1. Hippocampal capillary pericytes in post-stroke and vascular dementias and Alzheimer’s disease and experimental chronic cerebral hypoperfusion
- Author
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Yoshiki Hase, Dan Jobson, Jeremy Cheong, Kelvin Gotama, Luciana Maffei, Mai Hase, Alhafidz Hamdan, Ren Ding, Tuomo Polivkoski, Karen Horsburgh, and Raj N. Kalaria
- Subjects
Alzheimer’s disease ,Brain capillary ,Collagen IV or COL4 ,Dementia ,Hippocampus ,Pericyte ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
Abstract Neurovascular unit mural cells called ‘pericytes’ maintain the blood-brain barrier and local cerebral blood flow. Pathological changes in the hippocampus predispose to cognitive impairment and dementia. The role of hippocampal pericytes in dementia is largely unknown. We investigated hippocampal pericytes in 90 post-mortem brains from post-stroke dementia (PSD), vascular dementia (VaD), Alzheimer’s disease (AD), and AD-VaD (Mixed) subjects, and post-stroke non-demented survivors as well as similar age controls. We used collagen IV immunohistochemistry to determine pericyte densities and a mouse model of VaD to validate the effects of chronic cerebral hypoperfusion. Despite increased trends in hippocampal microvascular densities across all dementias, mean pericyte densities were reduced by ~25–40% in PSD, VaD and AD subjects compared to those in controls, which calculated to 14.1 ± 0.7 per mm capillary length, specifically in the cornu ammonis (CA) 1 region (P = 0.01). In mice with chronic bilateral carotid artery occlusion, hippocampal pericyte loss was ~60% relative to controls (P
- Published
- 2024
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