Extensive loss of arterial medial smooth muscle cells and mural extracellular matrix in cerebral autosomal recessive arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leukoencephalopathy (CARASIL)
- PMID: 18021191
- DOI: 10.1111/j.1440-1789.2007.00864.x
Extensive loss of arterial medial smooth muscle cells and mural extracellular matrix in cerebral autosomal recessive arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leukoencephalopathy (CARASIL)
Abstract
Cerebral autosomal recessive arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leukoencephalopathy (CARASIL) is a distinctive clinicopathologic entity characterized by young adult-onset non-hypertensive vasculopathic encephalopathy accompanied by alopecia and disco-vertebral degeneration. CARASIL arteriopathy is histopathologically characterized by intense arteriosclerosis without the deposition of granular osmiophilic materials. Until now, the obliterative arteriosclerosis is the presumptive cause of subcortical ischemia in CARASIL; however, a detailed vascular pathology leading to diffuse leukoencephalopathy remains unclear. In this study, we examined two autopsied CARASIL brains in comparison with an autopsy case of cerebral autosomal dominant arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leukoencephalopathy (CADASIL). Intensity of arterial sclerotic changes of CARASIL was evaluated by sclerotic index analysis. Immunohistochemical investigations were performed using a battery of primary antibodies, which recognized vascular cellular and extracellular components. As a result, sclerotic changes were disclosed to be mild and infrequent in CARASIL, in contrast to CADASIL that showed severe obliterative arterial changes. In CARASIL, conversely, most of the arteries were centrifugally enlarged and some were collapsed. We further revealed that arterial medial smooth muscle cells (SMCs) in patients with CARASIL were extensively lost, even in arteries without sclerotic changes. Arterial adventitia in CARASIL was conspicuously thin and immunoreactivities for type I, III, and VI collagens and fibronectin were appreciably weak in this region, indicating a reduction in the mural extracellular matrix (ECM). Because of the medial and adventitial degeneration, CARASIL brains likely receive marked fluctuations in blood flow because of deviations in the structural and functional basis of autoregulation mechanisms. We thus consider that diffuse leukoencephalopathy in CARASIL may be caused by arterial medial SMC loss with mural ECM reduction. We speculate that the abnormalities in the ECM are causatively related to the SMC degeneration, since the ECM is a crucial signal determining the biophysiological properties of arterial SMCs.
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