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Xin Qi, Koichi Inagaki, Raymond A. Sobel, Daria Mochly-Rosen
Published in Volume 118, Issue 1
J Clin Invest. 2008; 118(1):173–182 doi:10.1172/JCI32636
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Figure 8
Scheme depicting a possible mechanism of δPKC-mediated tight junction dysfunction, increased BBB permeability leading to hypertensive encephalopathy, and potential sites of action of the δPKC inhibitor δV1-1.

Left: scheme of a cerebral microvessel. Middle: enlargement of the area indicated in the red box at left. Right: scheme of a similar area in a hypertensive animal. Hypertension causes swelling of endothelia and endfeet of astrocytes surrounding the small vessels of brain and increases immunoreactivity of δPKC (right versus middle). Serine and threonine phosphorylation of ZO-1 by δPKC activation leads to the disruption of ZO-1 in the microvasculature and reduces its level in the tight junction (TJ). Consequently, BBB permeability increased. δPKC accumulation in endfeet is likely to lead to increased phosphorylation, but the substrates have not yet been identified. Inhibition of δPKC by δV1-1 inhibits ZO-1 phosphorylation, which, in turn, reduces changes in TJ morphology of the microvasculature and increases BBB impermeability.