Glymphatic system

(Redirected from Glymphatic)

The glymphatic system, glymphatic clearance pathway or paravascular system is an organ system for metabolic waste removal in the central nervous system (CNS) of vertebrates. According to this model, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), an ultrafiltrated plasma fluid secreted by choroid plexuses in the cerebral ventricles, flows into the paravascular space around cerebral arteries, contacts and mixes with interstitial fluid (ISF) and solutes within the brain parenchyma, and exits via the cerebral venous paravascular spaces back into the subarachnoid space.[1] The pathway consists of a para-arterial influx mechanism for CSF driven primarily by arterial pulsation[2], which "massages" the low-pressure CSF into the denser brain parenchyma, and the CSF flow is regulated during sleep by changes in parenchyma resistance due to expansion and contraction of the extracellular space. Clearance of soluble proteins, metabolites and excess extracellular fluid is accomplished through convective bulk flow of ISF, facilitated by astrocytic aquaporin 4 (AQP4) water channels.[3]

Glymphatic system
Mammalian glymphatic system
Identifiers
MeSHD000077502
Anatomical terminology

The name "glymphatic system" was coined by the Danish neuroscientist Maiken Nedergaard in recognition of its dependence upon glial cells and the similarity of its functions to those of the peripheral lymphatic system.[4]

Glymphatic flow was initially believed to be the complete answer to the long-standing question of how the sensitive neural tissue of the CNS functions in the perceived absence of a lymphatic drainage pathway for extracellular proteins, excess fluid, and metabolic waste products. However, two subsequent articles by Louveau et al. from the University of Virginia School of Medicine and Aspelund et al. from the University of Helsinki reported independently that the dural sinuses and meningeal arteries are lined with conventional lymphatic vessels, and that this long-elusive vasculature forms a connecting pathway to the glymphatic system.[5][6]

Proposed structure

edit
 
Astrocytes stained for GFAP (green) and aquaporin-4 (purple)

In a study published in 2012,[7] a group of researchers from the University of Rochester, headed by M. Nedergaard, used in-vivo two-photon imaging of small fluorescent tracers to monitor the flow of subarachnoid CSF into and through the brain parenchyma. The two-photon microscopy allowed the Rochester team to visualize the flux of CSF in living mice, in real time, without needing to puncture the CSF compartment (imaging was performed through a closed cranial window). According to findings of that study, subarachnoid CSF enters the brain rapidly, along the paravascular spaces surrounding the penetrating arteries, then exchanges with the surrounding interstitial fluid.[7] Similarly, interstitial fluid is cleared from the brain parenchyma via the paravascular spaces surrounding large draining veins.[citation needed]

Paravascular spaces are CSF-filled channels formed between the brain blood vessels and leptomeningeal sheathes that surround cerebral surface vessels and proximal penetrating vessels. Around these penetrating vessels, paravascular spaces take the form of Virchow-Robin spaces. Where the Virchow-Robin spaces terminate within the brain parenchyma, paravascular CSF can continue traveling along the basement membranes surrounding arterial vascular smooth muscle, to reach the basal lamina surrounding brain capillaries. CSF movement along these paravascular pathways is rapid and arterial pulsation has long been suspected as an important driving force for paravascular fluid movement.[8] In a study published in 2013, J. Iliff and colleagues demonstrated this directly. Using in vivo 2-photon microscopy, the authors reported that when cerebral arterial pulsation was either increased or decreased, the rate of paravacular CSF flux in turn increased or decreased, respectively.[citation needed]

Astrocytes extend long processes that interface with neuronal synapses, as well as projections referred to as 'end-feet' that completely ensheathe the brain's entire vasculature. Although the exact mechanism is not completely understood, astrocytes are known to facilitate changes in blood flow [9][10] and have long been thought to play a role in waste removal in the brain.[11] Researchers have long known that astrocytes express water channels called aquaporins.[12] Until recently, however, no physiological function had been identified that explained their presence in the astrocytes of the mammalian CNS. Aquaporins are membrane-bound channels that play critical roles in regulating the flux of water into and out of cells. Relative to simple diffusion, the presence of aquaporins in biological membranes facilitates a 3– to 10-fold increase in water permeability.[13] Two types of aquaporins are expressed in the CNS: aquaporin-1, which is expressed by specialized epithelial cells of the choroid plexus, and aquaporin-4 (AQP4), which is expressed by astrocytes.[14][15] Aquaporin-4 expression in astrocytes is highly polarized to the endfoot processes ensheathing the cerebral vasculature. Up to 50% of the vessel-facing endfoot surface that faces the vasculature is occupied by orthogonal arrays of AQP4.[12][14] In 2012, it was shown that AQP4 is essential for paravascular CSF–ISF exchange. Analysis of genetically modified mice that lacked the AQP4 gene revealed that the bulk flow-dependent clearance of interstitial solutes decreases by 70% in the absence of AQP4. Based upon this role of AQP4-dependent glial water transport in the process of paravascular interstitial solute clearance, Iliff and Nedergaard termed this brain-wide glio-vascular pathway the "glymphatic system".

Function

edit

Waste clearance during sleep

edit

A publication by L. Xie and colleagues in 2013 explored the efficiency of the glymphatic system during slow wave sleep and provided the first direct evidence that the clearance of interstitial waste products increases during the resting state. Using a combination of diffusion iontophoresis techniques pioneered by Nicholson and colleagues, in vivo 2-photon imaging, and electroencephalography to confirm the wake and sleep states, Xia and Nedergaard demonstrated that the changes in efficiency of CSF–ISF exchange between the awake and sleeping brain were caused by expansion and contraction of the extracellular space, which increased by ~60% in the sleeping brain to promote clearance of interstitial wastes such as amyloid beta. On the basis of these findings, they hypothesized that the restorative properties of sleep may be linked to increased glymphatic clearance of metabolic waste products produced by neural activity in the awake brain.[16]

Lipid transport

edit

Another key function of the glymphatic system was documented by Thrane et al., who, in 2013, demonstrated that the brain's system of paravascular pathways plays an important role in transporting small lipophilic molecules.[17] Led by M. Nedergaard, Thrane and colleagues also showed that the paravascular transport of lipids through the glymphatic pathway activated glial calcium signalling and that the depressurization of the cranial cavity, and thus impairment of the glymphatic circulation, led to unselective lipid diffusion, intracellular lipid accumulation, and pathological signalling among astrocytes. Although further experiments are needed to parse out the physiological significance of the connection between the glymphatic circulation, calcium signalling, and paravascular lipid transport in the brain, the findings point to the adoption of a function in the CNS similar to the capacity of the intestinal lymph vessels (lacteals) to carry lipids to the liver.

Clinical significance

edit

Pathologically, neurodegenerative diseases such as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, and Huntington's disease are all characterized by the progressive loss of neurons, cognitive decline, motor impairments, and sensory loss.[18][19] Collectively these diseases fall within a broad category referred to as proteinopathies due to the common assemblage of misfolded or aggregated intracellular or extracellular proteins. According to the prevailing amyloid hypothesis of Alzheimer's disease, the aggregation of amyloid-beta (a peptide normally produced in and cleared from the healthy young brain) into extracellular plaques drives the neuronal loss and brain atrophy that is the hallmark of Alzheimer's dementia. Although the full extent of the involvement of the glymphatic system in Alzheimer's disease and other neurodegenerative disorders remains unclear, researchers have demonstrated through experiments with genetically modified mice that the proper function of the glymphatic clearance system was necessary to remove soluble amyloid-beta from the brain interstitium.[7] In mice that lack the AQP4 gene, amyloid-beta clearance is reduced by approximately 55 percent.

The glymphatic system also may be impaired after acute brain injuries such as ischemic stroke, intracranial hemorrhage, or subarachnoid hemorrhage. In 2014, a group of researchers from the French Institute of Health and Medical Research (INSERM) demonstrated by MRI that the glymphatic system was impaired after subarachnoid hemorrhage, because of the presence of coagulated blood in the paravascular spaces.[20] Injection of tissue plasminogen activator (a fibrinolytic drug) in the CSF improved glymphatic functioning. In a parallel study, they also demonstrated that the glymphatic system was impaired after ischemic stroke in the ischemic hemisphere, although the pathophysiological basis of this phenomenon remains unclear. Notably, recanalization of the occluded artery also reestablished the glymphatic flow.

The glymphatic system may also be involved in the pathogenesis of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.[21]

History

edit

Description of the cerebrospinal fluid

edit

Although the first known observations of the CSF date back to Hippocrates (460–375 BCE) and later, to Galen (130–200 CE), its discovery is credited to Emanuel Swedenborg (1688–1772 CE), who, being a devoutly religious man, identified the CSF during his search for the seat of the soul.[22] The 16 centuries of anatomists who came after Hippocrates and Galen may have missed identifying the CSF due to the prevailing autopsy technique of the time, which included severing the head and draining the blood before dissecting the brain.[22] Although Swedenborg's work (in translation) was not published until 1887 due to his lack of medical credentials, he also may have made the first connection between the CSF and the lymphatic system. His description of the CSF was of a "spirituous lymph".[22]

CNS lymphatics

edit

In the peripheral organs, the lymphatic system performs important immune functions and runs parallel to the blood circulatory system to provide a secondary circulation that transports excess interstitial fluid, proteins, and metabolic waste products from the systemic tissues back into the blood. The efficient removal of soluble proteins from the interstitial fluid is critical to the regulation of both colloidal osmotic pressure and homeostatic regulation of the fluid volume of the body. The importance of lymphatic flow is especially evident when the lymphatic system becomes obstructed. In lymphatic associated diseases, such as elephantiasis (where parasites occupying the lymphatic vessels block the flow of lymph), the impact of such an obstruction may be dramatic. The resulting chronic edema is due to the breakdown of lymphatic clearance and the accumulation of interstitial solutes.[citation needed]

In 2015, the presence of a meningeal lymphatic system was first identified.[5][6] Downstream of the glymphatic system's waste clearance from the ISF to the CSF, the meningeal lymphatic system drains fluid from the glymphatic system to the meningeal compartment and deep cervical lymph nodes; this is shown by the draining of fluorescent dyes injected intracisternally into the CSF in mice.[5] The meningeal lymphatics also carry immune cells.[5] The extent to which these cells may interact directly with the brain or glymphatic system, is unknown.[citation needed]

Diffusion hypothesis

edit

For more than a century the prevailing hypothesis was that the flow of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), which surrounds, but does not come in direct contact with the parenchyma of the CNS, could replace peripheral lymphatic functions and play an important role in the clearance of extracellular solutes.[23] The majority of the CSF is formed in the choroid plexus and flows through the brain along a distinct pathway: moving through the cerebral ventricular system, into the subarachnoid space surrounding the brain, then draining into the systemic blood column via arachnoid granulations of the dural sinuses or to peripheral lymphatics along cranial nerve sheathes.[24][25] Many researchers have suggested that the CSF compartment constitutes a sink for interstitial solute and fluid clearance from the brain parenchyma.[citation needed] However, the distances between the interstitial fluid and the CSF in the ventricles and subarachnoid space are too great for the efficient removal of interstitial macromolecules and wastes by simple diffusion alone.[citation needed] Helen Cserr at Brown University calculated that mean diffusion times for large molecules, such as albumin, would exceed 100 hours to traverse 1 cm of brain tissue,[26] a rate that is not compatible with the intense metabolic demands of brain tissue. Additionally, a clearance system based on simple diffusion would lack the sensitivity to respond rapidly to deviations from homeostatic conditions.[citation needed]

Key determinants of diffusion through the brain interstitial spaces are the dimensions and composition of the extracellular compartment. In a series of elegantly designed experiments in the 1980s and 1990s, C. Nicholson and colleagues from New York University explored the microenvironment of the extracellular space using ion-selective micropipettes and ionophoretic point sources. Using these techniques Nicholson showed that solute and water movement through the brain parenchyma slows as the extracellular volume fraction decreases and becomes more tortuous.[27]

As an alternative explanation to diffusion, Cserr and colleagues proposed that convective bulk flow of interstitial fluid from the brain parenchyma to the CSF was responsible for efficient waste clearance.[26]

Research

edit

Studies in 1985 indicated that cerebrospinal fluid and interstitial fluid may flow along specific anatomical pathways within the brain, with CSF moving into the brain along the outside of blood vessels; such 'paravascular channels' were possibly analogous to peripheral lymph vessels, facilitating the clearance of interstitial wastes from the brain.[8][28] However, other studies did not observe such widespread paravascular CSF–ISF exchange.[29][30] The continuity between the brain interstitial fluid and the CSF was confirmed by evidence that interstitial solutes in the brain exchange with CSF via a bulk flow mechanism, rather than by diffusion.[30]

References

edit
  1. ^ Bacyinski A, Xu M, Wang W, Hu J (2017). "The Paravascular Pathway for Brain Waste Clearance: Current Understanding, Significance and Controversy". Frontiers in Neuroanatomy. 11: 101. doi:10.3389/fnana.2017.00101. PMC 5681909. PMID 29163074.
  2. ^ Kiviniemi V, Wang X, Korhonen V, Keinänen T, Tuovinen T, Autio J, et al. (June 2016). "Ultra-fast magnetic resonance encephalography of physiological brain activity - Glymphatic pulsation mechanisms?". Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism. 36 (6): 1033–45. doi:10.1177/0271678X15622047. PMC 4908626. PMID 26690495.
  3. ^ Bohr T, Hjorth PG, Holst SC, Hrabětová S, Kiviniemi V, Lilius T, Lundgaard I, Mardal KA, Martens EA, Mori Y, Nägerl UV, Nicholson C, Tannenbaum A, Thomas JH, Tithof J, Benveniste H, Iliff JJ, Kelley DH, Nedergaard M (September 2022). "The glymphatic system: Current understanding and modeling". iScience. 25 (9): 104987. doi:10.1016/j.isci.2022.104987. PMC 9460186. PMID 36093063.
  4. ^ Konnikova M (11 January 2014). "Goodnight. Sleep Clean". The New York Times. Retrieved 18 February 2014. She called it the glymphatic system, a nod to its dependence on glial cells
  5. ^ a b c d Louveau A, Smirnov I, Keyes TJ, Eccles JD, Rouhani SJ, Peske JD, et al. (July 2015). "Structural and functional features of central nervous system lymphatic vessels". Nature. 523 (7560): 337–41. Bibcode:2015Natur.523..337L. doi:10.1038/nature14432. PMC 4506234. PMID 26030524.
  6. ^ a b Aspelund A, Antila S, Proulx ST, Karlsen TV, Karaman S, Detmar M, et al. (June 2015). "A dural lymphatic vascular system that drains brain interstitial fluid and macromolecules". The Journal of Experimental Medicine. 212 (7): 991–9. doi:10.1084/jem.20142290. PMC 4493418. PMID 26077718.
  7. ^ a b c Iliff JJ, Wang M, Liao Y, Plogg BA, Peng W, Gundersen GA, et al. (August 2012). "A paravascular pathway facilitates CSF flow through the brain parenchyma and the clearance of interstitial solutes, including amyloid β". Science Translational Medicine. 4 (147): 147ra111. doi:10.1126/scitranslmed.3003748. PMC 3551275. PMID 22896675.
  8. ^ a b Rennels ML, Gregory TF, Blaumanis OR, Fujimoto K, Grady PA (February 1985). "Evidence for a 'paravascular' fluid circulation in the mammalian central nervous system, provided by the rapid distribution of tracer protein throughout the brain from the subarachnoid space". Brain Research. 326 (1): 47–63. doi:10.1016/0006-8993(85)91383-6. PMID 3971148. S2CID 23583877.
  9. ^ Takano T, Tian GF, Peng W, Lou N, Libionka W, Han X, Nedergaard M (February 2006). "Astrocyte-mediated control of cerebral blood flow". Nature Neuroscience. 9 (2): 260–7. doi:10.1038/nn1623. PMID 16388306. S2CID 6140428.
  10. ^ Schummers J, Yu H, Sur M (June 2008). "Tuned responses of astrocytes and their influence on hemodynamic signals in the visual cortex". Science. 320 (5883): 1638–43. Bibcode:2008Sci...320.1638S. doi:10.1126/science.1156120. PMID 18566287. S2CID 16895889.
  11. ^ Yuhas D (2012). "How the brain cleans itself". Nature. doi:10.1038/nature.2012.11216. ISSN 1476-4687. S2CID 183462941.
  12. ^ a b Amiry-Moghaddam M, Ottersen OP (December 2003). "The molecular basis of water transport in the brain". Nature Reviews. Neuroscience. 4 (12): 991–1001. doi:10.1038/nrn1252. PMID 14682361. S2CID 23975497.
  13. ^ Verkman AS, Mitra AK (January 2000). "Structure and function of aquaporin water channels". American Journal of Physiology. Renal Physiology. 278 (1): F13-28. doi:10.1152/ajprenal.2000.278.1.F13. PMID 10644652.
  14. ^ a b Verkman AS, Binder DK, Bloch O, Auguste K, Papadopoulos MC (August 2006). "Three distinct roles of aquaporin-4 in brain function revealed by knockout mice". Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Biomembranes. 1758 (8): 1085–93. doi:10.1016/j.bbamem.2006.02.018. PMID 16564496.
  15. ^ Yool AJ (October 2007). "Aquaporins: multiple roles in the central nervous system". The Neuroscientist. 13 (5): 470–85. doi:10.1177/1073858407303081. PMID 17901256. S2CID 46231509.
  16. ^ Xie L, Kang H, Xu Q, Chen MJ, Liao Y, Thiyagarajan M, et al. (October 2013). "Sleep drives metabolite clearance from the adult brain". Science. 342 (6156): 373–7. Bibcode:2013Sci...342..373X. doi:10.1126/science.1241224. PMC 3880190. PMID 24136970.
  17. ^ Rangroo Thrane V, Thrane AS, Plog BA, Thiyagarajan M, Iliff JJ, Deane R, et al. (2013). "Paravascular microcirculation facilitates rapid lipid transport and astrocyte signaling in the brain". Scientific Reports. 3: 2582. Bibcode:2013NatSR...3E2582T. doi:10.1038/srep02582. PMC 3761080. PMID 24002448.
  18. ^ Mehler MF, Gokhan S (December 2000). "Mechanisms underlying neural cell death in neurodegenerative diseases: alterations of a developmentally-mediated cellular rheostat". Trends in Neurosciences. 23 (12): 599–605. doi:10.1016/s0166-2236(00)01705-7. PMID 11137149. S2CID 21302044.
  19. ^ Narasimhan K (March 2006). "Quantifying motor neuron loss in ALS". Nature Neuroscience. 9 (3): 304. doi:10.1038/nn0306-304. PMID 16498424. S2CID 1933099.
  20. ^ Gaberel T, Gakuba C, Goulay R, Martinez De Lizarrondo S, Hanouz JL, Emery E, et al. (October 2014). "Impaired glymphatic perfusion after strokes revealed by contrast-enhanced MRI: a new target for fibrinolysis?". Stroke. 45 (10): 3092–6. doi:10.1161/STROKEAHA.114.006617. PMID 25190438.
  21. ^ Ng Kee Kwong KC, Mehta AR, Nedergaard M, Chandran S (August 2020). "Defining novel functions for cerebrospinal fluid in ALS pathophysiology". Review. Acta Neuropathologica Communications. 8 (1): 140. doi:10.1186/s40478-020-01018-0. PMC 7439665. PMID 32819425.
  22. ^ a b c Hajdu S (2003). "A Note from History: Discovery of the Cerebrospinal Fluid" (PDF). Annals of Clinical and Laboratory Science. 33 (3).
  23. ^ Abbott NJ, Pizzo ME, Preston JE, Janigro D, Thorne RG (March 2018). "The role of brain barriers in fluid movement in the CNS: is there a 'glymphatic' system?". Acta Neuropathologica. 135 (3): 387–407. doi:10.1007/s00401-018-1812-4. PMID 29428972.
  24. ^ Abbott NJ (September 2004). "Evidence for bulk flow of brain interstitial fluid: significance for physiology and pathology". Neurochemistry International. 45 (4): 545–52. doi:10.1016/j.neuint.2003.11.006. PMID 15186921. S2CID 10441695.
  25. ^ Bradbury MW, Cserr HF, Westrop RJ (April 1981). "Drainage of cerebral interstitial fluid into deep cervical lymph of the rabbit". The American Journal of Physiology. 240 (4): F329-36. doi:10.1152/ajprenal.1981.240.4.F329. PMID 7223890.
  26. ^ a b Cserr HF (April 1971). "Physiology of the choroid plexus". Physiological Reviews. 51 (2): 273–311. doi:10.1152/physrev.1971.51.2.273. PMID 4930496.
  27. ^ Nicholson C, Phillips JM (December 1981). "Ion diffusion modified by tortuosity and volume fraction in the extracellular microenvironment of the rat cerebellum". The Journal of Physiology. 321: 225–57. doi:10.1113/jphysiol.1981.sp013981. PMC 1249623. PMID 7338810.
  28. ^ Rennels ML, Blaumanis OR, Grady PA (1990). "Rapid solute transport throughout the brain via paravascular fluid pathways". Advances in Neurology. 52: 431–9. PMID 2396537.
  29. ^ Pullen RG, DePasquale M, Cserr HF (September 1987). "Bulk flow of cerebrospinal fluid into brain in response to acute hyperosmolality". The American Journal of Physiology. 253 (3 Pt 2): F538-45. doi:10.1152/ajprenal.1987.253.3.F538. PMID 3115117.
  30. ^ a b Cserr HF, Cooper DN, Suri PK, Patlak CS (April 1981). "Efflux of radiolabeled polyethylene glycols and albumin from rat brain". The American Journal of Physiology. 240 (4): F319-28. doi:10.1152/ajprenal.1981.240.4.F319. PMID 7223889.

Further reading

edit