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Nasal Lymphatic Network Crucial for Brain CSF Drainage – Neuroscience News

Nasal Lymphatic Network Crucial for Brain CSF Drainage – Neuroscience News
January 27, 2024


Summary: A research team has found a crucial network of lymphatic vessels at the back of the nose that aids in draining cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) from the brain. This study uncovers a previously unknown CSF drainage route, providing insights into neurodegenerative conditions.

The team used transgenic mice with lymphatic markers and advanced imaging to reveal this network, which is connected to deep cervical lymph nodes. Their findings suggest potential targets for enhancing CSF drainage, particularly in age-related neurodegenerative diseases.

Key Facts:

The newly discovered nasopharyngeal lymphatic plexus plays a major role in draining CSF from the brain.

The study proposes that activating cervical lymphatics could improve CSF outflow, offering a new therapeutic approach for neurodegenerative diseases.

The team plans to confirm these findings in primates to advance treatments for conditions such as Alzheimer’s disease.

Source: Institute for Basic Science

In a groundbreaking study published in Nature, South Korean researchers led by Director KOH Gou Young of the Center for Vascular Research within the Institute for Basic Science (IBS) have uncovered a distinctive network of lymphatic vessels at the back of the nose that plays a critical role in draining cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) from the brain.

The study, sheds light on a previously unknown route for CSF outflow, potentially unlocking new avenues for understanding and treating neurodegenerative conditions.

In our brains, waste products generated as byproducts of metabolic activity are expelled through cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). Accumulation of waste in the brain, if not properly expelled, can damage nerve cells, leading to impaired cognitive function, dementia, and other neurodegenerative brain disorders.

Nasal Lymphatic Network Crucial for Brain CSF Drainage – Neuroscience NewsThe brain produces around 500 mL of this fluid per day, which is drained from the subarachnoid space. Credit: Neuroscience News

Therefore, regulating CSF production, circulation, and drainage has been a major focus of scientific attention, particularly concerning age-related conditions such as Alzheimer’s disease and other neurodegenerative diseases.

The brain produces about 500 mL of this fluid per day, which is drained from the subarachnoid space. Among the known drainage routes are lymphatic vessels around the cranial nerves and the upper region of the nasal cavity.

Despite well-documented evidence of lymphatics aiding CSF clearance, identifying the precise anatomical connections between the subarachnoid space and extracranial lymphatics has been a challenge due to their extremely complex structure.

Koh’s team addressed this issue using transgenic mice with lymphatic fluorescent markers, microsurgeries, and advanced imaging techniques. Their efforts revealed a detailed network of lymphatic vessels at the back of the nose that serves as a major hub for CSF outflow to deep cervical lymph nodes in the neck. These lymphatics were found to have distinct features, including unusually shaped valves and short lymphangions.

Lead researcher JIN Hokyung highlighted, “Our study identified the nasopharyngeal lymphatic plexus as a hub for CSF outflow. CSF from specific cranial regions drained through these lymphatics to deep cervical lymph nodes in the neck. This discovery could have significant implications for understanding and treating conditions related to impaired CSF drainage.”

The study also demonstrated that pharmacological activation of the deep cervical lymphatics enhanced CSF drainage in mice.

The researchers were able to successfully modulate cervical lymphatics using phenylephrine (which activates α1-adrenergic receptors, causing smooth-muscle contraction) or sodium nitroprusside (which releases nitric oxide, inducing muscle relaxation and vessel dilation).

Importantly, this feature was preserved during aging, even when the nasopharyngeal lymphatic plexus had shrunk and was functionally impaired.

YOON Jin-Hui, the co-first author of this study, notes, “The deep cervical lymphatics, which remain intact with aging, offer a potential target for therapeutic interventions aimed at improving CSF outflow in individuals with compromised brain health.”

However, the study faced its own challenges. Deep anesthesia and removal of neck musculature were required to expose the lymphatics in the mice.

These delicate procedures themselves had problems altering the physiological dynamics of CSF drainage because cerebral blood flow and blood pulsing through the vasculature contribute to CSF circulation, which in turn influences CSF outflow.

Also, while the imaging techniques used were informative, researchers believe more advanced methods for imaging live animals (such as synchrotron X-ray imaging) may reveal more features of the dynamics of CSF drainage under physiological conditions.

Director KOH Gou Young of the Center for Vascular Research stated, “We plan to verify all the findings from the mice in primates, including monkeys and humans. We aim to investigate in a reliable animal model whether activating the cervical lymphatic vessels through pharmacological or mechanical means can prevent the exacerbation of Alzheimer’s disease progression by improving CSF clearance.”

About this neuroscience research news

Author: William Suh
Source: Institute for Basic Science
Contact: William Suh – Institute for Basic Science
Image: The image is credited to Neuroscience News

Original Research: Open access.
“Nasopharyngeal lymphatic plexus is a hub for cerebrospinal fluid drainage” by KOH Gou Young et al. Nature

Abstract

Nasopharyngeal lymphatic plexus is a hub for cerebrospinal fluid drainage

Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) in the subarachnoid space around the brain has long been known to drain through the lymphatics to cervical lymph nodes, but the connections and regulation have been challenging to identify.

Here, using fluorescent CSF tracers in Prox1-GFP lymphatic reporter mice, we found that the nasopharyngeal lymphatic plexus is a major hub for CSF outflow to deep cervical lymph nodes.

This plexus had unusual valves and short lymphangions but no smooth-muscle coverage, whereas downstream deep cervical lymphatics had typical semilunar valves, long lymphangions and smooth muscle coverage that transported CSF to the deep cervical lymph nodes. α-Adrenergic and nitric oxide signalling in the smooth muscle cells regulated CSF drainage through the transport properties of deep cervical lymphatics.

During ageing, the nasopharyngeal lymphatic plexus atrophied, but deep cervical lymphatics were not similarly altered, and CSF outflow could still be increased by adrenergic or nitric oxide signalling. Single-cell analysis of gene expression in lymphatic endothelial cells of the nasopharyngeal plexus of aged mice revealed increased type I interferon signalling and other inflammatory cytokines.

The importance of evidence for the nasopharyngeal lymphatic plexus functioning as a CSF outflow hub is highlighted by its regression during ageing. Yet, the ageing-resistant pharmacological activation of deep cervical lymphatic transport towards lymph nodes can still increase CSF outflow, offering an approach for augmenting CSF clearance in age-related neurological conditions in which greater efflux would be beneficial.

OpenAI
Author: OpenAI

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