Original Article
Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow & Metabolism (2006) 26, 1165–1175. doi:10.1038/sj.jcbfm.9600267; published online 4 January 2006
Brain protection at the blood–cerebrospinal fluid interface involves a glutathione-dependent metabolic barrier mechanism
Jean-François Ghersi-Egea1, Nathalie Strazielle1, Audrey Murat1, Anne Jouvet1, Annie Buénerd2 and Marie-Françoise Belin1
- 1Unité INSERM 433, IFR 19, Université Claude Bermard, Faculté de Médecine RTH Laennec, Lyon, France
- 2Service d'Anatomie et Cytologie Pathologiques, Hôpital E Herriot, Lyon, France
Correspondence: Dr J-F Ghersi-Egea, INSERM U433, Faculté de Médecine RTH Laennec, Rue Guillaume Paradin, 69372, Lyon Cedex 08, France. E-mail: ghersi-egea@lyon.inserm.fr
Received 18 October 2005; Revised 18 November 2005; Accepted 22 November 2005; Published online 4 January 2006.
Abstract
The choroid plexuses (CPs) form a protective interface between the blood and the ventricular cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). To probe into the pathways by which CPs provide brain protection, we sought to evaluate the efficiency of glutathione conjugation in this barrier as a mechanism to prevent the entry of blood-borne electrophilic, potentially toxic compounds into the CSF, and we investigated the fate of the resulting metabolites. Rat CPs, as well as human CPs from both fetal and adult brains, displayed high glutathione-S-transferase activities. Using an in vitro model of the blood–CSF barrier consisting of choroidal epithelial cells cultured in a two-chambered device, we showed that glutathione conjugation can efficiently prevent the entry of 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene (CDNB) into the CSF, a model for electrophilic compounds. The duration of this enzymatic protection was set by the concentration of CDNB to which the epithelium was exposed, and this barrier effect was impaired only on severe epithelial intracellular glutathione and cysteine depletion. The conjugate was excreted from the choroidal cells in a polarized manner, mostly at the blood-facing membrane, via a high-capacity transport process, which is not a rate-limiting step in this detoxification pathway, and which may involve transporters of the ATP-binding cassette c(Abcc) and/or solute carrier 21 (Slc21) families. Supplying the choroidal epithelium at the blood-facing membrane with a therapeutically relevant concentration of N-acetylcysteine sustained this neuroprotective effect. Thus, glutathione conjugation at the CP epithelium coupled with the basolateral efflux of the resulting metabolites form an efficient blood–CSF enzymatic barrier, which can be enhanced by pharmacologically increasing glutathione synthesis within the epithelial cells.
Keywords:
blood–brain barriers, cell polarity, choroid plexus, glutathione, N-acetylcysteine, neuroprotection, organic anion transporter
MORE ARTICLES LIKE THIS
These links to content published by NPG are automatically generated.
RESEARCH
Serum insulin-like growth factor I regulates brain amyloid-β levelsNature Medicine Article (01 Dec 2002)
How Does the Benzamide Antipsychotic Amisulpride get into the Brain??An In Vitro Approach Comparing Amisulpride with ClozapineNeuropsychopharmacology Original Article
Synergistic interaction of ABCB1 and ABCG2 polymorphisms predicts the prevalence of toxic encephalopathy during anticancer chemotherapyThe Pharmacogenomics Journal Original Article
See all 6 matches for Research
