Endothelial BACE1 Impairs Cerebral Small Vessels via Tight Junctions and eNOS

  • Haoyue Zhou
  • , Feng Gao
  • , Xiaoli Yang
  • , Tingting Lin
  • , Zhenxing Li
  • , Qiong Wang
  • , Yang Yao
  • , Lei Li
  • , Xinxin Ding
  • , Kaibin Shi
  • , Qiang Liu
  • , Hong Bao
  • , Zhenyu Long
  • , Zujun Wu
  • , Robert Vassar
  • , Xin Cheng
  • , Rena Li
  • , Yong Shen

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Background: Cerebral small vessel injury, including loss of endothelial tight junctions, endothelial dysfunction, and blood-brain barrier breakdown, is an early and typical pathology for Alzheimer's disease, cerebral amyloid angiopathy, and hypertension-related cerebral small vessel disease. Whether there is a common mechanism contributing to these cerebrovascular alterations remains unclear. Studies have shown an elevation of BACE1 (β-site amyloid precursor protein cleaving enzyme 1) in cerebral vessels from cerebral amyloid angiopathy or Alzheimer's disease patients, suggesting that vascular BACE1 may involve in cerebral small vessel injury. Methods: To understand the contribution of vascular BACE1 to cerebrovascular impairments, we combined cellular and molecular techniques, mass spectrometry, immunostaining approaches, and functional testing to elucidate the potential pathological mechanisms. Results: We observe a 3.71-fold increase in BACE1 expression in the cerebral microvessels from patients with hypertension. Importantly, we discover that an endothelial tight junction protein, occludin, is a completely new substrate for endothelial BACE1. BACE1 cleaves occludin with full-length occludin reductions and occludin fragment productions. An excessive cleavage by elevated BACE1 induces membranal accumulation of caveolin-1 and subsequent caveolin-1-mediated endocytosis, resulting in lysosomal degradation of other tight junction proteins. Meanwhile, membranal caveolin-1 increases the binding to eNOS (endothelial nitric oxide synthase), together with raised circulating Aβ (β-amyloid peptides) produced by elevated BACE1, leading to an attenuation of eNOS activity and resultant endothelial dysfunction. Furthermore, the initial endothelial damage provokes chronic reduction of cerebral blood flow, blood-brain barrier leakage, microbleeds, tau hyperphosphorylation, synaptic loss, and cognitive impairment in endothelial-specific BACE1 transgenic mice. Conversely, inhibition of aberrant BACE1 activity ameliorates tight junction loss, endothelial dysfunction, and memory deficits. Conclusions: Our findings establish a novel and direct relationship between endothelial BACE1 and cerebral small vessel damage, indicating that abnormal elevation of endothelial BACE1 is a new mechanism for cerebral small vessel disease pathogenesis.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)1321-1341
Number of pages21
JournalCirculation research
Volume130
Issue number9
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 29 2022

Keywords

  • cerebral small vessel disease
  • endothelial nitric oxide synthase
  • occludin
  • tight junctions
  • β-site amyloid precursor protein cleaving enzyme 1

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Physiology
  • Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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