학술논문

Open pathways for cerebrospinal fluid outflow at the cribriform plate along the olfactory nervesResearch in context
Document Type
article
Source
EBioMedicine, Vol 91, Iss , Pp 104558- (2023)
Subject
Cerebrospinal fluid
Lymphatic vessels
Cribriform plate
Olfactory nerves
Arachnoid barrier
Medicine
Medicine (General)
R5-920
Language
English
ISSN
2352-3964
Abstract
Summary: Background: Routes along the olfactory nerves crossing the cribriform plate that extend to lymphatic vessels within the nasal cavity have been identified as a critical cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) outflow pathway. However, it is still unclear how the efflux pathways along the nerves connect to lymphatic vessels or if any functional barriers are present at this site. The aim of this study was to anatomically define the connections between the subarachnoid space and the lymphatic system at the cribriform plate in mice. Methods: PEGylated fluorescent microbeads were infused into the CSF space in Prox1-GFP reporter mice and decalcification histology was utilized to investigate the anatomical connections between the subarachnoid space and the lymphatic vessels in the nasal submucosa. A fluorescently-labelled antibody marking vascular endothelium was injected into the cisterna magna to demonstrate the functionality of the lymphatic vessels in the olfactory region. Finally, we performed immunostaining to study the distribution of the arachnoid barrier at the cribriform plate region. Findings: We identified that there are open and direct connections from the subarachnoid space to lymphatic vessels enwrapping the olfactory nerves as they cross the cribriform plate towards the nasal submucosa. Furthermore, lymphatic vessels adjacent to the olfactory bulbs form a continuous network that is functionally connected to lymphatics in the nasal submucosa. Immunostainings revealed a discontinuous distribution of the arachnoid barrier at the olfactory region of the mouse. Interpretation: Our data supports a direct bulk flow mechanism through the cribriform plate allowing CSF drainage into nasal submucosal lymphatics in mice. Funding: This study was supported by the Swiss National Science Foundation (310030_189226), Dementia Research Switzerland—Synapsis Foundation, the Heidi Seiler Stiftung and the Fondation Dr. Corinne Schuler.