Endothelial Cell APOE3 Regulates Neurovascular, Neuronal, and Behavioral Function

Author:

Marottoli Felecia M.1,Zhang Hui1,Flores-Barrera Eden1ORCID,Artur de la Villarmois Emilce1ORCID,Damen Frederick C.2ORCID,Miguelez Fernández Anabel M.M.1ORCID,Blesson Hannah V.1,Chaudhary Rohan1,Nguyen Anthony L.1,Nwokeji Amanda E.1,Talati Ruju1,John Ashwin S.1ORCID,Madadakere Kushi1,Lutz Sarah E.1ORCID,Cai Kejia23ORCID,Tseng Kuei Y.1ORCID,Tai Leon M.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Departments of Anatomy and Cell Biology (F.M.M., H.Z., E.F.-B., E.A.d.l.V., A.M.M.M.F., H.V.B., R.C., A.L.N., A.E.N., R.T., A.S.J., K.M., S.E.L., K.Y.T., L.M.T.), University of Illinois at Chicago.

2. Radiology (F.C.D., K.C.), University of Illinois at Chicago.

3. Bioengineering (K.C.), University of Illinois at Chicago.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Specialized brain endothelial cells and human APOE3 are independently important for neurovascular function, yet whether APOE3 expression by endothelial cells contributes to brain function is currently unknown. In the present study, we determined whether the loss of endothelial cell APOE3 impacts brain vascular and neural function. METHODS: We developed APOE3 fl/fl /Cdh5(PAC)-CreERT2 +/− ( APOE3 Cre+/− ) and APOE3 fl/fl /Cdh5(PAC)-CreERT2 −/− ( APOE3 Cre −/− , control) mice and induced endothelial cell APOE3 knockdown with tamoxifen at ≈4 to 5 weeks of age. Neurovascular and neuronal function were evaluated by biochemistry, immunohistochemistry, behavioral testing, and electrophysiology at 9 months of age. RESULTS: We found that the loss of endothelial APOE3 expression was sufficient to cause neurovascular dysfunction including higher permeability and lower vessel coverage in tandem with deficits in spatial memory and fear memory extinction and a disruption of cortical excitatory/inhibitory balance. CONCLUSIONS: Our data collectively support the novel concept that endothelial APOE3 plays a critical role in the regulation of the neurovasculature, neural circuit function, and behavior.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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