A second look at the barriers of the medial basal hypothalamus

B Peruzzo, FE Pastor, JL Blázquez, K Schöbitz… - Experimental brain …, 2000 - Springer
B Peruzzo, FE Pastor, JL Blázquez, K Schöbitz, B Peláez, P Amat, EM Rodríguez
Experimental brain research, 2000Springer
The cell bodies of hypothalamic secretory neurons are localized in areas protected by the
blood-brain barrier (BBB), whereas their axon terminals are localized in the median
eminence, which lacks a BBB. This implies a complex barrier system, allowing neurons of
the central nervous system to secrete into the blood stream without making the BBB leaky. In
the present study, three experimental protocols were applied to clarify certain relevant
aspects of the barriers operating in the medial basal hypothalamus of the rat. We …
Abstract
The cell bodies of hypothalamic secretory neurons are localized in areas protected by the blood-brain barrier (BBB), whereas their axon terminals are localized in the median eminence, which lacks a BBB. This implies a complex barrier system, allowing neurons of the central nervous system to secrete into the blood stream without making the BBB leaky. In the present study, three experimental protocols were applied to clarify certain relevant aspects of the barriers operating in the medial basal hypothalamus of the rat. We established that the milieu of the arcuate nucleus is exposed to both the ventricular and the subarachnoidal cerebrospinal fluid (CSF).The median eminence milieu, the perivascular space of the portal vessels, and the subarachnoid space appear to be in open communication; also, β2-tanycytes establish an efficient barrier between the median eminence milieu and the ventricular CSF. Similarly, β1-tanycytes establish a lateral barrier, separating the intercellular space of the median eminence from that of the arcuate nucleus. We also found that the glucose transporter I (GLUT I), a BBB marker, is localized throughout the whole plasma membrane of β1-tanycytes, but is missing from β2-tanycytes. Expression of GLUT I by tanycytes progressively develops during the first postnatal weeks; while the degree of damage of the arcuate nucleus by administration of monosodium glutamate, at different postnatal intervals, parallels that of the GLUT I immunoreactivity of β1-tanycytes. An explanation is offered for the selective destruction of the arcuate neurons by the parenteral administration of monosodium glutamate to infant rats.
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