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The Journal of Neuroscience, July 1, 2002, 22(13):5606-5618
Distinct Brain Vascular Cell Types Manifest Inducible
Cyclooxygenase Expression as a Function of the Strength and Nature of
Immune Insults
Jennifer C.
Schiltz and
Paul E.
Sawchenko
Laboratory of Neuronal Structure and Function, The Salk Institute
for Biological Studies and Foundation for Medical Research, La Jolla,
California 92037
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ABSTRACT |
Induced prostanoid synthesis by cells associated with the cerebral
vasculature has been implicated in mediating immune system influences
on the CNS, but the cell type(s) involved remain unsettled. To
determine whether this might derive from differences in the nature and
intensity of the stimuli used to model immune insults, immunochemical
and hybridization histochemical methods were used to monitor
cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) expression alone, or in conjunction with
endothelial, perivascular, and glial cell markers, in brains of rats
treated with varying doses of interleukin-1 (IL-1) or bacterial
lipopolysaccharide (LPS). Vehicle-treated animals displayed weak COX-2
expression in the meninges, choroid plexus, and larger blood vessels.
Rats challenged intravenously with IL-1 (1.87-30 µg/kg) showed a
marked increase in the number of vascular-associated cells displaying
COX-2-immunoreactivity (ir). More than 90% stained positively for the
ED2 macrophage differentiation antigen, identifying them as
perivascular cells, whereas none coexpressed endothelial or glial cell
markers. Low doses of LPS (0.1 µg/kg) elicited a similar response
profile, but higher doses (2-100 µg/kg) provoked COX-2 expression in
a progressively greater number of cells exhibiting distinct round or
multipolar morphologies, corresponding to cells expressing endothelial
(RECA-1) or perivascular (ED2) cell antigens, respectively. Similarly,
ultrastructural analysis localized COX-2-ir to the perinuclear region
of endothelial cells of LPS-treated but not IL-1-treated rats. We
conclude that perivascular cells exhibit the lower threshold to COX-2
expression in response to either IL-1 or endotoxin treatment, and that
enzyme expression by endothelial cells requires one or more facets of
the more complex immune stimulus presented by LPS.
Key words:
endothelial cells; HPA axis; interleukin-1; lipopolysaccharide; perivascular cells; prostaglandins
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INTRODUCTION |
During infectious and inflammatory
episodes, cytokines act on the brain to elicit such adaptive responses
as fever, anorexia, somnolence, lethargy, and metabolic effects,
including activation of the hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis
(Dinarello, 1984 , 1988 ; Elmquist et al., 1997b ; Dantzer et al., 1998 ;
Krueger et al., 1999 ). One such factor, interleukin-1 (IL-1), is
released from activated macrophages and can itself elicit each of these central acute phase responses (Dinarello, 1984 , 1991 ; Besedovsky et
al., 1986 ; Sapolsky et al., 1987 ). Because IL-1 is not believed to
cross the blood-brain barrier in biologically significant
concentrations, the mechanisms that might provide access have been
studied extensively, and several alternative routes have been proposed
(Watkins et al., 1995 ; Blatteis and Sehic, 1997 ; Elmquist et al.,
1997b ). Entry at circumventricular organs, transduction by peripheral nerves, facilitated transport across the barrier, and cytokine-receptor interactions at the brain-fluid interfaces with consequent release of
local signaling molecules, each of which might allow direct or
afferent-mediated access to relevant effector populations, have all
been considered as a basis for such interactions (Dantzer, 1994 ;
Watkins et al., 1995 ; Ericsson et al., 1996 ).
Findings from several laboratories support the view that circulating
cytokines can be monitored by non-neuronal cells associated with the
cerebral vasculature, which appear capable of engaging proximate
afferent projections to relevant effector neurons, including those
involved in HPA control, through the local release of prostaglandins (Ericsson et al., 1997 ; Scammell et al., 1998 ). Prostaglandin levels
within the brain are elevated after bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS)
administration (Sehic et al., 1996 ), and blocking induced synthesis
with aspirin-like drugs can disrupt cytokine-mediated activation of the
HPA axis (Katsuura et al., 1988 ). Brain vascular cells express IL-1
receptors (Ericsson et al., 1995 ) and display inducible expression of
cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2), the rate-limiting enzyme in prostanoid
biosynthesis, as well as prostaglandin E2 (PGE2), in response to
certain immune challenges (Elmquist et al., 1997a ; Lacroix and Rivest,
1998 ; Matsumura et al., 1998 ; Quan et al., 1998 ).
Further understanding of prostanoid mechanisms in immune-to-brain
signaling has been limited by uncertainly as to the identity of the
vascular cell type(s) capable of induced COX-2 expression and the
conditions under which this capacity may be invoked (Rivest, 1999 ). For example, cells identified as perivascular microglia were
reported to be the dominant source of vascular COX-2 induction in rats
treated intravenously with moderate doses of LPS (Elmquist et al.,
1997a ), whereas another group has identified endothelial cells as the
only vascular cell type to express COX-2 after intraperitoneal IL-1 or
LPS (Cao et al., 1996 ; Matsumura et al., 1998 ). Still others describe
LPS-induced COX-2 expression mainly in endothelial cells, but with a
few perivascular cells also exhibiting this capacity (Quan et al.,
1998 ). Most previous studies on this topic have used relatively high
doses of LPS, and responses to individual cytokines at doses nearer the
threshold for eliciting acute phase responses have not been
systematically explored.
In line with an effort to clarify the mechanisms underlying
IL-1-mediated activation of HPA control circuitry, we studied COX-2
expression induced in response to intravenous IL-1 at a dose moderately
above the threshold required for HPA activation and characterized the
morphology and phenotype of responsive cells. Similar analyses were
conducted in rats given graded doses of LPS in an attempt to reconcile
the conflicting literature on this topic. LPS, a cell wall component of
Gram-negative bacteria, was used as a model of immune activation
because it induces the release of multiple proinflammatory cytokines,
including IL-1, and has recently been shown to account for very nearly
the entire bacterial response of certain immune (dendritic) cells
(Huang et al., 2001 ).
Portions of these data have been presented previously in abstract form
(Schiltz and Sawchenko, 2000 ).
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Animals. Adult male Sprague Dawley albino rats
(260-340 gm) were used in all experiments. They were housed
individually in a temperature-controlled room on a 12 hr light/dark
cycle with food and water ad libitum and were adapted to
handling for at least 5 d before any manipulation. All
experimental protocols were approved by the Institutional Animal Care
and Use Committee of the Salk Institute.
Intravenous administration of IL-1 and LPS.
The procedures for implanting catheters and intravenous infusions have
been described previously (Ericsson and Sawchenko, 1993 ; Ericsson et
al., 1994 ). Briefly, indwelling jugular catheters (PE 50) containing
sterile, heparin-saline (50 U/ml) were implanted under methoxyflurane
anesthesia. The sealed catheter was positioned with its internal
SILASTIC (Dow Corning) tip at the atrium and was exteriorized at an
interscapular position. After 2 d recovery, awake and freely
moving rats were removed briefly from their home cage, injected with
1.87, 10, or 30 µg/kg of recombinant human IL-1 (generously
provided by Dr. S. Gillis, Immunex, Seattle, WA) or its vehicle (1 ml/kg, 0.01% BSA, 0.01% ascorbic acid, 10 mM
Tris-HCl, 36 mM sodium phosphate buffer, pH 7.4)
and returned to their home cages. In similar experiments, groups of
rats were injected with lipopolysaccharide at varying doses (0.1, 2.0, or 100 µg/kg; Sigma, serotype 055:B5) or sterile saline (1 ml/kg).
Intraventricular indomethacin injections. Groups of rats
(n = 5 per group) were anesthetized with
ketamine/xylazine/acepromazine (25:5:1 mg/kg, s.c.) and stereotaxically
implanted with guide cannulas (Plastics One) terminating within
a lateral ventricle. The cannulas were affixed to the skull with dental
acrylic adhering to jewelers screws partially driven into the skull and
were sealed with dummy stylets cut to terminate flush with the tip of
the cannula. Seven to 10 d later, and 2 d after implantation
of jugular catheters, the stylets were removed and replaced with 30 ga
injection cannulas that extended 1.0 mm beyond the tip of the guide.
Rats were given intracerebroventricular injections of indomethacin (10 µg in 5 µl) or vehicle (5 µl, 0.04 M PBS
with 10% ethanol and 0.1% ascorbic acid, pH 6.0) through the
injection cannula connected to a 50 µl Hamilton syringe with PE 50 tubing. Fifteen minutes after the brain injection, IL-1 (1.87 µg/kg)
or vehicle was administered intravenously. Two hours later, the animals
were anesthetized and perfused for histology.
Histology and tissue processing. At appropriate time points
(between 0.5 and 6 hr after injection), rats were anesthetized with
chloral hydrate (350 mg/kg, i.p.) and perfused via the ascending aorta
with saline followed by 700 ml of 4% paraformaldehyde in 0.1 M borate buffer, pH 9.5, at 10°C. The brains
were removed, postfixed for 3 hr, and cryoprotected in 10-15% sucrose
in 0.1 M phosphate buffer overnight at 4°C.
Five one-in-five series of frozen coronal sections (30 µm), either
through the whole brain or through medulla and hypothalamus, were
collected in cryoprotectant solution and stored at 20°C until processing.
Immunohistochemistry. COX-2 and Fos proteins were detected
by localization of antisera raised against a peptide corresponding to
amino acids 584-604 mapping at the C terminus of the rat COX-2 precursor (raised in goat; Santa Cruz Biotechnology) and a rabbit polyclonal antiserum raised against an N-terminal fragment of human Fos
protein (raised in rabbit; Santa Cruz Biotechnology), respectively.
Analysis for Fos immunoreactivity (-ir) and COX-2-ir was performed on
free-floating sections using a conventional avidin-biotin immunoperoxidase technique (Sawchenko et al., 1990 ). Sections were
incubated with the primary antiserum at a dilution of 1:1000-1:5000 for COX-2 and 1:5000 for Fos at 4°C for 48 hr. The primary antiserum was localized using Vectastain Elite reagents, and the reaction product
was developed on ice using a nickel-enhanced glucose oxidase method
(Shu et al., 1988 ). The specificity of the antisera was confirmed in
control experiments in which preabsorption overnight with 30-50
µM of the synthetic peptide immunogens
eliminated basal and induced staining.
The number of Fos-ir nuclear profiles was counted under 400×
magnification in complete series of coronal sections through the
ventrolateral medullary reticular formation from the level of the
caudal pole of the facial motor nucleus to the spinal-medullary transition area and through the caudal half of the paraventricular nucleus of the hypothalamus (PVH) as defined by Swanson and Kuypers (1980) , from the rostral pole of the posterior magnocellular
subdivision through the caudalmost extent of the lateral parvocellular
regions, thereby encompassing each of the key resident visceromotor
populations (magnocellular neurosecretory, pre-autonomic, and
parvocellular neurosecretory) housed within this cell group.
Counting was performed without knowledge of treatment status, and
estimates were corrected for double-counting errors using the method of
Abercrombie (1946) .
To identify the cell type(s) displaying COX-2-like
immunoreactivity, a dual immunofluorescence protocol was used.
Sections were incubated with antisera for COX-2 and either the
macrophage differentiation antigen ED2, which serves as a marker for
rat perivascular and meningeal macrophages (1:1500; Serotec) (Dijkstra et al., 1985 ; Graeber et al., 1989 ), or a marker for endothelial cells
(RECA-1 antigen, 1:1000; Serotec) (Duijvestijn et al.,
1992 ), microglia (OX42, 1:1000; Serotec) or astroglia (glial fibrillary
acidic protein, 1:1000; Incstar) for 48 hr at 4°C. Subsequently, the
sections were incubated for 1-2 hr at room temperature with
affinity-purified Cy3-conjugated donkey anti-mouse IgG (1:200; Jackson
ImmunoResearch) and fluorescein-conjugated donkey anti-goat IgG (1:200;
Jackson ImmunoResearch) to localize ED2, RECA-1, and OX-42 or COX-2,
respectively. The astroglia marker was visualized with an
affinity-purified Cy3-conjugated donkey anti-rabbit IgG (1:200; Jackson
ImmunoResearch). Control experiments included incubation of tissue
sections from control and challenged animals with each antiserum singly
and then with both secondary antisera to ensure that the latter did not
cross-react with the inappropriate primary antiserum or with each
other. Imaging was performed using a Bio-Rad MRC1000UV scanning
confocal laser microscope (SCLM; courtesy of Dr. F. Gage, The Salk
Institute, La Jolla, CA) equipped with a krypton/argon laser and
Lasersharp software.
To determine whether IL-1 treatment might alter the number of
detectable ED2-ir cells, estimates of their density were obtained in
subgroups (n = 3) of rats killed 2 hr after vehicle or
IL-1 injection (1.87 µg/kg). Two regions were selected for analysis on the basis of their tendency to contain substantial numbers of
ED2-positive cells; the C1 region of the ventrolateral medulla and the
aspect of endopiriform nucleus just ventral to the external capsule at
the level of the medial preoptic nucleus. In each case, the number of
ED-2-positive cells in a 1.13 mm2 grid was
determined in sections taken at 150 µm intervals through the regions
of interest, and the average density of immunolabeled cells was
determined for each region in each animal.
In situ hybridization histochemistry. COX-2 mRNA was
detected using a 35S-labeled antisense
cRNA probe transcribed from a 0.2 kb cDNA (Dr. Serge Rivest, Laval
University). Control sense probes were generated from the same cDNA
clone and labeled to similar specific activities. Transcripts encoding
the type 1 IL-1 receptor (IL-1R1) was detected using a
35S-labeled antisense cRNA probe
transcribed from a 1.4 kb cDNA (Dr. Ron Hart, Rutgers University).
Hybridization histochemical localization was performed as described
previously (Simmons et al., 1989 ). Briefly, sections were mounted onto
gelatin and poly-L-lysine-coated slides and desiccated
under vacuum overnight. They were then postfixed with neutral buffered
formalin for 30 min, digested in 10 µg/ml proteinase K at 37°C for
30 min, acetylated for 10 min, and then dehydrated and vacuum dried for
several hours. After prehybridization treatments, sections were
hybridized at 55°C for 48 hr with antisense riboprobes synthesized
using [35S]-UTP and -ATP
(106 pm/100 µl per slide) and diluted in
hybridization buffer consisting of 247 mM NaCl, 8.2 Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, at 25°C, 41% (v/v) formamide, 0.82× Denhardt's
solution (50× bovine serum albumin, ficoll, and polyvinylpyrrolidone), 8.2% (w/v) dextran sulfate, 411 µg/ml
yeast tRNA, and 8.2 mM DTT. Post-hybridization treatments
included four initial rinses in 4× SSC and incubation in RNase A (20 µg/ml, 37°C, 30 min), followed by a high stringency wash in 0.1×
SSC at 65-70°C. The slides were rinsed in 0.1× SSC (0.15 M NaCl and 0.015 M citric acid), dehydrated,
and dried. Slides were exposed to Amersham -max autoradiography film
overnight, defatted in graded ethanols and xylenes, and dipped in Kodak
NTB-2 nuclear track emulsion. Slides were exposed for 15-28 d and
developed in D-19 developer (Kodak) for 5 min at 14°C. In some cases,
sections were then counterstained with thionin, dehydrated, and coverslipped.
Combined immunochemistry and hybridization histochemistry for ED2-ir
and IL-1R1 mRNA was performed using minor modifications (Chan et al.,
1993 ) of a procedure described by Watts and Swanson (1989) .
Immunostaining was performed first, and the individual methods were
modified as follows: (1) nonimmune (blocking) sera, potential sources
of RNase contamination, were replaced with 2% heparin sulfate and 2%
BSA, (2) nickel enhancement steps were eliminated from the
immunostaining protocol because nickel-based reaction product does not
survive the hybridization steps, (3) tissue pretreatment with hydrogen
peroxide was omitted, and (4) Nissl counterstaining was omitted.
Electron microscopy. Rats received an intravenous injection
of 1.87 µg/kg IL-1 and were perfused 2 hr later with saline followed by 2% paraformaldehyde and 2.75% acrolein in 0.1 M phosphate buffer, pH 7.0. Vibratome sections
(50 µm thick) were then prepared for avidin-biotin immunoperoxidase
localization of COX-2 or ED2 as described above. Sections were fixed in
1% osmium tetroxide with 1.5% potassium ferricyanide, dehydrated with
ethanol and propylene oxide, and infiltrated with Spurr's resin. The
sections were embedded, thin sectioned, and counterstained with uranyl
acetate and lead citrate. A similar protocol was followed for rats
given LPS except that they were perfused 4 hr after injection of 100 µg/kg LPS. The material was examined in a JEOL 100 CX II transmission
electron microscope.
Statistics. Counts of Fos-positive cells within the
paraventricular nucleus and ventrolateral medulla were analyzed by
one-way ANOVA for each region followed by Fischer LSD post
hoc tests.
Imaging. Most images either were captured digitally, using
an Orca 100 digital CCD camera (Hamamatsu) and Openlab software (Improvision), or were recorded on Kodak Ektachrome 160 positive film
or 70 mm EM plates and digitized using a Kodak RS-3570 film scanner.
All were imported into Adobe Photoshop (v. 5.5), cropped, adjusted to
balance brightness and contrast, exported to Canvas (v. 7.0) for
assembly, and rendered at 300 dpi using a Kodak PS-8600 dye sublimation printer.
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RESULTS |
Effect of central prostaglandin synthesis inhibition on
IL-1-induced activational responses
To determine whether induced synthesis of prostaglandins within
the brain is required for the activation of HPA control circuitry observed in response to a systemic (intravenous) IL-1 challenge, rats
were instrumented with chronic indwelling catheters placed within the
lateral ventricle and given indomethacin, a nonselective inhibitor of
COX activity, or its vehicle, 15 min before an intravenous infusion of
vehicle or IL-1. Analyses focused on the PVH (the seat of
neurosecretory neurons providing for HPA control) and the ventrolateral
medulla (the principal source of IL-1-sensitive catcholaminegic inputs
to the PVH, on whose integrity the hypothalamic response depends)
(Ericsson et al., 1994 ). Fos-ir expression in animals treated centrally
and systemically with vehicle was low to undetectable in both the PVH
and ventrolateral medulla. As reported previously (Ericsson et al.,
1994 ), intravenous IL-1 evokes a robust Fos response within the PVH and
the regions of catecholaminergic cell groups in the nucleus of the
solitary tract and ventrolateral medulla. Pretreatment with a central
infusion of indomethacin produced no significant effect on basal levels of Fos expression in either brainstem or hypothalamus, but did result
in a reliable diminution of IL-1 effects at the levels of both the
ventrolateral medulla (51%) and PVH (83%) (Figs.
1, 2). It
should be noted that central indomethacin treatment did elicit Fos
induction throughout the ependymal lining of the ventricular system,
which we attribute to nonspecific bulk effects of
intracerebroventricular injection of solute (Bittencourt and Sawchenko,
2000 ).

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Figure 1.
Central prostaglandin synthesis blockade
disrupts systemic IL-1-induced activation of the paraventricular
nucleus and its aminergic afferents. Bright-field photomicrographs show
IL-1-induced Fos-ir expression in the paraventricular nucleus
(PVH, top) and the C1 region of the
ventrolateral medulla (VLM, bottom) in
rats pretreated by intracerebroventricular injection of vehicle
(left) or indomethacin (10 µg/5 µl)
(right). As reported previously, intravenous IL-1 (1.87 µg/kg) evokes a robust Fos response within the PVH and C1 regions.
However, pretreatment with central infusion of indomethacin, a
nonselective inhibitor of COX activity, results in a marked diminution
of IL-1 effects at the levels of both medulla and hypothalamus. This
finding supports the view that induced synthesis of prostaglandins
within the brain is required for the activation of HPA control systems
in response to systemic (intravenous) IL-1. Scale bar, 100 µm.
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Figure 2.
Effects of central indomethacin on IL-1-induced
Fos expression in hypothalamus and ventrolateral medulla. Mean ± SEM number of Fos-ir neurons in the ventrolateral medulla
(VLM, left) and PVH
(right) and in rats pretreated centrally
(ICV) with 10 µg indomethacin
(Indo) or vehicle (Veh), and systemically
(IV) with 1.87 µg/kg IL-1. Indomethacin
treatment results in a marked diminution of IL-1 effects at the levels
of both medulla and hypothalamus. Neither of the groups pretreated with
indomethacin had counts in either region that were significantly
different from those in the Veh/Veh control group.
*p < 0. 01 compared with Veh/Veh group.
+ p < 0.05 compared with Veh/IL-1
group (n = 5 per group).
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Basal and IL-1-induced COX-2 expression
After confirming that prostaglandin synthesis within the brain was
required for IL-1-induced Fos expression within key elements of HPA
control circuitry, the sites of basal and cytokine-stimulated expression of COX-2 were evaluated at the mRNA and protein levels. A
total of 14 unmanipulated or vehicle-treated and 18 IL-1-injected rats
were used in the analysis. In vehicle-treated animals, the most
prominent sites of COX-2 mRNA signal were over presumed neurons in a
few discrete regions of the brain (Fig.
3). These included strong and continuous
labeling over the principal cell layers of the dentate gyrus and
Ammon's horn of the hippocampal formation, a somewhat lesser density
and intensity of labeling over piriform cortex, and scattered,
positively labeled cells in the superficial parts of layer 2/3
distributed roughly evenly throughout the isocortex. In addition,
isolated examples of above-background accumulations of silver grains
were seen over the meninges and some larger blood vessels. It was not
possible to discern in this material the extent to which the somewhat
greater density of positively hybridized cells over the area postrema
conformed to labeling of neurons versus vascular-associated cells. IL-1
treatment consistently resulted in no apparent alteration in neuronal
COX-2 mRNA expression over a range of doses (1.87-30 µg/kg) and at
varying time points after injection (0.5-6 hr), although the number of
cells associated with the vasculature and the meninges clearly showed
induced expression of the transcript. This extended to smaller caliber
vessels and capillaries. A time course analysis indicated that
IL-1-induced COX-2 mRNA expression is detectable by 30 min after
injection, peaks 1-2 hr after treatment, and diminishes to control
levels by 4 hr (data not shown).

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Figure 3.
Basal and IL-1-stimulated COX-2 mRNA expression.
Dark-field photomicrographs of sections from rats killed 1 hr after
intravenous injection of vehicle (top row) or 1.87 µg/kg IL-1 (bottom row), at the levels of the preoptic
area (left), paraventricular nucleus
(middle), and medulla (right). In
vehicle-treated rats, COX-2 mRNA is evident throughout the isocortex,
hippocampal formation, and the area postrema. Some signal is also
clearly evident within the meninges (men) and a few
blood vessels (bv). IL-1 treatment does not appear to
alter neuronal expression of COX-2 mRNA, although expression by cells
associated with the vasculature and the meninges is clearly increased
throughout the brain. Scale bar, 100 µm. ac,
Anterior commissure; och, optic chiasm; men,
meninges; OT, olfactory tubercule; CP, caudate
putamen; Pir, piriform cortex; iso, isocortex;
DG, dentate gyrus; CA3, field CA3 of ammon's
horn; NLOT, nucleus of lateral olfactory tract;
AP, area postrema; cc, central canal;
SNV, spinal nucleus of trigeminal.
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Complementary analyses of immunoreactive COX-2 expression were
undertaken in groups of rats killed at 2, 4, and 6 hr after vehicle or
IL-1 injection. In agreement with findings at the mRNA level,
constitutive COX-2-ir was present within cortical neurons whose
distribution mirrored that described above (Fig.
4). Similarly, lesser numbers of weakly
stained cells were seen in the meninges and perivascular regions (Fig.
4). Those associated with vasculature displayed an irregular,
polygonal, or multipolar morphology, whereas positively labeled cells
in the meninges ranged between round and polygonal in shape. Although
no alteration in neuronal staining was apparent at any interval after
IL-1 treatment, a clear increase in the number and staining intensity
of COX-2-positive cells was observed at 2 or 4 hr after treatment
within the meninges, choroid plexus, and perivascular regions
throughout the brain. COX-2-ir cells were not observed within all blood
vessels and were seen most commonly in association with larger diameter
ones, particularly penetrating arterioles. Furthermore, some regional
specificity of COX-2-ir distribution was evident in that
vessel-associated COX-2-ir cells were most numerous in ventral regions
of both the forebrain and brainstem, with somewhat more prominent
accumulations seen at the levels of rostral medulla and the preoptic
region, where vessels near the ventral-most extension of the external capsule showed particularly dense accumulations of positively stained
cells. Of the time points examined, induced COX-2-ir in non-neuronal
elements was detectable at 2 hr, maximal in most regions at 4 hr, and
reduced but not eliminated by 6 hr after injection (data not
shown).

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Figure 4.
Immunoreactive COX-2 expression in the
brain. Bright-field images of COX-2-ir cells in the isocortex and
meninges (top) and cells associated with the vasculature
in the forebrain (middle) and medulla
(bottom), from rats killed 4 hr after vehicle
(left) or IL-1 injection (right). In
agreement with findings at the mRNA level, constitutive COX-2-ir is
seen within some cortical neurons and, at lower levels, in the meninges
and perivascular regions. At 4 hr after IL-1 (1.87 µg/kg)
treatment, a clear increase in the number and staining intensity of
COX-2-positive cells is seen within the meninges and perivascular
regions, but not in neurons. Scale bar, 100 µm.
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Identification of IL-1-sensitive non-neuronal elements
Results of dual immunolabeling of material from IL-1-challenged
rats revealed that very nearly all COX-2-ir cells also stained positively for the ED2 antigen, suggesting that they may be considered "perivascular cells" as defined by Graeber et al. (1989) (Fig. 5). More than 90% of all COX-2-stained
cells both in the meninges and associated with the cerebral
microvasculature colabeled for ED2-ir in a sampling from various brain
levels and IL-1 dosage conditions. The isolated examples that failed to
exhibit COX-2-ir were never found to colocalize with the endothelial
marker, RECA-1 (Fig. 5), suggesting that endothelial cells do not
manifest substantial COX-2 expression in this paradigm. Dual staining
for COX-2-ir and either OX42 or GFAP-ir also failed to identify doubly
labeled cells, suggesting that neither parenchymal microglia nor
astroglia manifest COX-2 induction in response to an IL-1 challenge
(data not shown).

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Figure 5.
IL-1-induced COX-2 expression in perivascular
cells. SCLM images showing dual immunostaining for COX-2
(green) and a marker for perivascular
cells/macrophages (ED2, red,
top and middle panels) or endothelial
cells (RECA-1, red, bottom
panels) in blood vessels in the medulla (top and
bottom panels) or forebrain (middle
panel). Results of dual immunolabeling of material from
IL-1-challenged rats revealed that very nearly all COX-2-ir cells also
stained positively for the ED2 antigen, suggesting that they may be
considered perivascular cells as defined by Graeber et al. (1989) .
COX-2-ir was never found to colocalize with the endothelial marker
RECA-1 (bottom panel), suggesting that
endothelial cells do not manifest substantial COX-2 expression in this
paradigm. The yellow color in the top
right and middle two panels is from merged
confocal images and represents a positive signal for both COX-2-ir and
ED2-ir. The arrow indicates a single COX-2-positive,
ED2-negative cell. The open arrow indicates a
COX-2-positive cell immediately adjacent to a RECA-1-positive
vessel. Scale bars, 50 µm. POA, Pre-optic area.
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To further investigate the morphology and disposition of
vascular-associated cells that manifest inducible COX-2-ir, a fine structural analysis of ED2-ir and COX-2-ir was undertaken.
Pre-embedding immunolabeling of 14 blocks derived from six rats through
the medulla and ventral forebrain for ED2-ir labeled polygonal or multipolar cells in the perivascular space deep to the vascular basal
lamina, but within the glial limitans (Fig.
6). They were distinguished by a
relatively high density of lysosomes, multivesicular bodies, and
vacuoles of varying sizes. Reaction product in ED2-stained material was
restricted to the region at and just deep to the cell surface and
rimmed smaller vacuoles, giving the appearance of endocytotic figures.
In material from the same preparations, COX-2 immunostaining labeled
cells of a similar form and that occupied a similar position with
respect to other vascular-associated cell types. COX-2-ir differed in
that it was distributed diffusely throughout the cytoplasm of labeled
elements, giving no appearance of being associated with any particular
organelle. Labeling was never observed in cells that comprised integral
components of the vascular wall in material from animals treated with
IL-1. In addition, and despite the appearance of some of the
light-level staining patterns, positively labeled cells that lay
clearly within the lumen of a vessel were never seen. This argues
against the possibility that labeling of macrophages in the circulation
may have contributed in any substantial way to the observed
distribution.

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Figure 6.
Fine structure of ED2-ir and COX-2-ir perivascular
cells. Electron micrographs showing pre-embedding immunolabeling for
ED2 (top panel) and COX-2 (bottom
panel) near blood vessels in the medulla of a rat
treated with IL-1 (1.87 µg/kg). The ED2 antiserum recognizes a
surface antigen, and the reaction product (black arrows)
outlines a cell in a perivascular location, adjacent to a smooth muscle
cell (SM). The arrowheads indicate
reaction product associated with membrane-bound vacuoles. COX-2
immunoreactivity is distributed diffusely within the cytoplasm
(CY) of a cell of similar morphology and
location. It also appears to be enclosed within a basal lamina,
consistent again with the perivascular cell designation.
EC, Endothelial cell; bl, basal lamina;
L, lysosome; N, nucleus;
v, vacuole; bv, blood vessel. Scale bars,
1 µm.
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To determine whether perivascular cells express IL-1 receptors, and
thus at least hold potential for being accessed directly by the
cytokine, immunolocalization of ED2-ir was combined with hybridization histochemical detection of mRNA encoding the
IL-1R1. Although the limited cellular resolution of the IL-1R1
mRNA signal precluded meaningful quantitative analysis, examples of
positive hybridization signals associated with ED2-ir perivascular
elements were observed regularly (Fig.
7). Cells labeled singly for each marker
were also apparent in all sections, with ED2-labeling occurring in a
clear minority of vascular-associated cells that displayed positive
hybridization signals for IL-1R1 transcripts.

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Figure 7.
Dual localization of ED2-ir and IL-1R1 mRNA.
Bright-field photomicrographs of sections from untreated rats, showing
the distribution of ED2-ir perivascular cells (brown)
and IL-1R1 mRNA (black grains) around blood vessels in
the ventrolateral medulla. Black arrows indicate cells
expressing both markers. Not all receptor-bearing cells are ED2
positive (open arrows), suggesting that other cell types
associated with the vasculature (i.e., endothelial or other
vasculature-associated cell types) may exhibit IL-1 sensitivity, and
not all ED2-positive cells appear to express the receptor (black
arrowheads), suggesting some heterogeneity among ED2-positive
perivascular cells. Scale bar, 50 µm.
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To assess the possibility that IL-1 treatment might affect the number
of ED2-positive cells observed, the density of ED2-stained cells in
series of sections through representative regions of the forebrain and
brain stem (see Materials and Methods) of vehicle- or IL-1-treated rats
was assessed. In neither region did the density of immunolabeled cells
observed in rats killed 2 hr after intravenous IL-1 injection
(forebrain: 25.4 ± 2.9; brainstem: 13.0 ± 2.1 cells/mm2) differ significantly
(p > 0.10) from values obtained in
vehicle-injected controls (forebrain: 21.4 ± 2.8; brainstem:
10.5 ± 0.7 cells/mm2).
Vascular cell types responsive to IL-1 versus LPS
Because most recent reports (Matsumura et al., 1998 ; Quan et al.,
1998 ) suggesting that endothelial cells are the primary seat of COX-2
induction have used moderate to high doses of LPS as an immune
stimulus, we compared COX-2 induction in response to our standard dose
of IL-1 (1.87 µg/kg) with that seen after 100 µg/kg LPS. As was
seen in response to IL-1, by 2-4 hr after intravenous injection of 100 µg LPS, a clear and robust increase in COX-2-ir was apparent within
the meninges, choroid plexus, and vasculature-associated cells, as
compared with the very low level of COX-2-ir observed in saline-treated
rats (data not shown). Relative to material from IL-1-challenged
animals, LPS provoked labeling of a greater number of cells distributed
more densely over a greater number of vascular profiles, including
capillaries (Fig. 8). Significantly,
LPS-induced labeling associated with the vasculature differed in a
qualitative manner from that seen in response to IL-1 in that labeled
cells exhibited two distinct morphologies: a multipolar/polygonal form
like that seen in response to IL-1, and presumed to conform to
ED2-positive perivascular cells, and a distinctly round shape
suggestive of nuclear staining. Cells exhibiting the rounded form were
more closely and consistently associated with the vascular wall than
presumed perivascular cells and were clearly the dominant cell type
that exhibited induced COX-2 expression in rats treated with a high
dose of LPS.

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Figure 8.
Immunoreactive COX-2 expression in
vasculature-associated cells in response to IL-1 versus LPS.
Bright-field images of COX-2-ir cells associated with the vasculature
in the forebrain (top) and medulla
(bottom) from rats killed 4 hr after intravenous
injection of IL-1 (1.87 µg, left) or LPS (100 µg/kg,
right). As with IL-1, at 4 hr after LPS treatment, a
clear increase in the number and staining intensity of COX-2-positive
cells is seen within perivascular regions throughout the brain.
However, the predominant cell types manifesting enzyme expression
after each treatment are morphologically distinct. COX-2-positive
polygonal/multipolar cells (open arrows) are seen in
response to each treatment and exclusively in material from
IL-1-treated animals. COX-2-positive round cells
(arrowheads) are evident only in rats treated with LPS.
Scale bar, 100 µm.
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Localization of markers to identified endothelial cells has proven
difficult because of their irregular and elongated forms, which blend
continuously with one another, but SCLM images from rats treated
with 100 µg LPS suggest that the round COX-2-ir can be localized in
part to elements expressing RECA-1-ir, a rat brain endothelial cell
antigen (Fig. 9). Material from
LPS-injected animals contained multipolar/polygonal-shaped COX-2-ir
cells that did not express the RECA-1-ir (Fig. 9, arrow) but
could be costained for ED2-ir (data not shown). Despite the distinctly
different appearance of COX-2- and RECA-1-labeled elements, rounded
profiles did frequently exhibit areas of overlap of the two markers
near their periphery, supporting their identification as endothelial cells (Fig. 9, arrowhead).

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Figure 9.
LPS-induced COX-2 expression in
vasculature-associated cells. SCLM images show dual immunostaining for
COX-2 (green, left) and RECA-1, a
marker for endothelial cells (red,
middle), in blood vessels in the forebrain. Results of
dual immunolabeling of material from rats challenged with 100 µg/kg
LPS revealed that many round COX-2-ir cells coexpress the endothelial
marker RECA-1 (right panel). Another population
of COX-2-ir cells, polygonal or multipolar in form, stained positively
for the ED2 antigen (data not shown) in LPS-treated rats. The
yellow color in the merged image (right)
represents a positive signal for both markers and is consistent with a
perinuclear distribution of COX-2-ir in activated endothelial cells.
Arrowhead indicates a COX-2- and RECA-1-positive cell.
Arrow indicates a multipolar COX-2-positive cell that
did not express RECA-1. Scale bar, 50 µm.
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This conclusion was supported by the results of immunoelectron
microscopic localization of COX-2-ir in four rats treated with 100 µg/kg LPS (Fig. 10). In addition to
labeled cells that conformed in morphology and location to
IL-1-sensitive perivascular cells, numerous clear examples of
endothelial cells that contained COX-2 reaction product with a
discretely perinuclear localization were evident in this material.

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Figure 10.
Fine structure of LPS-sensitive
vasculature-associated cells. Electron micrographs showing
pre-embedding immunoperoxidase labeling for COX-2 in
vasculature-associated cells in the forebrain of a rat treated with 100 µg/kg LPS. COX-2-ir is distributed diffusely within the
cytoplasm of a cell (top panel, dotted
line) that is not an integral component of the vascular wall,
is segregated from the brain parenchyma by a basal lamina, and displays
morphological features similar to ED2-positive perivascular cells. The
bottom panels show examples of COX-2-ir within
endothelial cells. Note the perinuclear distribution of the reaction
product, consistent with the light-level appearance of COX-2-ir in this
cell type. Arrows indicate positive labeling for COX-2.
N, Nucleus; bl, basal lamina;
EC, endothelial cell; bv, blood vessel.
Scale bar, 1 µm.
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Finally, to glean a clearer sense of the sensitivity of perivascular
and endothelial cells to distinct immune challenge models, comparisons
were undertaken of the extent of labeling of the two cell types as a
function of the dose of IL-1 or LPS in groups of three to six animals
each. To provide a basis for comparing the two challenges, induced
expression of Fos-ir in the PVH was monitored as an independent index
of the strength of the treatments. Rats treated with graded doses of
IL-1 (1.87, 10, or 30 µg/kg) displayed dose-related induction of
COX-2 expression of vascular cells. Over this range of doses, these
appeared on morphological grounds to conform exclusively to
perivascular cells (Fig. 11). Although
LPS also clearly provoked dose-related COX-2 expression, the two cell
types displayed distinct thresholds (Fig.
12). Thus, 0.1 µg/kg of LPS resulted
in labeling only of multipolar/polygonal-shaped cells. At 2 µg/kg, a
dose that provoked Fos induction in the PVH whose strength (2034 ± 121 Fos-ir cells) most closely approximated that seen in response to
high doses of IL-1 (2156 ± 191 Fos-ir cells), the response
profile included mainly multipolar/polygonal cells, although with a
small proportion of weakly labeled round ones. Finally, with 100 µg/kg LPS, which elicited far more robust Fos induction in the PVH
than was seen with any dose of IL-1 that we used, rounded COX-2-ir
cells were clearly predominant, with labeled multipolar cells appearing
at a density roughly comparable to that seen in response to lower (2 µg/kg) dosage levels.

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Figure 11.
Vascular COX-2-ir induction as a function of IL-1
dose. Bright-field images show blood vessels stained for COX-2
(top row) or the PVN labeled for Fos-ir (bottom
row), from rats given vehicle (left panels),
1.87 µg/kg (middle panels), or 30 µg/kg IL-1
(right panels). To provide an index of the strength of
the stimulus, Fos-ir induction in the PVH seen in response to the same
treatments is shown (bottom row). In vehicle-treated
rats, few to no COX-2-ir cells are found in association with blood
vessels (top left), and Fos expression is not detected
within the PVH (bottom left). As documented previously,
1.87 µg/kg doses of IL-1 stimulate COX-2-expression within polygonal
or multipolar cells presumed to conform to ED2-positive perivascular
cells (top, middle, open
arrows); moderate Fos-ir induction is localized principally to
the medial parvocellular (mp) part of the PVH, with
lesser involvement of the dorsal parvocellular (dp)and
posterior magnocellular (pm) subdivisions
(bottom, middle). The 30 µg/kg IL-1
dose produces more robust Fos induction in the PVH
(bottom, right), comparable to that seen
in response to 2 µg/kg LPS. Nevertheless, only elements exhibiting
perivascular cell morphology manifest COX-2-ir in response to the
higher IL-1 dose (top, right). Scale bar,
100 µm.
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Figure 12.
Strength and locus of COX-2 induction as a
function of LPS dose. Bright-field images show vessels stained for
COX-2 (top row) from rats given 0.1 µg/kg
(left), 2 µg/kg (middle), or 100 µg/kg (right) LPS. In rats treated with 0.1 µg/kg
LPS (left), only cells exhibiting perivascular cell
morphology manifest COX-2-ir (left, open
arrows). Even this low dose provokes significant activation of
neurons within the PVH, especially its CRF-rich medial parvocellular
(mp) subdivision. In response to the 2 µg/kg LPS dose
(middle), both polygonal/multipolar (open
arrows) and round-shaped cells (closed
arrowheads) exhibit COX-2-ir, suggesting involvement of both
perivascular and endothelial cells. Fos induction under this condition
is marginally increased, with greater involvement of the dorsal
parvocellular (dp) and posterior magnocellular
(pm) aspects of the PVH. The 100 µg/kg LPS dose
(right) also provokes COX-2-ir expression in both
polygonal/multipolar (open arrows) and round
(arrowheads) cells, whose number and staining intensity
are enhanced. Fos induction in the PVH is most robust under this
condition and distributed uniformly throughout all subregions of the
nucleus. Scale bar, 100 µm.
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Quantitative comparisons of the percentage of COX-2-positive cells that
costained for ED2-ir were made in series through the ventrolateral
medulla as a function of treatment status. Groups of rats treated with
1.87, 10, or 30 µg/kg of IL-1 and 0.1 µg of LPS had values ranging
between 92 ± 9 and 100 ± 0%. In animals treated with 2 µg/kg LPS, this value was 70 ± 9%, and in rats treated with
the highest dose (100 µg/kg), only 13 ± 2% of the COX-2-labeled cells also expressed ED2-ir, with the remainder exhibiting the rounded appearance presumably indicative of enzyme expression in endothelia.
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DISCUSSION |
Here we provide additional evidence to support the view that
prostanoid synthesis is induced within the brain in response to a
systemic IL-1 challenge and is required for activation of HPA control
circuitry in this paradigm. In addition, we offer a basis for
reconciling discrepant findings in the literature bearing on the
identity of the vascular cell type(s) that manifest(s) induced
prostanoid synthesis in two widely used immune challenge paradigms. Our
findings identify perivascular cells as the dominant, if not sole, seat
of COX-2 induction seen in response to a range of IL-1 treatment
conditions and low doses of LPS, whereas such engagement of endothelial
cells requires more strenuous LPS challenges. This raises intriguing
questions and possibilities concerning the transduction of immune
signals at the blood-brain interface.
Previous work has shown that pretreatment with systemic indomethacin
attenuates a range of centrally mediated acute phase responses induced
by IL-1, including secretory and biosynthetic activities of the HPA
axis (Katsuura et al., 1988 ; Morimoto et al., 1989 ; Watanabe et al.,
1990 ; Ericsson et al., 1997 ; Lacroix and Rivest, 1997 ). Because of the
capacity of activated immune cells to synthesize prostaglandins, this
left open the question of whether a peripheral versus central site of
action was responsible for such effects. In the present study, we
demonstrate that central administration of indomethacin reduces to
control levels IL-1-induced activational responses both in the
hypothalamic site of CRF production for HPA axis regulation (PVH) and
in a relevant afferent cell group on whose integrity the hypothalamic
response depends (ventrolateral medulla). This supports the view that
induced synthesis of prostaglandins within the brain is required
for the activation of HPA control systems in response to systemic
(intravenous) IL-1.
In general terms, our findings on the basal and IL-1-stimulated
distribution of COX-2 expression in brain are compatible with previous
reports on this topic (Breder et al., 1992 ; Elmquist et al., 1997a ;
Lacroix and Rivest, 1998 ). Thus, in the unstimulated condition, COX-2
is expressed mainly within neurons of the hippocampal formation, and
olfactory and isocortex, and in unidentified elements of the area
postrema. Enzyme expression is also detectable in the leptomeninges and
vasculature, albeit at low levels, raising questions about whether
basal expression of the enzyme and its products are sufficient to
participate in acute phase responses to IL-1 or endotoxin challenges,
such as increased ACTH secretion, that can occur within minutes after
administration. Our results are also in line with numerous reports of
marked increases in the number of meningeal and vascular, but not
neuronal, cells that exhibit COX-2 expression after systemic IL-1 or
LPS. However, the particular vascular cell type(s) to which this
response is localized has remained a point of contention (Rivest,
1999 ).
Elmquist and colleagues (1997a) found after intravenous injection of 5 or 125 µg/kg LPS that most vascular COX-2 expression could be
localized to perivascular microglia, of a form similar to the
perivascular cells seen in our material. Another group has reported
endothelial cells to be the dominant site of COX-2 induction in rats
given 30 µg/kg IL-1 or 100 µg/kg LPS via the intraperitoneal route
(Cao et al., 1996 ; Matsumura et al., 1998 ). A third group found
evidence for a predominant localization of LPS-induced COX-2 expression
in endothelia, with substantially lesser involvement of perivascular
cells, independent of the dose and route of endotoxin administration
(Quan et al., 1998 ). A similar conclusion was reached in a recent study
examining PGE synthase expression in response to intravenous IL-1 using
a nonselective marker for vascular-associated cells (Ek et al., 2001 ).
Our results are clear in indicating that, over the range of doses
examined, IL-1 evokes COX-2 expression selectively within cells that on the basis of morphology, location, and expression of the ED2 macrophage differentiation antigen conform to perivascular cells. LPS, by contrast, can induce COX-2 expression in both perivascular and endothelial cells in a dose-dependent manner, with the former exhibiting the lower threshold to expression. We cannot exclude the
possibility that an extremely high dose of IL-1 might provoke enzyme
expression in endothelia, although it is worthy of note that all the
doses of IL-1 used here are sufficient to elicit activation of the PVH
and associated circuitry, increased levels of CRF mRNA, and HPA
secretory responses (Rivier et al., 1989 ; Ericsson et al., 1994 ). Such
considerations bear directly on the question of the extent to which
IL-1 may participate in provoking endothelial cells to synthesize
COX-2. LPS induces a cascade of cytokine production that includes IL-6,
IL-1, and tumor necrosis factor- , with the latter two being capable
of independently inducing vascular COX-2 expression (Lacroix and
Rivest, 1998 ; Blais and Rivest, 2001 ; Mark et al., 2001 ).
The basis for the disparities between the present and past treatments
of the topic are not entirely clear. It is possible that the generally
higher doses of LPS used in previous studies may have resulted in
activation of a sufficiently large population of endothelia as to allow
perivascular cells to be overlooked or underestimated. In addition,
there is evidence that ED2 expression in perivascular cells may be
acutely diminished after exposure to higher doses of LPS, thereby
confounding their identification (Mato et al., 1998 ). Other potential
contributors include differences in the route of LPS administration
(intraperitoneal vs intravenous), which could result in presentation of
distinct complements and concentrations of cytokines to the cerebral
vasculature. Moreover, aforementioned difficulties in localizing
multiple markers to endothelial cells has frequently required
modification of conventional fixation and tissue processing protocols
(Cao et al., 1996 ; Elmquist et al., 1997a ; Matsumura et al., 1998 ),
which could make them more subject to artifact. In any event, we
suggest that the consistency of the outcomes achieved in comparing
directly IL-1 and LPS effects over a range of doses should serve to
reconcile disparate findings in this literature.
The literature bearing on the nomenclature and identity of
vascular-associated cells other than endothelia is confusing and sometimes conflicting. Because the cells in this study stain for ED2
and not endothelial or macroglial markers, and because their morphology
is distinct from pericytes or endothelial cells, and because they are
not integral components of the vascular wall, we follow Graeber and
Streit (1990) in referring to them as "perivascular cells."
Perivascular cells are believed to derive from bone marrow progenitors
that take up residence in the perivascular spaces and meninges of the
brain during early development and come to express high levels of major
histocompatibility complex II antigens and thus play a role in
antigen recognition and presentation in the CNS (Hickey and Kimura,
1988 ; Gehrmann et al., 1995 ). In addition, they are phagocytic, contain
dense lysosomal bodies, and depending on their location may (Graeber et
al., 1989 ) or may not be completely enclosed by a basal lamina (Kida et
al., 1993 ; Angelov et al., 1998 ). In line with the results of Bechmann
et al. (2001) , we found the ED2-positive cells to be located between
the second and third basement membranes or in the space separating the
endothelial cell/pericyte layer from the glia limitans (Figs. 6, 10).
It worthy to note that ED2-positive cells associated with the
vasculature and meninges are readily detectable in control animals, and
their numbers do not appear to change acutely after IL-1 treatment. Although recent evidence indicates that immune insults can foster migration of immune cells into brain (Bohatschek et al., 2001 ), the
time course of such responses (12 hr to days) is incompatible with
their contributing substantially to the ED2 population observed over
the 2-4 hr time points after treatment analyzed here. Clearly, more needs to be known about these cells, including whether they may
represent an intermediate stage in the differentiation of other cell
types. The findings that indomethacin, which is not believed to cross
the blood-brain barrier, can block IL-1-induced activation of HPA
control circuitry when given either intravenously (Ericsson et al.,
1997 ) or intracerebroventricularly suggests that these cells may occupy
the unique position of being readily accessible to both the systemic
and cerebral ventricular circulations. This notion is also supported by
the observation that these cells phagocytize tracers and macromolecules
introduced into either the CSF or the systemic circulation (Kida et
al., 1993 , Mato et al., 1996 ).
Both IL-1 and LPS are of sufficient size as to preclude their ability
to directly access the CNS in biologically significant concentrations.
Mounting evidence from many laboratories supports the hypothesis that
secondary signaling molecules such as prostanoids, nitric oxide, or
locally produced cytokines themselves synthesized by cells at the
barriers between the brain and its fluid environments, play a crucial
role in transducing circulating cytokine signals (Kilbourn and
Belloni, 1990 ; Schindler et al., 1990 ; McCarron, 1992 ; van Dam et al.,
1992 ). Although our results support a prominent role for perivascular
cells in this regard, details of the transduction mechanism(s) are
lacking. We have demonstrated that at least some perivascular cells
express IL-1R1 mRNA but are unaware of evidence that speaks directly to
the question of whether they can be accessed directly by circulating
macromolecules, including cytokines. Alternatively, IL-1 may bind
initially to endothelial cells, which also bear IL-1 receptors (van Dam
et al., 1996 ) (Fig. 7), and in turn release a paracrine factor to
activate prostanoid production and release by local perivascular cells.
Similarly, LPS may be capable of activating directly endothelial and
perivascular cells, because vascular localizations of CD14 mRNA have
been reported (Lacroix et al., 1998 ), or its effects may be
attributable to its capacity to provoke cytokine release. In any event,
prostanoids are then presumed to diffuse through the extracellular
space to interact with parenchymal elements bearing cognate receptors.
For example, prostanoid receptor expression of both EP3 and EP4 has
been localized to IL-1-sensitive medullary catecholamine neurons
(Zhang and Rivest, 1999 ; Ek et al., 2000 ). Our working hypothesis
posits that activation of these populations leads to engagement of
CRF-expressing PVH neurons by way of well known direct axonal
projections (Cunningham et al., 1990 ), an idea supported by the
capacity of medullary PGE2 injections to discretely stimulate both
local aminergic neurons and their hypothalamic targets (Ericsson et
al., 1997 ).
In summary, our findings suggest that ED2-positive perivascular cells
are positioned to play a privileged role in immune-to-brain communication by virtue of their low threshold to prostanoid synthesis provoked by increased circulating levels of either IL-1 or LPS. Endothelial cells are also clearly capable of LPS-induced COX-2 expression, although with lesser sensitivity. Recent evidence to
indicate that perivascular cells can be ablated with at least some
selectivity by exploiting their susceptibility to ionizing radiation
(Priller et al., 2001 ) or their capacity to phagocytize (clondronate-laden) liposomes introduced into the ventricular system
(Polfliet et al., 2001a ,b , 2002 ) should allow more penetrating assessment of the role of this cell type in CNS responses to immune and
inflammatory insults.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Jan. 18, 2002; revised March 25, 2002; accepted April 12, 2002.
This research was supported by National Institutes of Health Grant
NS-21182 and was conducted in part by the Foundation for Medical
Research. P.E.S. is an investigator of the Foundation for Medical
Research. J.C.S. was the recipient of National Research Service Award
support 5 F32 NS10695. We thank Carlos Arias, Casey Peto, and
Kris Trulock for excellent technical and photographic expertise, respectively.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Paul E. Sawchenko, Laboratory
of Neuronal Structure and Function, The Salk Institute, 10010 North
Torrey Pines Road, La Jolla, CA 92037. E-mail:
sawchenko{at}salk.edu.
 |
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