Background: Cerebral small vessel disease (SVD) is common in older people and causes lacunar stroke and vascular cognitive impairment. Risk factors include old age, hypertension and variants in the genes COL4A1/COL4A2 encoding collagen alpha-1(IV) and alpha-2(IV), here termed collagen-IV, which are core components of the basement membrane. We tested the hypothesis that increased vascular collagen-IV associates with clinical hypertension and with SVD in older persons and with chronic hypertension in young and aged primates and genetically hypertensive rats. Methods: We quantified vascular collagen-IV immunolabeling in small arteries in a cohort of older persons with minimal Alzheimer pathology (N=52; 21F/31M, age 82.8±6.95 years). We also studied archive tissue from young (age range 6.2-8.3 years) and older (17.0-22.7 years) primates (M mulatta) and compared chronically hypertensive animals (18 months aortic stenosis) with normotensives. We also compared genetically hypertensive and normotensive rats (aged 10-12 months). Results: Collagen-IV immunolabeling in cerebral small arteries of older persons was negatively associated with radiological SVD severity (ρ: -0.427, P=0.005) but was not related to history of hypertension. General linear models confirmed the negative association of lower collagen-IV with radiological SVD (P<0.017), including age as a covariate and either clinical hypertension (P<0.030) or neuropathological SVD diagnosis (P<0.022) as fixed factors. Reduced vascular collagen-IV was accompanied by accumulation of fibrillar collagens (types I and III) as indicated by immunogold electron microscopy. In young and aged primates, brain collagen-IV was elevated in older normotensive relative to young normotensive animals (P=0.029) but was not associated with hypertension. Genetically hypertensive rats did not differ from normotensive rats in terms of arterial collagen-IV. Conclusions: Our cross-species data provide novel insight into sporadic SVD pathogenesis, supporting insufficient (rather than excessive) arterial collagen-IV in SVD, accompanied by matrix remodeling with elevated fibrillar collagen deposition. They also indicate that hypertension, a major risk factor for SVD, does not act by causing accumulation of brain vascular collagen-IV.

Vascular Collagen Type-IV in Hypertension and Cerebral Small Vessel Disease / Kumar, A. A.; Yeo, N.; Whittaker, M.; Attra, P.; Barrick, T. R.; Bridges, L. R.; Dickson, D. W.; Esiri, M. M.; Farris, C. W.; Graham, D.; Lin, W. L.; Meijles, D. N.; Pereira, A. C.; Perry, G.; Rosene, D. L.; Shtaya, A. B.; Van Agtmael, T.; Zamboni, G.; Hainsworth, A. H.. - In: STROKE. - ISSN 0039-2499. - 53:12(2022), pp. 3696-3705. [10.1161/STROKEAHA.122.037761]

Vascular Collagen Type-IV in Hypertension and Cerebral Small Vessel Disease

Zamboni G.
Data Curation
;
2022

Abstract

Background: Cerebral small vessel disease (SVD) is common in older people and causes lacunar stroke and vascular cognitive impairment. Risk factors include old age, hypertension and variants in the genes COL4A1/COL4A2 encoding collagen alpha-1(IV) and alpha-2(IV), here termed collagen-IV, which are core components of the basement membrane. We tested the hypothesis that increased vascular collagen-IV associates with clinical hypertension and with SVD in older persons and with chronic hypertension in young and aged primates and genetically hypertensive rats. Methods: We quantified vascular collagen-IV immunolabeling in small arteries in a cohort of older persons with minimal Alzheimer pathology (N=52; 21F/31M, age 82.8±6.95 years). We also studied archive tissue from young (age range 6.2-8.3 years) and older (17.0-22.7 years) primates (M mulatta) and compared chronically hypertensive animals (18 months aortic stenosis) with normotensives. We also compared genetically hypertensive and normotensive rats (aged 10-12 months). Results: Collagen-IV immunolabeling in cerebral small arteries of older persons was negatively associated with radiological SVD severity (ρ: -0.427, P=0.005) but was not related to history of hypertension. General linear models confirmed the negative association of lower collagen-IV with radiological SVD (P<0.017), including age as a covariate and either clinical hypertension (P<0.030) or neuropathological SVD diagnosis (P<0.022) as fixed factors. Reduced vascular collagen-IV was accompanied by accumulation of fibrillar collagens (types I and III) as indicated by immunogold electron microscopy. In young and aged primates, brain collagen-IV was elevated in older normotensive relative to young normotensive animals (P=0.029) but was not associated with hypertension. Genetically hypertensive rats did not differ from normotensive rats in terms of arterial collagen-IV. Conclusions: Our cross-species data provide novel insight into sporadic SVD pathogenesis, supporting insufficient (rather than excessive) arterial collagen-IV in SVD, accompanied by matrix remodeling with elevated fibrillar collagen deposition. They also indicate that hypertension, a major risk factor for SVD, does not act by causing accumulation of brain vascular collagen-IV.
2022
53
12
3696
3705
Vascular Collagen Type-IV in Hypertension and Cerebral Small Vessel Disease / Kumar, A. A.; Yeo, N.; Whittaker, M.; Attra, P.; Barrick, T. R.; Bridges, L. R.; Dickson, D. W.; Esiri, M. M.; Farris, C. W.; Graham, D.; Lin, W. L.; Meijles, D. N.; Pereira, A. C.; Perry, G.; Rosene, D. L.; Shtaya, A. B.; Van Agtmael, T.; Zamboni, G.; Hainsworth, A. H.. - In: STROKE. - ISSN 0039-2499. - 53:12(2022), pp. 3696-3705. [10.1161/STROKEAHA.122.037761]
Kumar, A. A.; Yeo, N.; Whittaker, M.; Attra, P.; Barrick, T. R.; Bridges, L. R.; Dickson, D. W.; Esiri, M. M.; Farris, C. W.; Graham, D.; Lin, W. L.; ...espandi
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11380/1372253
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