Fibrin Mechanisms and Functions in Nervous System Pathology

  1. Ryan A. Adams1,
  2. Melissa Passino1,
  3. Benjamin D. Sachs1,
  4. Tal Nuriel1,2 and
  5. Katerina Akassoglou1
  1. 1Department of Pharmacology, University of California–San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093–0636;
  2. 2Molecular Neurobiology, Skirball Institute of Biomolecular Medicine, New York University Medical Center, New York, NY 10016

Abstract

In brain physiology, cerebrovascular interactions regulate both, vascular functions, such as blood vessel branching and endothelial cell homeostasis, as well as neuronal functions, such as local synaptic activity and adult neurogenesis. In brain pathology, including stroke, HIV encephalitis, Alzheimer Disease, multiple sclerosis, bacterial meningitis, and glioblastomas, rupture of the vasculature allows the entry of blood proteins into the brain with subsequent edema formation and neuronal damage. Fibrin is a blood-derived protein that is not produced by cells of the nervous system, but accumulates only after disease associated with vasculature rupture. This review presents evidence from human disease and animal models that highlight the role of fibrin in nervous system pathology. Our review presents novel experimental data that extend the role of fibrin, from that of a blood-clotting protein in cerebrovascular pathologies, to a component of the perivascular extracellular matrix that regulates inflammatory and regenerative cellular responses in neurodegenerative diseases.

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