Title

The Blood-Brain Barrier for Catecholamines - Revisited

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

12-1-2007

Description

Although it is well-recognized that catecholamines are generally unable to penetrate the developed blood-brain barrier (BBB) to gain entry into brain, except at circumventricular sites where the BBB is absent or deficient, onto-genetic development of this barrier seems to have escaped systematic study. To explore BBB development, several approaches were used. In the first study rats were treated once on a specific day of postnatal ontogeny, as early as the day of birth, with the neurotoxin 6-hydroxydopa-mine (6-OHDA; 60 mg/kg), and then terminated in adulthood for regional analysis of endogenous norepinephrine (NE) content of brain. In another study, rats were treated once, on a specific day of postnatal ontogeny, with the BBB-perme-able neurotoxin 6-hydroxydopa (6-OHDOPA; 60 mg/kg) following pretreatment with the BBB-impermeable amino acid decarboxylase inhibitor carbidopa (100 mg/kg IP), then terminated in adulthood for regional analysis of endogenous NE content of brain. In the third study rats were treated once, on a specific day of postnatal ontogeny, with the analog [3H]metaraminol, and terminated 1 hour later for determination of regional distribution of tritium in brain. On the basis of [3H]metaraminol distribution and NE depletions after neurotoxin treatments, it is evident that the BBB in neocortex, striatum, cerebellum and other brain regions forms in stages over a period of at least 2 weeks from birth. Moreover, because the BBB consists of several element (physical-, ion-restrictive-, and enzymatic-barrier), the method employed will derive data mainly applicable to the targeted aspect of the barrier, which may or may not necessarily coincide with elements of the barrier that have a different rate of ontogenetic development. Accordingly, it is evident that some aspects of physical- and ion-restrictive elements of the BBB form within approximately the first week after birth in rat neocortex and striatum, while enzymatic elements of the BBB form more than than 2 week later. Regardless, the BBB forms at earlier times in forebrain vs hindbrain regions.

COinS