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Vascular smooth muscle cell loss, but not neuroinflammation, drives cerebrovascular reactivity impairment in Alzheimer disease

yang, x.; Li, Y.; Yao, M.; Bibic, A.; Duan, W.; Lu, H.; Wei, Z.

2025-12-03 bioengineering
10.64898/2025.12.01.691642 bioRxiv
Show abstract

INTRODUCTIONCerebrovascular reactivity (CVR) impairment is a key feature of Alzheimers disease (AD), but its mechanistic basis remains unclear. This study examined whether vascular smooth muscle cell (VSMC) loss, rather than amyloidosis or neuroinflammation, underlies CVR deficits. METHODSNon-contrast MRI, including phase-contrast and pseudo-continuous arterial spin labeling, was performed in mouse models of amyloidosis (5xFAD), VSMC degeneration (CADASIL), and lipopolysaccharide-induced neuroinflammation. Characterization of vascular, amyloid-{beta}, and inflammatory markers were performed for pathological assessment. RESULTSCVR impairment emerged only when VSMC loss was present in CADASIL mice and at older ages in 5xFAD mice (9-12 months). Amyloid-{beta} deposition occurred earlier than VSMC loss or CVR decline. Neuroinflammation primarily altered baseline cerebral blood flow without affecting CVR or VSMC integrity. DISCUSSIONThese findings identify VSMC degeneration as an important driver of CVR impairment independent of cerebral amyloid angiopathy or inflammation, highlighting vascular integrity as a potential therapeutic target in AD. HighlightsO_LICerebrovascular reactivity (CVR) impairment occurred in 5xFAD mice only when vascular smooth muscle cell (VSMC) loss was present C_LIO_LI5xFAD mice exhibited prominent parenchymal but minimal vascular amyloid-{beta} deposition C_LIO_LIVSMC developmental deficiency resulted in CVR impairment in a small-vessel disease (SVD) model C_LIO_LINeuroinflammation primarily altered baseline cerebral blood flow (CBF) without affecting CVR C_LI

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