2019
DOI: 10.1101/802033
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AMP-activated protein kinase is a key regulator of acute neurovascular permeability

Abstract: 12Pathological hyperpermeability accompanies many blinding retinopathies. Despite 13 important therapeutic breakthroughs benefitting many but not all retinopathy patients, 14 the intracellular signalling underlying retinal leakage is still poorly understood. We 15 have developed an ex-vivo model, which allowed us to measure and manipulate acute 16 vascular permeability in the intact rodent retina, and combined measurements with 17 immunohistochemical analyses of signal transduction. This ex-vivo retina platfor… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report demonstrating that VE-cadherin is redistributed in response to a CCL chemokine. VE-cadherin redistribution was profound and its manifestations consistent with epitope masking (catenins bind within the C-terminal epitope recognition area) and more importantly internalisation, as also described previously ( Dragoni et al., 2021 ). VE-cadherin internalisation is generally triggered by its phosphorylation and is a pre-requisite of vascular leakage in the periphery ( Orsenigo et al., 2012 ) but also the retinal microvasculature ( Dragoni et al., 2021 ; Ninchoji et al., 2021 ) in response to VEGF.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 85%
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“…To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report demonstrating that VE-cadherin is redistributed in response to a CCL chemokine. VE-cadherin redistribution was profound and its manifestations consistent with epitope masking (catenins bind within the C-terminal epitope recognition area) and more importantly internalisation, as also described previously ( Dragoni et al., 2021 ). VE-cadherin internalisation is generally triggered by its phosphorylation and is a pre-requisite of vascular leakage in the periphery ( Orsenigo et al., 2012 ) but also the retinal microvasculature ( Dragoni et al., 2021 ; Ninchoji et al., 2021 ) in response to VEGF.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 85%
“…VE-cadherin redistribution was profound and its manifestations consistent with epitope masking (catenins bind within the C-terminal epitope recognition area) and more importantly internalisation, as also described previously ( Dragoni et al., 2021 ). VE-cadherin internalisation is generally triggered by its phosphorylation and is a pre-requisite of vascular leakage in the periphery ( Orsenigo et al., 2012 ) but also the retinal microvasculature ( Dragoni et al., 2021 ; Ninchoji et al., 2021 ) in response to VEGF. Consistent with this, phosphorylation of VE-cadherin and loss of barrier integrity has also shown to facilitate increased leukocyte migration via the paracellular route ( Wessel et al., 2014 ; Martinelli et al., 2014 ; Turowski et al., 2008 ).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 85%
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“…Thus, this model allowed the study of an experimental condition and its control within the same brain. Preparation of rodent heads and the perfusion protocol was identical to that used to study a fully functional blood-retinal barrier in explants , 18,19 suggesting that this protocol left the BBB intact. When heads were perfused with Evans Blue-albumin (EB-Alb), this dye remained restricted to the vasculature of most areas of the brain, including the cortex, hippocampus, and thalamus, and did not leak for at least 1 h (Figure S1C), indicating that BBB properties were preserved.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%