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An early endothelial cell–specific requirement for Glut1 is revealed in Glut1 deficiency syndrome model mice
Maoxue Tang, … , Darryl C. De Vivo, Umrao R. Monani
Maoxue Tang, … , Darryl C. De Vivo, Umrao R. Monani
Published December 22, 2020
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2021;6(3):e145789. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.145789.
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Research Article Neuroscience

An early endothelial cell–specific requirement for Glut1 is revealed in Glut1 deficiency syndrome model mice

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Abstract

Paucity of the glucose transporter-1 (Glut1) protein resulting from haploinsufficiency of the SLC2A1 gene arrests cerebral angiogenesis and disrupts brain function to cause Glut1 deficiency syndrome (Glut1 DS). Restoring Glut1 to Glut1 DS model mice prevents disease, but the precise cellular sites of action of the transporter, its temporal requirements, and the mechanisms linking scarcity of the protein to brain cell dysfunction remain poorly understood. Here, we show that Glut1 functions in a cell-autonomous manner in the cerebral microvasculature to affect endothelial tip cells and, thus, brain angiogenesis. Moreover, brain endothelial cell–specific Glut1 depletion not only triggers a severe neuroinflammatory response in the Glut1 DS brain, but also reduces levels of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) and causes overt disease. Reduced BDNF correlated with fewer neurons in the Glut1 DS brain. Controlled depletion of the protein demonstrated that brain pathology and disease severity was greatest when Glut1 scarcity was induced neonatally, during brain angiogenesis. Reducing Glut1 at later stages had mild or little effect. Our results suggest that targeting brain endothelial cells during early development is important to ensure proper brain angiogenesis, prevent neuroinflammation, maintain BDNF levels, and preserve neuron numbers. This requirement will be essential for any disease-modifying therapeutic strategy for Glut1 DS.

Authors

Maoxue Tang, Sarah H. Park, Sabrina Petri, Hang Yu, Carlos B. Rueda, E. Dale Abel, Carla Y. Kim, Elizabeth M.C. Hillman, Fanghua Li, Yeojin Lee, Lei Ding, Smitha Jagadish, Wayne N. Frankel, Darryl C. De Vivo, Umrao R. Monani

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Figure 2

Selective depletion of Glut1 in ECs arrests brain angiogenesis and causes tip cell defects.

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Selective depletion of Glut1 in ECs arrests brain angiogenesis and cause...
(A) Thalamic sections of Tie2-Cre;Glut1fl/+ mutants and littermate controls stained with labeled lectin at 20 weeks of life reveal cerebral angiogenesis defects and diminution of the mutant microvasculature. (B) Graph quantifies average and aggregate cerebral capillary length in the mice; ***P < 0.001, t test, n = 9 regions from each of n = 3 mice of each genotype examined. (C) Thalamic sections of Tie2-Cre;Glut1fl/+ mutants and littermate controls stained at P14 for Glut1 reveals fewer tip cells (arrows) in mutants. (D) Quantified numbers of tip cells in mutants and relevant controls. (E and F) Tip cells in mutant brains have fewer (E) and shorter (F) lamellipodia than those of healthy controls or mutants restored for Glut1. *P < 0.05,***P < 0.001, 1-way ANOVA, n ≥ 9 regions from each of n = 3 mice of each genotype examined for D–F.

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