Steroid inhibition of neural microvessel morphogenesis in vitro: receptor mediation and astroglial dependence
- PMID: 1371144
- DOI: 10.1111/j.1471-4159.1992.tb09357.x
Steroid inhibition of neural microvessel morphogenesis in vitro: receptor mediation and astroglial dependence
Abstract
Steroid hormones alter several aspects of microvascular function within the CNS. Both microvessel formation and blood-brain barrier expression appear to be influenced by interactions between astrocytes and endothelial cells. To determine if steroids alter astrocyte-endothelial interactions, we studied their effects on astroglial-induced microvessel morphogenesis in vitro. C6 astroglial cells induce bovine retinal microvascular endothelial cells to differentiate into capillary-like structures. Dexamethasone, hydrocortisone, and progesterone at 10 nM inhibited C6-induced microvessel morphogenesis by 75, 35, and 30%, respectively. Inhibition by dexamethasone was both time and concentration dependent, reaching 80-100% at 1 microM. Tetrahydrocortisone and 17 alpha-hydroxyprogesterone had only marginal inhibitory effects. Cortexolone, a glucocorticoid receptor antagonist, blocked inhibition by dexamethasone. Progesterone receptors were expressed in C6 but not bovine retinal microvascular endothelial cells, identifying the astroglial cell as the likely effector of progesterone-mediated inhibition. Astroglial cells were further implicated as the effectors of steroid-mediated inhibition because none of the steroids inhibited astroglial-independent capillary-like structure formation in response to a reconstituted extracellular matrix, Matrigel. These findings are evidence that steroids modulate neural microvascular endothelial cell functions indirectly through perivascular astrocytes via a receptor-mediated mechanism.
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