Mechanisms that determine the internal environment of the developing brain: a transcriptomic, functional and ultrastructural approach

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Standard

Mechanisms that determine the internal environment of the developing brain : a transcriptomic, functional and ultrastructural approach. / Liddelow, Shane A; Dziegielewska, Katarzyna M; Ek, C Joakim; Habgood, Mark D; Bauer, Hannelore; Bauer, Hans-Christian; Lindsay, Helen; Wakefield, Matthew J; Strazielle, Nathalie; Kratzer, Ingrid; Møllgård, Kjeld; Ghersi-Egea, Jean-François; Saunders, Norman R.

I: PLOS ONE, Bind 8, Nr. 7, 2013, s. e65629.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Liddelow, SA, Dziegielewska, KM, Ek, CJ, Habgood, MD, Bauer, H, Bauer, H-C, Lindsay, H, Wakefield, MJ, Strazielle, N, Kratzer, I, Møllgård, K, Ghersi-Egea, J-F & Saunders, NR 2013, 'Mechanisms that determine the internal environment of the developing brain: a transcriptomic, functional and ultrastructural approach', PLOS ONE, bind 8, nr. 7, s. e65629. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0065629

APA

Liddelow, S. A., Dziegielewska, K. M., Ek, C. J., Habgood, M. D., Bauer, H., Bauer, H-C., Lindsay, H., Wakefield, M. J., Strazielle, N., Kratzer, I., Møllgård, K., Ghersi-Egea, J-F., & Saunders, N. R. (2013). Mechanisms that determine the internal environment of the developing brain: a transcriptomic, functional and ultrastructural approach. PLOS ONE, 8(7), e65629. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0065629

Vancouver

Liddelow SA, Dziegielewska KM, Ek CJ, Habgood MD, Bauer H, Bauer H-C o.a. Mechanisms that determine the internal environment of the developing brain: a transcriptomic, functional and ultrastructural approach. PLOS ONE. 2013;8(7):e65629. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0065629

Author

Liddelow, Shane A ; Dziegielewska, Katarzyna M ; Ek, C Joakim ; Habgood, Mark D ; Bauer, Hannelore ; Bauer, Hans-Christian ; Lindsay, Helen ; Wakefield, Matthew J ; Strazielle, Nathalie ; Kratzer, Ingrid ; Møllgård, Kjeld ; Ghersi-Egea, Jean-François ; Saunders, Norman R. / Mechanisms that determine the internal environment of the developing brain : a transcriptomic, functional and ultrastructural approach. I: PLOS ONE. 2013 ; Bind 8, Nr. 7. s. e65629.

Bibtex

@article{6040eb248f05443992256e76510c8524,
title = "Mechanisms that determine the internal environment of the developing brain: a transcriptomic, functional and ultrastructural approach",
abstract = "We provide comprehensive identification of embryonic (E15) and adult rat lateral ventricular choroid plexus transcriptome, with focus on junction-associated proteins, ionic influx transporters and channels. Additionally, these data are related to new structural and previously published permeability studies. Results reveal that most genes associated with intercellular junctions are expressed at similar levels at both ages. In total, 32 molecules known to be associated with brain barrier interfaces were identified. Nine claudins showed unaltered expression, while two claudins (6 and 8) were expressed at higher levels in the embryo. Expression levels for most cytoplasmic/regulatory adaptors (10 of 12) were similar at the two ages. A few junctional genes displayed lower expression in embryos, including 5 claudins, occludin and one junctional adhesion molecule. Three gap junction genes were enriched in the embryo. The functional effectiveness of these junctions was assessed using blood-delivered water-soluble tracers at both the light and electron microscopic level: embryo and adult junctions halted movement of both 286Da and 3kDa molecules into the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). The molecular identities of many ion channel and transporter genes previously reported as important for CSF formation and secretion in the adult were demonstrated in the embryonic choroid plexus (and validated with immunohistochemistry of protein products), but with some major age-related differences in expression. In addition, a large number of previously unidentified ion channel and transporter genes were identified for the first time in plexus epithelium. These results, in addition to data obtained from electron microscopical and physiological permeability experiments in immature brains, indicate that exchange between blood and CSF is mainly transcellular, as well-formed tight junctions restrict movement of small water-soluble molecules from early in development. These data strongly indicate the brain develops within a well-protected internal environment and the exchange between the blood, brain and CSF is transcellular and not through incomplete barriers.",
author = "Liddelow, {Shane A} and Dziegielewska, {Katarzyna M} and Ek, {C Joakim} and Habgood, {Mark D} and Hannelore Bauer and Hans-Christian Bauer and Helen Lindsay and Wakefield, {Matthew J} and Nathalie Strazielle and Ingrid Kratzer and Kjeld M{\o}llg{\aa}rd and Jean-Fran{\c c}ois Ghersi-Egea and Saunders, {Norman R}",
year = "2013",
doi = "10.1371/journal.pone.0065629",
language = "English",
volume = "8",
pages = "e65629",
journal = "PLoS ONE",
issn = "1932-6203",
publisher = "Public Library of Science",
number = "7",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Mechanisms that determine the internal environment of the developing brain

T2 - a transcriptomic, functional and ultrastructural approach

AU - Liddelow, Shane A

AU - Dziegielewska, Katarzyna M

AU - Ek, C Joakim

AU - Habgood, Mark D

AU - Bauer, Hannelore

AU - Bauer, Hans-Christian

AU - Lindsay, Helen

AU - Wakefield, Matthew J

AU - Strazielle, Nathalie

AU - Kratzer, Ingrid

AU - Møllgård, Kjeld

AU - Ghersi-Egea, Jean-François

AU - Saunders, Norman R

PY - 2013

Y1 - 2013

N2 - We provide comprehensive identification of embryonic (E15) and adult rat lateral ventricular choroid plexus transcriptome, with focus on junction-associated proteins, ionic influx transporters and channels. Additionally, these data are related to new structural and previously published permeability studies. Results reveal that most genes associated with intercellular junctions are expressed at similar levels at both ages. In total, 32 molecules known to be associated with brain barrier interfaces were identified. Nine claudins showed unaltered expression, while two claudins (6 and 8) were expressed at higher levels in the embryo. Expression levels for most cytoplasmic/regulatory adaptors (10 of 12) were similar at the two ages. A few junctional genes displayed lower expression in embryos, including 5 claudins, occludin and one junctional adhesion molecule. Three gap junction genes were enriched in the embryo. The functional effectiveness of these junctions was assessed using blood-delivered water-soluble tracers at both the light and electron microscopic level: embryo and adult junctions halted movement of both 286Da and 3kDa molecules into the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). The molecular identities of many ion channel and transporter genes previously reported as important for CSF formation and secretion in the adult were demonstrated in the embryonic choroid plexus (and validated with immunohistochemistry of protein products), but with some major age-related differences in expression. In addition, a large number of previously unidentified ion channel and transporter genes were identified for the first time in plexus epithelium. These results, in addition to data obtained from electron microscopical and physiological permeability experiments in immature brains, indicate that exchange between blood and CSF is mainly transcellular, as well-formed tight junctions restrict movement of small water-soluble molecules from early in development. These data strongly indicate the brain develops within a well-protected internal environment and the exchange between the blood, brain and CSF is transcellular and not through incomplete barriers.

AB - We provide comprehensive identification of embryonic (E15) and adult rat lateral ventricular choroid plexus transcriptome, with focus on junction-associated proteins, ionic influx transporters and channels. Additionally, these data are related to new structural and previously published permeability studies. Results reveal that most genes associated with intercellular junctions are expressed at similar levels at both ages. In total, 32 molecules known to be associated with brain barrier interfaces were identified. Nine claudins showed unaltered expression, while two claudins (6 and 8) were expressed at higher levels in the embryo. Expression levels for most cytoplasmic/regulatory adaptors (10 of 12) were similar at the two ages. A few junctional genes displayed lower expression in embryos, including 5 claudins, occludin and one junctional adhesion molecule. Three gap junction genes were enriched in the embryo. The functional effectiveness of these junctions was assessed using blood-delivered water-soluble tracers at both the light and electron microscopic level: embryo and adult junctions halted movement of both 286Da and 3kDa molecules into the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). The molecular identities of many ion channel and transporter genes previously reported as important for CSF formation and secretion in the adult were demonstrated in the embryonic choroid plexus (and validated with immunohistochemistry of protein products), but with some major age-related differences in expression. In addition, a large number of previously unidentified ion channel and transporter genes were identified for the first time in plexus epithelium. These results, in addition to data obtained from electron microscopical and physiological permeability experiments in immature brains, indicate that exchange between blood and CSF is mainly transcellular, as well-formed tight junctions restrict movement of small water-soluble molecules from early in development. These data strongly indicate the brain develops within a well-protected internal environment and the exchange between the blood, brain and CSF is transcellular and not through incomplete barriers.

U2 - 10.1371/journal.pone.0065629

DO - 10.1371/journal.pone.0065629

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 23843944

VL - 8

SP - e65629

JO - PLoS ONE

JF - PLoS ONE

SN - 1932-6203

IS - 7

ER -

ID: 47685723