Berislav V. Zlokovic
University of Southern California
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Berislav V. Zlokovic.
Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2000
Masayoshi Shibata; Shinya Yamada; S. Ram Kumar; Miguel Calero; James R. Bading; Blas Frangione; David M. Holtzman; Carol A. Miller; Dudley K. Strickland; Jorge Ghiso; Berislav V. Zlokovic
Elimination of amyloid-ss peptide (Ass) from the brain is poorly understood. After intracerebral microinjections in young mice, (125)I-Ass(1-40) was rapidly removed from the brain (t(1/2) </= 25 minutes), mainly by vascular transport across the blood-brain barrier (BBB). The efflux transport system for Ass(1-40) at the BBB was half saturated at 15.3 nM, and the maximal transport capacity was reached between 70 nM and 100 nM. Ass(1-40) clearance was substantially inhibited by the receptor-associated protein, and by antibodies against LDL receptor-related protein-1 (LRP-1) and alpha(2)-macroglobulin (alpha(2)M). As compared to adult wild-type mice, clearance was significantly reduced in young and old apolipoprotein E (apoE) knockout mice, and in old wild-type mice. There was no evidence that Ass was metabolized in brain interstitial fluid and degraded to smaller peptide fragments and amino acids before its transport across the BBB into the circulation. LRP-1, although abundant in brain microvessels in young mice, was downregulated in older animals, and this downregulation correlated with regional Ass accumulation in brains of Alzheimers disease (AD) patients. We conclude that the BBB removes Ass from the brain largely via age-dependent, LRP-1-mediated transport that is influenced by alpha(2)M and/or apoE, and may be impaired in AD.
Nature Medicine | 2003
Rashid Deane; Shi Du Yan; Ram Kumar Submamaryan; Barbara LaRue; Suzana Jovanovic; Elizabeth Hogg; Deborah Welch; Lawrence Manness; Chang Lin; Jin Yu; Hong Zhu; Jorge Ghiso; Blas Frangione; Alan Stern; Ann Marie Schmidt; Don L. Armstrong; Bernd Arnold; Birgit Liliensiek; Peter P. Nawroth; Florence M. Hofman; Mark S. Kindy; David M. Stern; Berislav V. Zlokovic
Amyloid-β peptide (Aβ) interacts with the vasculature to influence Aβ levels in the brain and cerebral blood flow, providing a means of amplifying the Aβ-induced cellular stress underlying neuronal dysfunction and dementia. Systemic Aβ infusion and studies in genetically manipulated mice show that Aβ interaction with receptor for advanced glycation end products (RAGE)-bearing cells in the vessel wall results in transport of Aβ across the blood-brain barrier (BBB) and expression of proinflammatory cytokines and endothelin-1 (ET-1), the latter mediating Aβ-induced vasoconstriction. Inhibition of RAGE-ligand interaction suppresses accumulation of Aβ in brain parenchyma in a mouse transgenic model. These findings suggest that vascular RAGE is a target for inhibiting pathogenic consequences of Aβ-vascular interactions, including development of cerebral amyloidosis.
Trends in Neurosciences | 2005
Berislav V. Zlokovic
In contrast to traditional neuroncentric views of Alzheimers disease (AD), recent findings indicate that neurovascular dysfunction contributes to cognitive decline and neurodegeneration in AD. Here, I propose the neurovascular hypothesis of AD, suggesting that faulty clearance of amyloid beta peptide (A beta) across the blood-brain barrier (BBB), aberrant angiogenesis and senescence of the cerebrovascular system could initiate neurovascular uncoupling, vessel regression, brain hypoperfusion and neurovascular inflammation. Ultimately, this would lead to BBB compromise, to chemical imbalance in the neuronal environment and to synaptic and neuronal dysfunction, injury and loss. Based on the neurovascular hypothesis, I suggest an array of new potential therapeutic approaches that could be developed for AD, to enhance A beta clearance and neurovascular repair, and to protect the neurovascular unit from divergent inducers of injury and apoptosis.
Neuron | 2010
Robert D. Bell; Ethan A. Winkler; Abhay P. Sagare; Itender Singh; Barb LaRue; Rashid Deane; Berislav V. Zlokovic
Pericytes play a key role in the development of cerebral microcirculation. The exact role of pericytes in the neurovascular unit in the adult brain and during brain aging remains, however, elusive. Using adult viable pericyte-deficient mice, we show that pericyte loss leads to brain vascular damage by two parallel pathways: (1) reduction in brain microcirculation causing diminished brain capillary perfusion, cerebral blood flow, and cerebral blood flow responses to brain activation that ultimately mediates chronic perfusion stress and hypoxia, and (2) blood-brain barrier breakdown associated with brain accumulation of serum proteins and several vasculotoxic and/or neurotoxic macromolecules ultimately leading to secondary neuronal degenerative changes. We show that age-dependent vascular damage in pericyte-deficient mice precedes neuronal degenerative changes, learning and memory impairment, and the neuroinflammatory response. Thus, pericytes control key neurovascular functions that are necessary for proper neuronal structure and function, and pericyte loss results in a progressive age-dependent vascular-mediated neurodegeneration.
Neuron | 2004
Rashid Deane; Zhenhua Wu; Abhay P. Sagare; Judianne Davis; Shi Du Yan; Katie Hamm; Feng Xu; Margaret Parisi; Barbra LaRue; Hong Wei Hu; Patricia Spijkers; Huang Guo; Xiaomei Song; Peter J. Lenting; William E. Van Nostrand; Berislav V. Zlokovic
Abstract LRP (low-density lipoprotein receptor-related protein) is linked to Alzheimers disease (AD). Here, we report amyloid β-peptide Aβ40 binds to immobilized LRP clusters II and IV with high affinity (K d = 0.6–1.2 nM) compared to Aβ42 and mutant Aβ, and LRP-mediated Aβ brain capillary binding, endocytosis, and transcytosis across the mouse blood-brain barrier are substantially reduced by the high β sheet content in Aβ and deletion of the receptor-associated protein gene. Despite low Aβ production in the brain, transgenic mice expressing low LRP-clearance mutant Aβ develop robust Aβ cerebral accumulations much earlier than Tg-2576 Aβ-overproducing mice. While Aβ does not affect LRP internalization and synthesis, it promotes proteasome-dependent LRP degradation in endothelium at concentrations >1 μM, consistent with reduced brain capillary LRP levels in Aβ-accumulating transgenic mice, AD, and patients with cerebrovascular β-amyloidosis. Thus, low-affinity LRP/Aβ interaction and/or Aβ-induced LRP loss at the BBB mediate brain accumulation of neurotoxic Aβ.
Nature Medicine | 2003
Tong Cheng; Dong Liu; José A. Fernández; Francis J. Castellino; Elliot D. Rosen; Kenji Fukudome; Berislav V. Zlokovic
Activated protein C (APC) is a systemic anti-coagulant and anti-inflammatory factor. It reduces organ damage in animal models of sepsis, ischemic injury and stroke and substantially reduces mortality in patients with severe sepsis. It was not known whether APC acts as a direct cell survival factor or whether its neuroprotective effect is secondary to its anti-coagulant and anti-inflammatory effects. We report that APC directly prevents apoptosis in hypoxic human brain endothelium through transcriptionally dependent inhibition of tumor suppressor protein p53, normalization of the pro-apoptotic Bax/Bcl-2 ratio and reduction of caspase-3 signaling. These mechanisms are distinct from those involving upregulation of the genes encoding the anti-apoptotic Bcl-2 homolog A1 and inhibitor of apoptosis protein-1 (IAP-1) by APC in umbilical vein endothelial cells. Cytoprotection of brain endothelium by APC in vitro required endothelial protein C receptor (EPCR) and protease-activated receptor-1 (PAR-1), as did its in vivo neuroprotective activity in a stroke model of mice with a severe deficiency of EPCR. This is consistent with work showing the direct effects of APC on cultured cells via EPCR and PAR-1 (ref. 9). Moreover, the in vivo neuroprotective effects of low-dose mouse APC seemed to be independent of its anti-coagulant activity. Thus, APC protects the brain from ischemic injury by acting directly on brain cells.
Nature | 2012
Robert D. Bell; Ethan A. Winkler; Itender Singh; Abhay P. Sagare; Rashid Deane; Zhenhua Wu; David M. Holtzman; Christer Betsholtz; Annika Armulik; Jan Sallstrom; Bradford C. Berk; Berislav V. Zlokovic
Human apolipoprotein E has three isoforms: APOE2, APOE3 and APOE4. APOE4 is a major genetic risk factor for Alzheimer’s disease and is associated with Down’s syndrome dementia and poor neurological outcome after traumatic brain injury and haemorrhage. Neurovascular dysfunction is present in normal APOE4 carriers and individuals with APOE4-associated disorders. In mice, lack of Apoe leads to blood–brain barrier (BBB) breakdown, whereas APOE4 increases BBB susceptibility to injury. How APOE genotype affects brain microcirculation remains elusive. Using different APOE transgenic mice, including mice with ablation and/or inhibition of cyclophilin A (CypA), here we show that expression of APOE4 and lack of murine Apoe, but not APOE2 and APOE3, leads to BBB breakdown by activating a proinflammatory CypA–nuclear factor-κB–matrix-metalloproteinase-9 pathway in pericytes. This, in turn, leads to neuronal uptake of multiple blood-derived neurotoxic proteins, and microvascular and cerebral blood flow reductions. We show that the vascular defects in Apoe-deficient and APOE4-expressing mice precede neuronal dysfunction and can initiate neurodegenerative changes. Astrocyte-secreted APOE3, but not APOE4, suppressed the CypA–nuclear factor-κB–matrix-metalloproteinase-9 pathway in pericytes through a lipoprotein receptor. Our data suggest that CypA is a key target for treating APOE4-mediated neurovascular injury and the resulting neuronal dysfunction and degeneration.
Nature Neuroscience | 2011
Ethan A. Winkler; Robert D. Bell; Berislav V. Zlokovic
Pericytes are uniquely positioned within the neurovascular unit to serve as vital integrators, coordinators and effectors of many neurovascular functions, including angiogenesis, blood-brain barrier (BBB) formation and maintenance, vascular stability and angioarchitecture, regulation of capillary blood flow and clearance of toxic cellular byproducts necessary for proper CNS homeostasis and neuronal function. New studies have revealed that pericyte deficiency in the CNS leads to BBB breakdown and brain hypoperfusion resulting in secondary neurodegenerative changes. Here we review recent progress in understanding the biology of CNS pericytes and their role in health and disease.
Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2005
John R. Cirrito; Rashid Deane; Anne M. Fagan; Michael L. Spinner; Maia Parsadanian; Mary Beth Finn; Hong Jiang; Julie L. Prior; Abhay P. Sagare; Kelly R. Bales; Steven M. Paul; Berislav V. Zlokovic; David Piwnica-Worms; David M. Holtzman
Accumulation of amyloid-beta (Abeta) within extracellular spaces of the brain is a hallmark of Alzheimer disease (AD). In sporadic, late-onset AD, there is little evidence for increased Abeta production, suggesting that decreased elimination from the brain may contribute to elevated levels of Abeta and plaque formation. Efflux transport of Abeta across the blood-brain barrier (BBB) contributes to Abeta removal from the brain. P-glycoprotein (Pgp) is highly expressed on the luminal surface of brain capillary endothelial cells and contributes to the BBB. In Pgp-null mice, we show that [I]Abeta40 and [I]Abeta42 microinjected into the CNS clear at half the rate that they do in WT mice. When amyloid precursor protein-transgenic (APP-transgenic) mice were administered a Pgp inhibitor, Abeta levels within the brain interstitial fluid significantly increased within hours of treatment. Furthermore, APP-transgenic, Pgp-null mice had increased levels of brain Abeta and enhanced Abeta deposition compared with APP-transgenic, Pgp WT mice. These data establish a direct link between Pgp and Abeta metabolism in vivo and suggest that Pgp activity at the BBB could affect risk for developing AD as well as provide a novel diagnostic and therapeutic target.
Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2008
Rashid Deane; Abhay P. Sagare; Katie Hamm; Margaret Parisi; Steven W. Lane; Mary Beth Finn; David M. Holtzman; Berislav V. Zlokovic
Neurotoxic amyloid beta peptide (Abeta) accumulates in the brains of individuals with Alzheimer disease (AD). The APOE4 allele is a major risk factor for sporadic AD and has been associated with increased brain parenchymal and vascular amyloid burden. How apoE isoforms influence Abeta accumulation in the brain has, however, remained unclear. Here, we have shown that apoE disrupts Abeta clearance across the mouse blood-brain barrier (BBB) in an isoform-specific manner (specifically, apoE4 had a greater disruptive effect than either apoE3 or apoE2). Abeta binding to apoE4 redirected the rapid clearance of free Abeta40/42 from the LDL receptor-related protein 1 (LRP1) to the VLDL receptor (VLDLR), which internalized apoE4 and Abeta-apoE4 complexes at the BBB more slowly than LRP1. In contrast, apoE2 and apoE3 as well as Abeta-apoE2 and Abeta-apoE3 complexes were cleared at the BBB via both VLDLR and LRP1 at a substantially faster rate than Abeta-apoE4 complexes. Astrocyte-secreted lipo-apoE2, lipo-apoE3, and lipo-apoE4 as well as their complexes with Abeta were cleared at the BBB by mechanisms similar to those of their respective lipid-poor isoforms but at 2- to 3-fold slower rates. Thus, apoE isoforms differentially regulate Abeta clearance from the brain, and this might contribute to the effects of APOE genotype on the disease process in both individuals with AD and animal models of AD.