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Printable Handouts
Navigable Slide Index
- Introduction
- Topics to be covered in this presentation
- Overview of the blood-brain barrier
- What is the blood brain barrier?
- The neurovascular unit/ neural environment
- Importance of water and electrolyte homeostasis
- BBB ion transporters and channels
- Normoxic interstitial fluid volume and composition
- Astrocytes induce BBB properties
- Secretion of NaCl and water, adsorption of K
- BBB secretion of NaCl and water into the brain
- BBB adsorption of K from brain into blood
- Other BBB ion transporters and channels
- Possible roles of Na/H and Cl/HCO3 exchange
- Na-driven Cl/HCO3 exchanger
- Na/HCO3 or Na/2HCO3 cotransporter
- Multiple K channel types
- Na/Ca exchange
- Edema and morbidity/mortality of stroke
- Stroke (brain attack)
- Events occuring during stroke
- Early events occuring during ischemic stroke
- Late events occuring during ischemic stroke
- Altered BBB function in ischemic stroke
- NaCl and water hypersecretion in ischemic stroke
- Endothelial and astrocytic transporters in edema
- Cerebral edema formation in ischemic stroke
- Na-K-Cl cotransporter participates in edema
- Na-K-Cl cotransporters in the luminal membrane
- Does the cotransporter inhibtion attenuate edema?
- Imaging of cerebral edema formation in ischemia
- ADC values and bumetanide reduction of edema
- TTC staining of infarct size following MCAO
- Stimulation of Na-Cl-K cotransporter in ischemia
- AVP stimulates CMEC Na-K-Cl cotransporter
- The cotransporter stimulation is Ca-dependent
- Does hypoxia stimulate the Na-K-Cl cotransporter?
- Testing hypoxia effects on Na-K-Cl cotransporter
- Moderate to severe hypoxia stimulation
- Hypoxia stimulates the cotransporter activity
- Aglycemia stimulates the cotransporter activity
- Uptake of Na, Cl and water
- Na-K-Cl cotransporter of brain microvascular ECs
- Hypoxia causes a slow onset swelling of CMEC
- BBB ion transporters: in summary
- Identifying BBB transporters/channels is valuable
- References
- Acknowledgements
Topics Covered
- Ischemic stroke
- Mechanisms of cerebral edema formation
- Brain microvascular endothelial cell ion transporters and channels
- Role of blood-brain barrier in water and electrolyte homeostasis in the brain
- Potential blood-brain barrier therapeutic targets for ischemic stroke
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Talk Citation
O'Donnell, M. (2016, December 19). Blood-brain barrier ion transport [Video file]. In The Biomedical & Life Sciences Collection, Henry Stewart Talks. Retrieved November 21, 2024, from https://doi.org/10.69645/LFSU8522.Export Citation (RIS)
Publication History
Financial Disclosures
- Prof. Martha O'Donnell has not informed HSTalks of any commercial/financial relationship that it is appropriate to disclose.
A selection of talks on Neuroscience
Transcript
Please wait while the transcript is being prepared...
0:00
Hello. This is Martha O'Donnell of
the Department of Physiology and Membrane Biology at the University of California, Davis.
I will discuss what we know about blood-brain barrier ion transporters and channels,
and the role that they play in water and electrolyte homeostasis of the brain,
both in health and disease.
0:22
I will begin with an overview of the blood brain-barrier and talk about
the role of the barrier in water and electrolyte homeostasis of the brain.
Next, I will turn to a discussion of
the ion transporters and channels that we know are present in the blood-brain barrier,
and talk a bit about how these transporters and channels are thought to participate in
sodium secretion and potassium absorption across the blood-brain barrier.
Finally, in the third section,
I will discuss cerebral edema formation in ischemic stroke,
as an example of how blood-brain barrier transporters contribute to
changes in water and electrolyte distribution in the brain during stroke.
In particular, I will talk about the possible role that
blood brain-barrier sodium transporters play in edema formation during stroke.
And lastly, I will discuss recent studies from my own laboratory,
studies that provide evidence for a role of
blood-brain barrier sodium potassium chloride cotransport
in ischemia-induced edema formation.
1:26
Let's begin then with part one,
an overview of the blood-brain barrier with a focus on the barrier's role
in water and electrolyte homeostasis in the brain.
1:38
First, it's important to remember that it is
endothelial cells of brain microvessels that comprise the blood-brain barrier.
A barrier that lies between blood and brain.
The electron micrograph shows a brain capillary.
Note here, the capillary lumen and the endothelial cell marked by the arrow.
The cell nucleus can be seen to the right of the capillary lumen.
While the microvessel endothelial cell itself forms the blood-brain barrier,
the abluminal surface of the blood-brain barrier is
ensheathed by foot processes of perivascular astrocytes.
Note that, in the context of blood-brain barrier endothelial cells,
the apical surface is luminal,
that is lumen-facing and the basal lateral surface is abluminal.
The cartoon on the left based on the electron micrograph,
illustrates the end feet more clearly.
A prevalent characteristic of blood-brain barrier
endothelial cells is the presence of complex tight junctions.
These tight junctions create a barrier with very limited paracellular solute flux.
The blood-brain barrier also has very few pinocytotic vesicles.
That is, little vesicular traffic that could move solutes between blood and brain.
This means that the vast majority of solutes must move across
the blood-brain barrier via a transendothelial rather than a paracellular route.
And thus, it is blood-brain barrier transporters
that determine what moves between blood and brain.
In this regard, an important function of the blood-brain barrier is to
regulate the composition and volume of brain interstitial fluid.
While the endothelial cells provide the anatomic blood-brain barrier,