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Publication : Preservation of transendothelial glucose transporter 1 and P-glycoprotein transporters in a cortical slice culture model of the blood-brain barrier.

First Author  Camenzind RS Year  2010
Journal  Neuroscience Volume  170
Issue  1 Pages  361-71
PubMed ID  20603190 Mgi Jnum  J:165208
Mgi Id  MGI:4836445 Doi  10.1016/j.neuroscience.2010.06.073
Citation  Camenzind RS, et al. (2010) Preservation of transendothelial glucose transporter 1 and P-glycoprotein transporters in a cortical slice culture model of the blood-brain barrier. Neuroscience 170(1):361-71
abstractText  A variety of neurological diseases are characterized by disturbances of the blood-brain barrier (BBB) and its transporters. We recently introduced fibroblast growth factor treated cortical organotypic slice cultures of mice as a model for in vitro studies of the blood-brain barrier and have now further characterized the maintenance and function of transport-proteins typically expressed in the endothelium of cerebral blood vessels. The glucose transporter GLUT-1 is present in blood vessels of slice cultures derived from postnatal day 4 to 21 mice after 3 days in vitro. The endothelial multidrug resistance P-glycoprotein (P-gp) which is involved in the control of pharmacological substance transport across the blood-brain barrier is also maintained in blood vessels, most prominently in slice cultures derived from postnatal day 14 and 21 mice. To assess P-gp function, we tested rhodamine 123 transport in presence or absence of the P-gp inhibitor verapamil. Rhodamine 123-fluorescence accumulated rapidly in the vascular lumen both in acute slices and in slices cultured for 3 days in vitro. Our results provide evidence that endothelial transporters and their functional properties can be maintained in organotypic cortical slices cultures, thus making it an attractive model system for the study of the blood-brain barrier.
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