Pericyte Mechanisms in Traumatic Brain Injury - Pericyte Mechanisms in Traumatic Brain injury
Pericyte mechanisms are poorly understood in TBI. This is the major gap in knowledge that we seek to
address. Our pilot data (some published in Choi et al, Nature Medicine 2016) suggest that (a) pericytes are
widely damaged in mouse models of concussion or controlled cortical impact, (b) pericyte injury involves HIF-
1a signaling, (c) disruption of pericyte-neural stem cell (NSC) crosstalk perturbs neurogenesis and interferes
with TBI recovery, (d) pericyte-NSC crosstalk may involve nitric oxide (NO) pathways, (e) pericytes may also
communicate with oligodendrocyte precursor cells (OPCs), and (f) treatments with carbon monoxide (CO) that
enhance heme oxygenase (HO-1) signaling may restore pericyte crosstalk and improve recovery after TBI.
Based on these pilot data, we propose this overall hypothesis: TBI triggers HIF-1a-mediated injury to pericytes
and disrupts pericyte-NSC-OPC crosstalk thus interfering with endogenous recovery. If true, this hypothesis
may have translational significance, i.e. rescuing “help-me” signaling between pericytes, NSCs and OPCs may
improve gray and white matter recovery after TBI. We will test this hypothesis in four integrated aims.
In Aim 1, we investigate cellular mechanisms that allow pericytes to support NSCs and OPCs, and ask how
HIF-1a-mediated pericyte injury disrupts these crosstalk mechanisms. In Aim 2, we test CO as a way to
augment HO-1 signaling for protecting pericytes. In Aim 3, we dissect integrin and HIF mechanisms for
pericytes, NSCs and OPCs in vivo using two TBI models (mild-to-moderate concussion and more severe
controlled cortical impact). In Aim 4, will use the two mouse models of concussion and controlled cortical
impact to test the utility of CO-HO-1 signaling as a therapeutic approach for restoring pericyte-NSC-OPC
crosstalk and improving recovery after TBI. To assess causality in our pathways, we will conduct gain and loss-
of-function experiments using cell culture, in vivo mouse models, pharmacologic inhibitors, dominant mutant
constructs, siRNA and knockouts, optical imaging and long-term neurological outcomes.
This project should define a novel mechanism wherein widespread injury to pericytes underlie not only acute
vascular injury after TBI, but also disrupts pericyte-NSC-OPC crosstalk pathways. Our findings may provide a
new conceptual framework for potentially targeting pericyte mechanisms after TBI.