Neocortical Transplants in the Mammalian Brain Lack a Blood-Brain Barrier to Macromolecules
- 13 February 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 235 (4790) , 772-774
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.2433767
Abstract
In order to determine whether the blood-brain barrier was present in transplants of central nervous tissue, fetal neocortex, which already possesses blood-brain and blood-cerebrospinal fluid barriers to protein, was grafted into the undamaged fourth ventricle or directly into the neocortex of recipient rats. Horseradish peroxidase or a conjugated human immunoglobulin G-peroxidase molecule was systemically administered into the host. These proteins were detected within the cortical transplants within 2 minutes regardless of the age of the donor or postoperative time. At later times these compounds, which normally do not cross the blood-brain barrier, inundated the grafts and adjacent host brain and also entered the cerebrospinal fluid. Endogenous serum albumin detected immunocytochemically in untreated hosts had a comparable although less extensive distribution. Thus, transplants of fetal central nervous tissue have permanent barrier dysfunction, probably due to microvascular changes, and are not integrated physiologically within the host. Blood-borne compounds, either systemically administered or naturally occurring, which should never contact normal brain tissue, have direct access to these transplants and might affect neuronal function.This publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit:
- Patterns of angiogenesis in neural transplant models: I. Autonomic tissue transplantsJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1987
- Alterations of the blood‐brain barrier after transplantation of autonomic ganglia into the mammalian central nervous systemJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1986
- Circumventing the Blood-Brain Barrier with Autonomic Ganglion TransplantsScience, 1983
- Immunocytochemical localization of P0 protein in Golgi complex membranes and myelin of developing rat Schwann cells.The Journal of cell biology, 1981
- Developing nervous tissue induces formation of blood-brain barrier characteristics in invading endothelial cells: A study using quail-chick transplantation chimerasDevelopmental Biology, 1981
- Functional Development of Grafted Vasopressin NeuronsScience, 1980
- Vasogenic edema in the injured spinal cord: A method of evaluating the extent of blood-brain barrier alteration to horseradish peroxidaseExperimental Neurology, 1975
- Complex tight junctions of epithelial and of endothelial cells in early foetal brainJournal of Neurocytology, 1975
- Axonal degeneration associated with a defective blood–brain barrier in cerebral implantsNature, 1975
- Tumor Angiogenesis: Therapeutic ImplicationsNew England Journal of Medicine, 1971