Proof-of-concept study: APOE4 brain endothelial cells as a phenotypic compound screen
Ana C. Valencia-Olvera, Felecia M Marottoli, Kiira Ratia, Gregory RJ Thatcher, Leon Maing Tai

TL;DR
This study shows that APOE4 brain endothelial cells can be used to screen for compounds that protect against cerebrovascular dysfunction.
Contribution
A phenotypic compound screen using APOE4 brain endothelial cells was developed and validated.
Findings
APOE4 brain endothelial cells were successfully used to identify compounds that protect against LPS-induced permeability.
33 protective compounds were identified, targeting various signaling pathways.
Four compounds showed protective effects in vivo in APOE4-expressing mice.
Abstract
Published data suggest that compared to APOE3, APOE4 could increase the risk of neurodegeneration via higher cerebrovascular permeability. We recently proposed the concept that brain endothelial cell APOE is protective for cerebrovascular function in a genotype specific manner, APOE3 > APOE4, and therefore APOE4 brain endothelial cells may be predisposed to dysfunction during aging and disease. In addition to mechanistic implications, our concepts and methods may have therapeutic applications; identifying compounds that protect APOE4 brain endothelial cells. The goal of this proof-of-concept study was to determine whether APOE4 brain endothelial cells can be used as a phenotypic compound screen. Previously we found that APOE4 brain endothelial cells are particularly sensitive to lipopolysaccharide- (LPS) induced permeability disruption when measured by trans endothelial cell electrical…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBarrier Structure and Function Studies · Alzheimer's disease research and treatments · Neuroinflammation and Neurodegeneration Mechanisms
