Publications | Molecular profiling of brain endothelial cell to astrocyte endfoot communication in mouse and human

Our understanding of how the body communicates with the brain to coordinate their functions is remarkably limited. At the blood-brain barrier (BBB), brain endothelial cells (BECs) are ideally positioned to mediate signaling between blood and brain parenchyma via direct communication with astrocyte perivascular processes (endfeet). We develop a method to define the mouse in vivo astrocyte endfoot proteome, which in combination with BEC-specific RNA-seq, reveal BEC to astrocyte endfoot ligand-receptor pairs that are modulated when mice are exposed to a peripheral inflammatory insult with lipopolysaccharide. We show that over 80% of these mouse BEC-endfoot ligand-receptor pairs are also found in the human BBB, with a subset of them differentially expressed in human multiple sclerosis or Alzheimer's disease compared to healthy individuals. Our findings reveal dynamic BEC-endfoot communication pathways that are relevant to human physiology and provide methodology and datasets for the translational study of BEC-astrocyte crosstalk in health and disease.

Principal Investigator(s):

Author(s):
Hill SA, Bravo-Ferrer I, Čiulkinytė A, Pérez Ramos N, Rossetti I, Colvin C, Beltran-Lobo P, Parra-Pérez C, Emelianova K, Dando O, Geary B, Nirujogi RS, Alessi DR, Lee DY, Lee YB, Díaz Castro B

PubMed:
41198665
Citation:
Hill SA, Bravo-Ferrer I, Čiulkinytė A, Pérez Ramos N, Rossetti I, Colvin C, Beltran-Lobo P, Parra-Pérez C, Emelianova K, Dando O, Geary B, Nirujogi RS, Alessi DR, Lee DY, Lee YB, Díaz Castro B
Nature Communications
2025
Nov
16
9750
doi:
10.1038/s41467-025-65487-4
PMID: 41198665