Glycocalyx dysregulation impairs blood–brain barrier in ageing and disease

Sophia M. Shi(Neurosciences Institute), Ryan J. Suh(Neurosciences Institute), D. Judy Shon(Stanford University), F. García, Josephine K. Buff(Neurosciences Institute), Micaiah Atkins(Neurosciences Institute), Lulin Li(Palo Alto Veterans Institute for Research), Nannan Lu(Neurosciences Institute), Bryan Sun(Palo Alto Veterans Institute for Research), Jian Luo(Palo Alto Veterans Institute for Research), Ning-Sum To, Tom H. Cheung(Cell Technology (China)), M. Windy McNerney(Palo Alto Veterans Institute for Research), Myriam Heiman, Carolyn R. Bertozzi(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Tony Wyss‐Coray(Neurosciences Institute)
Nature
February 26, 2025
Cited by 104Open Access
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Abstract

Abstract The blood–brain barrier (BBB) is highly specialized to protect the brain from harmful circulating factors in the blood and maintain brain homeostasis 1,2 . The brain endothelial glycocalyx layer, a carbohydrate-rich meshwork composed primarily of proteoglycans, glycoproteins and glycolipids that coats the BBB lumen, is a key structural component of the BBB 3,4 . This layer forms the first interface between the blood and brain vasculature, yet little is known about its composition and roles in supporting BBB function in homeostatic and diseased states. Here we find that the brain endothelial glycocalyx is highly dysregulated during ageing and neurodegenerative disease. We identify significant perturbation in an underexplored class of densely O-glycosylated proteins known as mucin-domain glycoproteins. We demonstrate that ageing- and disease-associated aberrations in brain endothelial mucin-domain glycoproteins lead to dysregulated BBB function and, in severe cases, brain haemorrhaging in mice. Finally, we demonstrate that we can improve BBB function and reduce neuroinflammation and cognitive deficits in aged mice by restoring core 1 mucin-type O-glycans to the brain endothelium using adeno-associated viruses. Cumulatively, our findings provide a detailed compositional and structural mapping of the ageing brain endothelial glycocalyx layer and reveal important consequences of ageing- and disease-associated glycocalyx dysregulation on BBB integrity and brain health.


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