in Regulating Blood-Brain Barrier Properties.

First Author  Bonney S Year  2017
Journal  eNeuro Volume  4
Issue  3 PubMed ID  28560318
Mgi Jnum  J:253618 Mgi Id  MGI:6109325
Doi  10.1523/ENEURO.0378-16.2017 Citation  Bonney S, et al. (2017) Differential Effects of Retinoic Acid Concentrations in Regulating Blood-Brain Barrier Properties. eNeuro 4(3):ENEURO.0378-16.2017
abstractText  The blood-brain barrier (BBB) is a multifaceted property of the brain vasculature that protects the brain and maintains homeostasis by tightly regulating the flux of ions, molecules, and cells across the vasculature. Blood vessels in the brain are formed by endothelial cells that acquire barrier properties, such as tight and adherens junctions, soon after the brain vasculature is formed. Endothelial WNT signaling is crucial to induce these BBB properties by regulating their expression and stabilization. Recent studies have implicated retinoic acid (RA) signaling in BBB development and shown that pharmacological concentrations of RA (>/=5 microm) can induce BBB properties in cultured brain endothelial cells. However, a recent study demonstrated that RA inhibits endothelial WNT signaling during brain development, suggesting that RA does not promote BBB properties. We therefore investigated whether RA plays a physiological role in BBB development. We found that BBB function and junctional protein expression was unaffected in mouse mutants that have a reduced capacity to synthesize RA (Rdh10 mutants). Furthermore, embryos exposed to a RA-enriched diet did not enhance BBB protein expression. Together, our data indicate that RA is not capable of inducing, nor is it required for, BBB protein expression in vivo. Like other studies, we found that pharmacological concentrations of RA induce BBB genes in cultured murine brain endothelial cells, and this may involve activation of the LXR/RXR signaling pathway. Our data do not support a role for RA in BBB development, but confirm reports that pharmacological RA is a robust tool to induce BBB properties in culture.
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