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1.
Pan W  Kastin AJ 《Life sciences》2001,68(24):2705-2714
The blood-brain barrier (BBB) regulates the amount of peripherally produced leptin reaching the brain. Knowing that the blood concentration of leptin has a circadian rhythm, we investigated whether the influx of leptin at the BBB followed the same pattern in three main sets of experiments. (a): The entry of 125I-leptin from blood to brain was measured in mice every 4 h, as indicated by the influx rate of 125I-leptin 1-10 min after an iv bolus injection. The blood concentration of endogenous leptin was measured at the same times. Blood leptin concentrations were higher at night and early morning (peak at 0800 h) and lower during the day (nadir at 1600 h). By contrast, the influx of 125I-leptin was fastest at 2000 h and slowest at 0400 h. Addition of unlabeled leptin (1 microg/mouse) significantly decreased the influx rate of 125I-leptin at all time points, indicating saturability of the transport system. The unlabeled leptin also abolished the diurnal variation of the influx of 125I-leptin. (b): The entry of 125I-leptin into spinal cord was faster than that into brain and showed a different diurnal pattern. The greatest influx occurred at 2400 h and the slowest at 0800 h. In spinal cord, unlike brain, unlabeled leptin (1 microg/mouse) neither inhibited the influx of 125I-leptin nor abolished the diurnal rhythm. (c): Higher concentrations of unlabeled leptin (5 microg/mouse) inhibited the uptake of 125I-leptin in spinal cord as well as in brain, but not in muscle. This experiment measured uptake 10 min after iv injection at 0600 h (beginning of the light cycle) and 1800 h (beginning of the dark cycle). Thus, influx of 125I-leptin into the CNS shows diurnal variation, indicating a circadian rhythm in the transport system at the BBB, saturation of the leptin transport system shows differences between the brain and spinal cord, and blood concentrations of leptin suggest that partial saturation of the transport system occurs at physiological concentrations of circulating leptin, contributing to the differing diurnal patterns in brain and spinal cord. Together, the results show that the BBB is actively involved in the neuroendocrine regulation of feeding behavior.  相似文献   

2.
Kastin AJ  Akerstrom V  Pan W 《Peptides》2000,21(12):1811-1817
There are several transport systems for peptides and polypeptides at the blood-brain barrier (BBB) which facilitate the passage of bioactive substances from blood to brain or from brain to blood. Nonetheless, it would be a novel concept for one peptide or polypeptide to activate the transport of another peptide with a similar function but unrelated structure. In this study, we report the first observation of such a phenomenon: activation of a urocortin transport system at the BBB by leptin. Urocortin, a corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF)-related neuropeptide, is a more potent suppressor of food intake than leptin or CRF when injected peripherally. Radiolabeled urocortin (125I-urocortin) was used for these in vivo studies in mice; it remained stable and intact during the experimental period. Unlike CRF, urocortin was not saturably transported out of the brain. There was no substantial entry of 125I-urocortin into brain as determined by sensitive multiple-time regression analysis after iv bolus injection. Addition of leptin, however, caused a dose-related increase in the influx of 125I-urocortin and greatly facilitated its entry into brain parenchyma; this effect disappeared at higher doses of leptin. Moreover, in the presence of an activating dose of leptin, the entry of 125I-urocortin into brain was saturable. The results indicate that the presence of leptin contributes to the potent satiety effects of urocortin after peripheral administration. Thus, the action of leptin in the periphery extends beyond its direct passage across the BBB and involves acute modulation of an inert transport system. We believe that these findings have broad physiological implications and indicate a unique function of the BBB as a regulatory interface.  相似文献   

3.
Kastin AJ  Pan W  Maness LM  Koletsky RJ  Ernsberger P 《Peptides》1999,20(12):1449-1453
Leptin is produced in adipose tissue in the periphery, but its satiety effect is exerted in the CNS that it reaches by a saturable transport system across the blood-brain barrier (BBB). The short form of the leptin receptor has been hypothesized to be the transporter, with impaired transport of leptin being implicated in obesity. In Koletsky rats, the splice variant that gives rise to the short form of the leptin receptor contains a point mutation that results in marked obesity. We studied the transport of leptin across the BBB in Koletsky rats and found it to be significantly less than in their lean littermates. By contrast, Sprague-Dawley rats matched in weight to each of these two groups showed no difference in the blood-to-brain influx of leptin. HPLC showed that most of the leptin crossing the BBB in rats remained intact and capillary depletion showed that most of the leptin reached the parenchyma of the brain. The results indicate that the short form of the leptin receptor is involved in the transport of leptin across the BBB.  相似文献   

4.
Leptin is produced in adipose tissue in the periphery, but its satiety effect is exerted in the CNS that it reaches by a saturable transport system across the blood–brain barrier (BBB). The short form of the leptin receptor has been hypothesized to be the transporter, with impaired transport of leptin being implicated in obesity. In Koletsky rats, the splice variant that gives rise to the short form of the leptin receptor contains a point mutation that results in marked obesity. We studied the transport of leptin across the BBB in Koletsky rats and found it to be significantly less than in their lean littermates. By contrast, Sprague–Dawley rats matched in weight to each of these two groups showed no difference in the blood–to–brain influx of leptin. HPLC showed that most of the leptin crossing the BBB in rats remained intact and capillary depletion showed that most of the leptin reached the parenchyma of the brain. The results indicate that the short form of the leptin receptor is involved in the transport of leptin across the BBB.  相似文献   

5.
Multiple-time regression analysis has been used to study the influx of radiolabeled peptides and polypeptides across the blood-brain barrier (BBB). This study used both tritiated and iodinated leptin to clarify several issues associated with these measurements. Recombinant murine leptin was radiolabeled with 3H by derivatization or with 125I by the iodobead method and each studied separately in mice. Intact 3H-leptin had a higher apparent influx rate from blood to brain than did intact 125I-leptin, correlating with its higher proportion of reversible association with the capillary lumen that would misleadingly appear to reflect entry. Yet the majority of 3H-leptin and 125I-leptin reached brain parenchyma. There was no significant difference in the influx rate between cerebral cortex and the subcortical regions, thus ruling out a predominant contribution of simple diffusion through the circumventricular organs or choroid plexuses outside the BBB. The influx of radiolabeled leptin, especially 125I-leptin, was decreased by excess unlabeled leptin, supporting the presence of a saturable transport system for leptin at the BBB. To identify the specificity of the transport system and determine whether it is shared by 3H-leptin and 125I-leptin, these radioactively labeled leptins were heat-denatured. Denaturation had no effect on the fast influx of 3H-leptin, but abolished the entry of 125I-leptin into brain; excess denatured leptin failed to inhibit the influx of either 3H-leptin or 125I-leptin. This indicates that the conformation of 125I-leptin is similar to that of native unlabeled leptin, so that iodination would be the better choice for investigating the interaction of leptin with the BBB. However, 3H-leptin can use the same transport system, as shown by inhibition of its influx by unlabeled leptin, whereas the derivatization procedure altered its biophysical properties such that its non-saturated influx was greatly enhanced. Finally, the rapid influx of radioactively labeled leptin contrasted greatly with that of the reference compounds 99mTc-albumin and 3H-inulin which had no significant penetration of the BBB. Thus, with additional considerations such as stability and interactions with the vasculature, multiple-time regression analysis is sensitive and selective for study of the penetration of peptides across the BBB.  相似文献   

6.
Leptin regulates body adiposity by decreasing feeding and increasing thermogenesis. Obese humans and some obese rodents are resistant to peripherally administered leptin, suggesting a defect in the transport of leptin across the blood-brain barrier (BBB). Defective transport of exogenous leptin occurs in some models of obesity, but in other models transport is normal. This shows that factors other than obesity are associated with impairment of leptin transport across the BBB. In order to further investigate these factors, we determined leptin transport in rats made obese by lesioning of the ventromedial hypothalamus (VMH), paraventricular nucleus (PVN), or posterodorsal amygdala (PDA). These regions all contain leptin receptors and lesions there induce obesity and hyperleptinemia and alter the levels of many feeding hormones which might participate in leptin transporter regulation. We measured the uptake of radioactively labeled leptin by the BBB by multiple-time regression analysis which divides uptake into a reversible phase (Vi, e.g., receptor/transporter binding to the brain endothelial cell) and an irreversible phase (Ki, complete transport across the BBB). Leptin uptake was not affected in rats with VMH lesions. No significant change occurred in the entry rate (Ki) for any group, although Ki declined by over 35% in rats with PVN lesions. Decreased uptake was observed in rats with PVN lesions and with PDA lesions. This was primarily due to a reduced Vi (about 21% for the PDA). This decreased uptake is most likely explained by decreased binding of leptin to the brain endothelial cell, which could be because of decreased binding by either receptors or transporters. This suggests that some of the feeding hormones controlled by the PVN and PDA may participate in regulating leptin uptake by the BBB.  相似文献   

7.
W Pan  A J Kastin 《Peptides》1999,20(9):1091-1098
Epidermal growth factor (EGF) is a neurotrophic peptide produced both in the central nervous system and the periphery. Peripheral administration of EGF causes central nervous system-mediated changes. The central nervous system effects could be explained by the permeation of EGF across the blood-brain barrier (BBB). In this report, we show that 125I-EGF crosses the BBB rapidly, with an influx rate of about 2 microl/g x min, much faster than that for neurotrophins, cytokines, and most other bioactive peptides tested. The 125I-EGF was recovered intact in the brain 10 min after i.v. injection, and the majority of the peptide reaching the brain was present in the parenchyma. The fast rate of influx was significantly decreased by co-administration of nonradiolabeled EGF and transforming growth factor alpha, peptides that share the EGF receptor. By contrast, a monoclonal antibody against the EGF receptor failed to inhibit the entry of EGF. Furthermore, mice with a mutation in the EGF receptor had no significant decrease in the rapid rate of entry of 125I-EGF. By contrast to the fast rate of entry, 125I-EGF injected intracerebroventricularly (i.c.v.) only exited the brain with the bulk flow of cerebrospinal fluid. Thus, EGF has a saturable transport system at the BBB for rapid, unidirectional influx. The transport system does not require the entire EGF receptor and is susceptible to possible therapeutic manipulation.  相似文献   

8.
Evidence both from mice and cultured cells suggests an important role of soluble leptin receptors in obesity and leptin signaling. However, the direct effects of soluble receptors on leptin uptake by cells are not clear. This study shows that soluble leptin receptors antagonize the permeation of leptin across the mouse blood-brain barrier by reducing the binding and endocytosis of leptin. This is illustrated by analysis of radioactively labeled and fluorescent-tagged leptin in normal mice and in cultured cells overexpressing various forms of leptin receptors. Three constructs of soluble leptin receptors were generated in this study: ObRe (805 aa), ObR839, and ObR852. (125)I-leptin was injected intravenously and its influx rate from blood to brain determined by multiple-time regression analysis. Pre-incubation with ObR839 caused a significant reduction of leptin influx across the blood-brain barrier. Endocytosis assays and fluorescent image analysis further showed that ObRe, ObR839, and ObR852 failed to mediate leptin internalization and trafficking within the cells. Instead, these soluble receptors inhibited surface binding and endocytosis of leptin. Thus, we provide novel direct evidence both in vivo and in vitro that soluble receptors of leptin serve as antagonists of the transport of leptin.  相似文献   

9.
We have investigated the transport characteristics of dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate (DHEAS), a neuroactive steroid, at the blood-brain barrier (BBB) in a series of functional in vivo and in vitro studies. The apparent BBB efflux rate constant of [(3)H]DHEAS evaluated by the brain efflux index method was 2.68 x 10(-2) min(-1). DHEAS efflux transport was a saturable process with a Michaelis constant (K:(m)) of 32.6 microM: Significant amounts of [(3)H]DHEAS were determined in the jugular venous plasma by HPLC, providing direct evidence that most of the DHEAS is transported in intact form from brain to the circulating blood across the BBB. This efflux transport of [(3)H]DHEAS was significantly inhibited by common rat organic anion-transporting polypeptide (oatp) substrates such as taurocholate, cholate, sulfobromophthalein, and estrone-3-sulfate. Moreover, the apparent efflux clearance of [(3)H]DHEAS across the BBB (118 microl/min-g of brain) was 10.4-fold greater than its influx clearance estimated by the in situ brain perfusion technique (11.4 microl/min-g of brain), suggesting that DHEAS is predominantly transported from the brain to blood across the BBB. In cellular uptake studies using a conditionally immortalized mouse brain capillary endothelial cell line (TM-BBB4), [(3)H]DHEAS uptake by TM-BBB4 cells exhibited a concentration dependence with a K:(m) of 34.4 microM: and was significantly inhibited by the oatp2-specific substrate digoxin. Conversely, [(3)H]digoxin uptake by TM-BBB4 cells was significantly inhibited by DHEAS. Moreover, the net uptake of [(3)H]DHEAS at 30 min was significantly increased under ATP-depleted conditions, suggesting that an energy-dependent efflux process may also be involved in TM-BBB4. RT-PCR and sequence analysis suggest that an oatp2 is expressed in TM-BBB4 cells. In conclusion, DHEAS efflux transport takes place across the BBB, and studies involving in vitro DHEAS uptake and RT-PCR suggest that there is oatp2-mediated DHEAS transport at the BBB.  相似文献   

10.
The many lives of leptin   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
Banks WA 《Peptides》2004,25(3):331-338
Leptin is a 16,000-Da protein which is secreted by fat but acts within the brain to regulate adiposity. Our Peptides Classic addressed the mystery of how such a large molecule could negotiate the blood-brain barrier (BBB), a structure which normally excludes proteins from the brain. We found that leptin was transported across the BBB by a saturable transport system. This finding was important to understanding how satiety-related peptides and proteins worked, but it was also important to the concept that the BBB is a regulatory interface important in brain-body communication. Obesity in humans and many animals is associated with a leptin resistant state rather than a leptin deficiency. Subsequent work has shown that a defect in the BBB transport of leptin is key in producing and reinforcing this state of resistance. Leptin is pluripotent and the concept of it being primarily an adipostat is being discarded for more encompassing views. Consideration of the BBB data would favor the view that ancestral levels of leptin were much lower than those currently considered normal and are consistent with leptin acting as a metabolic switch, informing the brain when fat reserves are adequate to direct energy expenditures towards activities other than seeking calories.  相似文献   

11.
Kastin AJ  Akerstrom V 《Peptides》2000,21(5):679-682
Food deprivation and adrenalectomy are associated with low concentrations of leptin in blood and the absence of obesity. Because leptin is known to cross the blood-brain barrier (BBB) by a saturable transport system, we examined whether fasting and adrenalectomy (ADX) also act at the BBB. Multiple-time regression analysis showed that fasting, but not ADX, significantly decreased the entry of leptin into mouse brain. After 3 days of food deprivation, the influx of leptin became indistinguishable from that of the vascular control (albumin); 5 h of refeeding significantly reversed this reduced rate of influx. Thus, the results indicate that the BBB provides a dynamic site for the regulation of physiological processes involving leptin.  相似文献   

12.
Aspartic acid (Asp) undergoes l-isomer-selective efflux transport across the blood-brain barrier (BBB). This transport system appears to play an important role in regulating l- and d-Asp levels in the brain. The purpose of this study was to identify the responsible transporters and elucidate the mechanism for l-isomer-selective Asp transport at the BBB. The l-isomer-selective uptake of Asp by conditionally immortalized mouse brain capillary endothelial cells used as an in vitro model of the BBB took place in an Na+- and pH-dependent manner. This process was inhibited by system ASC substrates such as l-alanine and l-serine, suggesting that system ASC transporters, ASCT1 and ASCT2, are involved in the l-isomer selective transport. Indeed, l-Asp uptake by oocytes injected with either ASCT1 or ASCT2 cRNA took place in a similar manner to that in cultured BBB cells, whereas no significant d-Asp uptake occurred. Although both ASCT1 and ASCT2 mRNA were expressed in the cultured BBB cells, the expression of ASCT2 mRNA was 6.7-fold greater than that of ASCT1. Moreover, immunohistochemical analysis suggests that ASCT2 is localized at the abluminal side of the mouse BBB. These results suggest that ASCT2 plays a key role in l-isomer-selective Asp efflux transport at the BBB.  相似文献   

13.
The purpose of this study was to clarify the mechanism of the blood-brain barrier (BBB) transport of H-Tyr-D-Arg-Phe-beta-Ala-OH (TAPA), which is a novel dermorphin analog with high affinity for the micro 1-opioid receptor. The in vivo BBB permeation influx rate of [125I]TAPA after an i.v. bolus injection (7.3 pmol/g body weight) into mice was estimated to be 0.265 +/- 0.025 microL/(min.g of brain). The influx rate of [125I]TAPA was reduced 70% by the coadministration of unlabeled TAPA (33 nmol/g of brain), suggesting the existence of a specific transport system for TAPA at the BBB. In order to elucidate the BBB transport mechanism of TAPA, a conditionally immortalized mouse brain capillary endothelial cell line (TM-BBB4) was used as an in vitro model of the BBB. The acid-resistant binding of [125I]TAPA, which represents the internalization of the peptide into cells, was temperature- and concentration-dependent with a half-saturation constant of 10.0 +/- 1.7 microm. The acid-resistant binding of TAPA was significantly inhibited by 2,4-dinitrophenol, dansylcadaverine (an endocytosis inhibitor) and poly-l-lysine and protamine (polycations). These results suggest that TAPA is transported through the BBB by adsorptive-mediated endocytosis, which is triggered by binding of the peptide to negatively charged sites on the surface of brain capillary endothelial cells. Blood-brain barrier transport via adsorptive-mediated endocytosis plays a key role in the expression of the potent opioid activity of TAPA in the CNS.  相似文献   

14.
1. A clinical trial of quinacrine in patients with Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease is now in progress. The permeability of drugs through the blood-brain barrier (BBB) is a determinant of their therapeutic efficacy for prion diseases. The mechanism of quinacrine transport across the BBB was investigated using mouse brain endothelial cells (MBEC4). 2. The permeability of quinacrine through MBEC4 cells was lower than that of sodium fluorescein, a BBB-impermeable marker. The basolateral-to-apical transport of quinacrine was greater than its apical-to-basolateral transport. In the presence of P-glycoprotein (P-gp) inhibitor, cyclosporine or verapamil, the apical-to-basolateral transport of quinacrine increased. The uptake of quinacrine by MBEC4 cells was enhanced in the presence of cyclosporine or verapamil. 3. Quinacrine uptake was highly concentrative, this event being carried out by a saturable and carrier-mediated system with an apparent Km of 52.1 microM. Quinacrine uptake was insensitive to Na+-depletion and changes in the membrane potential and sensitive to changes in pH. This uptake was decreased by tetraethylammonium and cimetidine, a substrate and an inhibitor of organic cation transporters, respectively. 4. These findings suggest that quinacrine transport at the BBB is mediated by the efflux system (P-gp) and the influx system (organic cation transporter-like machinery).  相似文献   

15.
The peptide urocortin is a member of the corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) family and a potent satiety signal to the brain. Urocortin in blood does not reach the brain significantly by itself, but its permeation across the blood-brain barrier (BBB) can be enhanced by leptin. How leptin facilitates the influx of urocortin has not been elucidated. In this study, we tested the hypothesis that leptin activates receptor-mediated endocytosis of urocortin. We measured the kinetics of permeation of radioactively labeled urocortin across the mouse BBB and determined the specific effects of leptin and receptor antibodies. The results show that the influx transfer constant of urocortin was enhanced in the presence of leptin and mediated by CRF-2beta, the specific receptor for urocortin. To determine the specificity of this modulation, the effect of leptin was compared with that of TNFalpha. Both TNFalpha and leptin independently facilitated receptor-mediated transport of urocortin across the BBB. Even though TNFalpha and leptin have similar effects on urocortin transport, leptin did not significantly affect the influx of TNFalpha across the BBB. The results indicate that permeation of ingestive peptides and cytokines across the BBB can be acutely modulated, consistent with a role of BBB in regulating feeding behavior. Thus, sites of action of leptin, urocortin, and TNFalpha exist not only in the brain but also at the BBB where they each control the flow of other ingestive signals to CNS targets.  相似文献   

16.
Senile amyloid plaques are one of the diagnostic hallmarks of Alzheimer's disease (AD). However, the severity of clinical symptoms of AD is weakly correlated with the plaque load. AD symptoms severity is reported to be more strongly correlated with the level of soluble amyloid-β (Aβ) assemblies. Formation of soluble Aβ assemblies is stimulated by monomeric Aβ accumulation in the brain, which has been related to its faulty cerebral clearance. Studies tend to focus on the neurotoxicity of specific Aβ species. There are relatively few studies investigating toxic effects of Aβ on the endothelial cells of the blood–brain barrier (BBB). We hypothesized that a soluble Aβ pool more closely resembling the in vivo situation composed of a mixture of Aβ40 monomer and Aβ42 oligomer would exert higher toxicity against hCMEC/D3 cells as an in vitro BBB model than either component alone. We observed that, in addition to a disruptive effect on the endothelial cells integrity due to enhancement of the paracellular permeability of the hCMEC/D3 monolayer, the Aβ mixture significantly decreased monomeric Aβ transport across the cell culture model. Consistent with its effect on Aβ transport, Aβ mixture treatment for 24 h resulted in LRP1 down-regulation and RAGE up-regulation in hCMEC/D3 cells. The individual Aβ species separately failed to alter Aβ clearance or the cell-based BBB model integrity. Our study offers, for the first time, evidence that a mixture of soluble Aβ species, at nanomolar concentrations, disrupts endothelial cells integrity and its own transport across an in vitro model of the BBB.  相似文献   

17.
Choline enters brain by saturable transport at the blood-brain barrier (BBB). In separate studies, both sodium-dependent and passive choline transport systems of differing affinity have been reported at brain capillary endothelial cells. In the present study, we re-examined brain choline uptake using the in situ rat brain perfusion technique. Saturable brain choline uptake from perfusion fluid was best described by a model with a single transporter (V:(max) = 2.4-3.1 nmol/min/g; K(m) = 39-42 microM) with an apparent affinity (1/Km)) for choline five to ten-fold greater than previously reported in vivo, but less than neuronal 'high-affinity' brain choline transport (K(m) = 1-5 microM). BBB choline uptake from a sodium-free perfusion fluid using sucrose for osmotic balance was 50% greater than in the presence of sodium suggesting that sodium is not required for transport. Hemicholinium-3 inhibited brain choline uptake with a K(i) (57 +/- 11 microM) greater than that at the neuronal choline system. In summary, BBB choline transport occurs with greater affinity than previously reported, but does not match the properties of the neuronal choline transporter. The V:(max) of this system is appreciable and may provide a mechanism for delivering cationic drugs to brain.  相似文献   

18.
Impaired transport of leptin across the blood-brain barrier in obesity   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
Banks WA  DiPalma CR  Farrell CL 《Peptides》1999,20(11):1341-1345
Leptin is a 17-kDa protein secreted by fat cells that regulates body adiposity by crossing the blood-brain barrier (BBB) to affect feeding and thermogenesis. Obese human and rodent models of dietary obesity have shown decreased sensitivity to blood-borne leptin, postulated to be due to impaired transport of leptin across the BBB. We show here that the transport rate of leptin across the BBB is reduced about 2/3 in 12-month-old obese CD-1 mice. In a follow-up study, a perfusion method was used that replaced the blood with a buffer containing low concentrations of radioactive leptin. Obese mice still had lower rates of transport into the brain than lean mice, which shows that the reduction in transport rate associated with obesity is not due simply to saturation of transporter secondary to higher serum leptin levels as has been thought, but to a decreased capacity of the BBB to transport leptin. This suggests a new model for obesity in which a defect in the BBB transport of leptin into the CNS underlies the insensitivity to leptin and leads to obesity.  相似文献   

19.
The present study aimed to investigate pathways that contribute to uptake and transcytosis of high-density lipoproteins (HDLs) and HDL-associated alpha-tocopherol (alpha TocH) across an in vitro model of the blood-brain barrier (BBB). In primary porcine brain capillary endothelial cells HDL-associated alpha TocH was taken up in 10-fold excess of HDL holoparticles, indicating efficient selective uptake, a pathway mediated by scavenger receptor class B, type I (SR-BI). SR-BI was present in caveolae of brain capillary endothelial cells and expressed almost exclusively at the apical membrane. Disruption of caveolae with methyl-beta-cyclodextrin (CDX) resulted in (mis)sorting of SR-BI to the basolateral membrane. Immunohistochemistry of porcine brain cryosections revealed SR-BI expression on brain capillary endothelial cells and presumably astrocytic endfeet. HDL-associated [(14)C]alpha TocH taken up by brain capillary endothelial cells was recovered in sucrose gradient fractions containing the majority of cellular caveolin-1, the major caveolae-associated protein. During mass transfer studies using alpha TocH-enriched HDL, approximately 50% of cellular alpha TocH was recovered with the bulk of cellular caveolin-1 and SR-BI. Efflux experiments revealed that a substantial amount of cell-associated [(14)C]alpha TocH could be mobilized into the culture medium. In addition, apical-to-basolateral transport of HDL holoparticles and HDL-associated alpha TocH was saturable. Results from the present study suggest that part of cerebral apolipoprotein A-I and alpha TocH originates from plasma HDL transcytosed across the BBB and that caveolae-located SR-BI facilitates selective uptake of HDL-associated alpha TocH at the BBB.  相似文献   

20.
Leptin resistance is a major cause of obesity in humans. A major component of this resistance is likely an impaired transport of leptin across the blood-brain barrier (BBB). The fattest subgroup of otherwise normal 12-mo-old CD-1 mice have severely impaired transport of leptin across the BBB. However, it is unknown whether these mice are born with a BBB impairment or acquire it with aging and obesity. Here, we found within an otherwise normal population of CD-1 mice that the 10% fattest mice gained weight throughout a 12-mo-life span, whereas the 10% thinnest mice gained little weight after 3 mo of age. The fattest mice acquired a progressive impairment in their ability to transport leptin across the BBB, whereas the thinnest mice had a rate of transport that did not change with age. Fasting fat mice for 24 h or treating them with leptin resulted in modest weight reduction and development of transport rates for leptin across the BBB similar to those of thin mice. These results show that, in obese CD-1 mice, the impaired transport of leptin across the BBB develops in tandem with obesity and is reversible with even modest weight reduction.  相似文献   

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