Lecture Webcasts - Blood Brain Barrier Flashcards
Define the blood brain barrier
Endothelial cells lining the microvasculature of the brain to form a barrier between the circulation and the interstitial fluid.
What is the function of the blood brain barrier?
Helps maintain a stable microenvironment for the proper functioning of neurons within the CNS.
What is the difference between systemic and brain capillaries?
Systemic: Gaps (fenestra) between the cytoplasm of adjacent cells. Numerous pinocytotic vesicles that help movement of things from lumen to EC space.
Brain: Linked by tight junctions and have few pinocytotic vesicles.
The BBB is a _____ barrier. Why is this?
physical.
Because of complex tight junctions that restrict the movement of things to intracellular route and establish endothelial polarity.
The lack of pinocytotic vesicles in the BBB indicates what?
The reduced transport through the endothelial cells.
Within the brain, capillary endothelial cells are surrounded by what?
Basal lamina, pericytes, and astrocyte foot processes.
What are pericytes?
Cells with smooth muscle like properties
What is the location of astrocyties in the BBB?
They cover the abluminal surface (faces away from the capillary lumen).
Provide cellular link to neurons.
What substances can move through the BBB? How do they do it?
Lipid soluble agents- diffuse membrane of the cells. (CNS drugs enter the brain this way)
Water soluble agents are limited in their paracellular movement.
Glucose, aas,
How do water soluble agents pass through the BBB?
They are very limited in their movement, but can move through to some extent paracellularly.
How do lipophillic molecules move through the BBB?
They can diffuse through the lipid membrane of the cells (transcellular).
Ethanol and barbiturates move this way.
Most CNS drugs enter the brain this way.
What substances can move through the BBB through endothelial cell transporters?
Nutrients: glucose, amino acids, nucleosides. (glucose cannot be moved against concentration gradient).
Also gets rid of waste.
What medications get to the brain via transport proteins?
L-dopa used to treat parkinsons, and chemotherapy agents.
How do insulin and transferrin get to the brain?
Via receptor-mediated endocytosis.
How do plasma proteins such as albumin get to the brain?
If surrounded by cations they can be taken up by the cell via absorptive transcytosis.