Atherosclerosis: How diseased blood vessels communicate with the brain
➤ IPEK scientists have been able to demonstrate for the first time that nerve signals are exchanged between arteries and the brain in atherosclerosis.
Nerve network (red) in diseased artery adventitia.
Laboratories worldwide are carrying out research into the disease of atherosclerosis. However, their focus is on atherosclerotic plaques – deposits of cholesterol, fibrous tissue and immune cells that form in the inner layer of arteries. These plaques progressively constrict the lumen of the arteries, such that less oxygen can get to the body tissue. Heart attacks, strokes and peripheral occlusive disease (smoker’s leg) are among the known consequences.
“In recent decades, nobody has asked whether there is a direct connection between the artery and the brain – the obvious reason being that atherosclerotic plaques are not innervated,” says IPEK researcher Dr. Sarajo K. Mohanta . But it is precisely such a connection that he has now managed to demonstrate together with Professor Andreas Habenicht, also from IPEK, Prof. Christian Weber, director of the institute, and an international team. Crucial results were obtained by Professor Daniela Carnevale and Professor Giuseppe Lembo from the Department of Angiocardioneurology and Translational Medicine, IRCCS Neuromed, Sapienza University of Rome. Parts of the study were funded by LMU's Cluster of Excellence SyNergy and the Collaborative Research Center 1123. In Nature, the researchers report their findings about signals that are conveyed from the arteries containing plaques via nerves to the brain. After processing of the signals in the brain has taken place, signals make their way back to the blood vessel.
Some background information: The walls of arteries are made up of three components, an outer layer, a middle layer, and an inner layer. Plaques are found in the inner layer. They are not innervated by nerve fibers – a fact that has long been known. “As such, it did not occur to anyone to investigate whether the peripheral nervous system comes into contact with arteries in the case of atherosclerosis,” says Habenicht.Since 2004, his research group has been investigating what happens on the outer wall of arteries in patients burdened with atherosclerosis. “After all, atherosclerosis is more than just a plaque, rather it is a chronic inflammatory disease of the entire artery - and relevant to our findings the outer layer of it,” adds Mohanta, who was the lead scientist in charge of the project.The peripheral nervous system responds to such inflammation. Habenicht’s team discovered that molecular sensors known as receptors play a key role. Receptors are located in the outer layer of the vessels. They recognize where plaques are located and where vessels are inflamed by identifying the inflammatory messengers of the inflammation. Then they translate the inflammatory signals into electrical signals via nerves to the brain. The brain processes the signals and sends a stress signal back to the inflamed blood vessel. This negatively influences the inflammation, and the atherosclerosis gets worse.
Growing nerve network (red) in diseased artery adventitia