Composite
72%
Novelty
70%
Feasibility
40%
Impact
60%
Mechanistic
50%
Druggability
50%
Safety
50%
Confidence
40%

Mechanistic description

Mechanistic Overview

Retinal Vascular Microcirculation Rescue starts from the claim that modulating PDGFRB/ANGPT1 within the disease context of neurodegeneration can redirect a disease-relevant process. The original description reads: "Molecular Mechanism and Rationale The blood-brain barrier (BBB) and blood-retinal barrier (BRB) share fundamental structural and functional similarities, particularly in their reliance on pericyte-endothelial cell interactions to maintain vascular integrity. This hypothesis centers on the critical role of pericyte dysfunction as a convergent mechanism underlying neurodegenerative diseases, with particular focus on the platelet-derived growth factor receptor beta (PDGFRB) and angiopoietin-1 (ANGPT1) signaling pathways. Pericytes, contractile cells that wrap around capillary endothelial cells, are essential for maintaining vascular stability through multiple molecular mechanisms. PDGFRB, predominantly expressed on pericytes, serves as the primary receptor for platelet-derived growth factor-B (PDGF-B) secreted by endothelial cells, forming a crucial paracrine signaling loop. This PDGF-B/PDGFRB axis is fundamental for pericyte recruitment, proliferation, and survival during both developmental angiogenesis and adult vascular maintenance. The ANGPT1/TIE2 signaling pathway represents another critical component of pericyte-endothelial communication. ANGPT1, primarily secreted by pericytes and smooth muscle cells, binds to the TIE2 receptor on endothelial cells, promoting vascular maturation and stability. This pathway activates downstream PI3K/AKT signaling, leading to enhanced endothelial cell survival, reduced vascular permeability, and strengthened intercellular junctions through increased expression of tight junction proteins including claudin-5, occludin, and VE-cadherin. The molecular crosstalk between these pathways involves multiple effector molecules: ANGPT1 signaling enhances PDGFRB expression on pericytes, while PDGFRB activation promotes ANGPT1 secretion, creating a positive feedback loop that maintains vascular homeostasis. In neurodegenerative conditions, this delicate balance becomes disrupted through several mechanisms including oxidative stress-induced pericyte apoptosis, inflammatory cytokine-mediated downregulation of PDGFRB expression, and compromised ANGPT1/TIE2 signaling due to accumulated metabolic dysfunction. The resulting pericyte loss leads to increased vascular permeability, reduced cerebral blood flow, and compromised clearance of toxic metabolites including amyloid-beta peptides and tau proteins. Preclinical Evidence Extensive preclinical evidence supports the central role of pericyte dysfunction in neurodegeneration across multiple model systems. In 5xFAD transgenic mice, a well-established Alzheimer’s disease model, pericyte coverage decreases by approximately 45-60% by 12 months of age, coinciding with significant amyloid plaque deposition and cognitive decline. Quantitative analysis using NG2 and PDGFRB immunostaining reveals progressive pericyte loss beginning as early as 3 months, preceding substantial neuronal death. APP/PS1 mice demonstrate similar patterns, with pericyte density reduction of 35-50% in hippocampal and cortical regions by 9 months. Importantly, genetic ablation of pericytes in PDGFRB^flox/flox mice crossed with NG2-CreER^T2 lines results in accelerated cognitive decline and enhanced amyloid pathology, supporting a causal rather than correlative relationship. Functional studies using Evans blue extravasation and fluorescein angiography demonstrate 2-3 fold increases in vascular permeability in regions with pericyte loss. Live imaging experiments in C. elegans models expressing human amyloid-beta in neurons show that pericyte-like cells (GLR cells) exhibit reduced motility and altered calcium signaling patterns when exposed to amyloid oligomers. In vitro co-culture systems using human brain microvascular endothelial cells (HBMVECs) and primary human brain pericytes reveal that amyloid-beta exposure at pathologically relevant concentrations (1-5 μM) reduces pericyte viability by 30-40% within 48 hours and decreases PDGFRB expression by 60-70%. Transendothelial electrical resistance (TEER) measurements in these co-cultures show 40-50% reductions following pericyte dysfunction, indicating compromised barrier integrity. Retinal imaging studies in multiple transgenic mouse models demonstrate striking parallels between retinal and cerebral vascular changes. Optical coherence tomography angiography (OCT-A) reveals decreased vessel density and increased vascular tortuosity in the superficial and deep retinal plexuses of 3xTg-AD mice by 6 months of age. Fluorescein angiography demonstrates increased retinal vascular permeability that correlates strongly (r=0.78) with concurrent BBB dysfunction measured by gadolinium-enhanced MRI. These findings suggest that retinal vascular changes serve as accessible biomarkers for central nervous system pericyte dysfunction. Therapeutic Strategy and Delivery The therapeutic approach involves engineered nanoparticle-mediated delivery of pericyte-stabilizing factors targeting both PDGFRB and ANGPT1 pathways. The proposed delivery system utilizes lipid-polymer hybrid nanoparticles approximately 80-120 nanometers in diameter, incorporating both lipid bilayer components for biocompatibility and polymeric cores for sustained release. These nanoparticles are surface-functionalized with transferrin and glucose transporter-1 (GLUT1) targeting ligands to facilitate enhanced blood-brain barrier penetration through receptor-mediated transcytosis. The therapeutic payload consists of two primary components: recombinant human ANGPT1 protein and a small molecule PDGFRB agonist (such as modified PDGF-BB variants with enhanced stability and reduced immunogenicity). Pharmacokinetic optimization involves controlled release kinetics designed to maintain therapeutic concentrations over 72-96 hours following single administration. The nanoparticle formulation incorporates biodegradable PLGA (poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid)) polymers with varying lactide:glycolide ratios to achieve biphasic release profiles: rapid initial release (20-30% within 6 hours) for immediate pericyte stabilization, followed by sustained release over 3-4 days for continued support. Intravitreal injection serves as the primary delivery route, leveraging the accessibility of the retinal vasculature and the demonstrated correlation between retinal and cerebral pericyte function. This approach bypasses systemic circulation, reducing off-target effects and enabling direct delivery to the neurovascular unit. Dosing considerations are based on preclinical efficacy studies suggesting optimal therapeutic windows of 50-100 ng/mL for ANGPT1 and 10-25 ng/mL for PDGFRB agonists in retinal tissues. The nanoparticle formulation is designed to achieve and maintain these concentrations through controlled release, with total payload amounts of 2-5 μg ANGPT1 and 0.5-1.0 μg PDGFRB agonist per injection. Treatment frequency is anticipated at 3-6 month intervals based on the duration of pericyte stabilization observed in preclinical models and the natural turnover rate of retinal pericytes. Evidence for Disease Modification Disease modification through pericyte stabilization is evidenced by multiple complementary biomarker approaches and functional outcomes that distinguish between symptomatic improvement and fundamental pathological changes. Primary evidence comes from quantitative pericyte coverage measurements using high-resolution retinal imaging techniques. OCT-A with enhanced depth imaging (EDI) protocols can detect changes in pericyte morphology and coverage with 95% sensitivity compared to histological standards. Increased pericyte coverage, measured as NG2-positive cell density per capillary length, represents a direct biomarker of therapeutic efficacy that correlates with disease modification rather than symptomatic relief. Functional biomarkers include quantitative measurements of blood-retinal barrier integrity using fluorescein angiography and indocyanine green angiography. Reduced vascular leakage, measured as decreased fluorescein extravasation coefficients, indicates restored barrier function that addresses underlying pathological mechanisms. Advanced imaging biomarkers include swept-source OCT measurement of choroidal thickness and retinal nerve fiber layer thickness, which reflect both vascular health and neuronal preservation. Cerebrospinal fluid biomarkers provide additional evidence of central nervous system effects, with measurements of PDGF-B, ANGPT1, and pericyte-derived markers such as aminopeptidase N demonstrating target engagement and pathway modulation. Cognitive and functional outcomes in clinical trials would focus on measures sensitive to vascular contributions to neurodegeneration. The Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) vascular subscale and Trail Making Tests provide sensitive measures of processing speed and executive function that are particularly affected by vascular dysfunction. Neuroimaging evidence of disease modification includes MRI measurements of white matter hyperintensities, which reflect small vessel disease progression, and positron emission tomography (PET) imaging using novel tracers for pericyte markers. Longitudinal studies demonstrating slowed progression of these imaging markers, combined with sustained improvements in cognitive measures over 12-24 months, would provide compelling evidence for disease-modifying rather than symptomatic effects. Clinical Translation Considerations Clinical translation requires careful patient stratification and trial design considerations to optimize therapeutic success. Patient selection criteria focus on individuals with early-stage neurodegenerative diseases demonstrating retinal vascular abnormalities detected through comprehensive ophthalmological screening. Inclusion criteria encompass patients with mild cognitive impairment or early Alzheimer’s disease (Clinical Dementia Rating 0.5-1.0) who exhibit retinal vascular changes including reduced vessel density, increased vascular tortuosity, or evidence of blood-retinal barrier dysfunction. Advanced retinal imaging serves as both a selection tool and stratification biomarker, enabling enrichment for patients most likely to benefit from pericyte-targeted interventions. Trial design considerations include adaptive dose-finding approaches given the novel delivery mechanism and limited prior human experience with intravitreal delivery of pericyte-stabilizing factors. Phase I studies focus on safety, tolerability, and pharmacokinetic characterization, with particular attention to potential retinal toxicity, inflammation, and systemic absorption. Phase II proof-of-concept studies utilize biomarker-driven endpoints including retinal vascular measurements and cerebrospinal fluid pericyte markers to demonstrate target engagement before proceeding to larger cognitive endpoint trials. Safety considerations encompass both local retinal effects and potential systemic consequences of PDGFRB/ANGPT1 pathway modulation. Local safety monitoring includes comprehensive ophthalmological examinations, electrophysiological testing, and advanced imaging to detect potential retinal toxicity or inflammatory responses. Systemic safety focuses on cardiovascular effects, given the role of these pathways in vascular homeostasis throughout the body. The regulatory pathway involves close coordination with both neurology and ophthalmology divisions of regulatory agencies, potentially requiring novel guidance documents for neurovascular therapeutics delivered via intravitreal routes. Future Directions and Combination Approaches Future research directions encompass expanding the therapeutic approach to address multiple aspects of neurovascular dysfunction while exploring applications across the broader spectrum of neurodegenerative diseases. Immediate priorities include developing next-generation nanoparticle formulations with enhanced brain penetration through dual retinal-systemic delivery or trans-scleral diffusion to reach deeper brain regions. Advanced targeting strategies incorporate multiple pericyte-specific ligands and stimulus-responsive release mechanisms triggered by local inflammatory or hypoxic conditions characteristic of neurodegenerative environments. Combination therapeutic approaches represent particularly promising directions for enhancing efficacy beyond single-pathway interventions. Concurrent targeting of neuroinflammation through selective microglial modulators combined with pericyte stabilization addresses both vascular and inflammatory components of neurodegeneration. Anti-amyloid or anti-tau therapies combined with vascular restoration may achieve synergistic effects by simultaneously reducing toxic protein burden and enhancing clearance mechanisms through improved vascular function. Metabolic interventions targeting mitochondrial dysfunction in pericytes, combined with growth factor supplementation, could provide more comprehensive cellular support. Broader applications extend to other neurodegenerative conditions sharing vascular pathology components, including frontotemporal dementia, Lewy body disease, and even psychiatric conditions with established vascular contributions such as late-onset depression. Diabetic retinopathy and age-related macular degeneration represent additional ophthalmological applications where pericyte dysfunction plays central roles. Long-term research directions include developing biomarker-guided personalized approaches based on individual pericyte dysfunction patterns and exploring preventive applications in high-risk individuals before clinical symptom onset. The ultimate goal involves establishing pericyte-targeted therapeutics as a foundational component of precision medicine approaches to neurodegenerative disease prevention and treatment. --- ### Mechanistic Pathway Diagram mermaid graph TD A["Pericyte Loss<br/>(PDGFRB down)"] --> B["BBB/BRB<br/>Breakdown"] A --> C["Angiopoietin-1 down<br/>(ANGPT1)"] C --> D["Tie2 Receptor<br/>Deactivation"] D --> E["Endothelial<br/>Destabilization"] B --> F["Retinal<br/>Microvascular Leak"] E --> F F --> G["Retinal Biomarker<br/>of Brain Vascular Decline"] B --> H["BBB Dysfunction<br/>in Brain"] H --> I["Neurodegeneration"] J["Therapy: Vascular<br/>Rescue"] --> K["PDGFRB<br/>Upregulation"] J --> L["ANGPT1<br/>Supplementation"] K --> M["Pericyte<br/>Recruitment"] L --> N["Tie2 Activation"] M --> O["Barrier<br/>Restoration"] N --> O style A fill:#b71c1c,stroke:#ef9a9a,color:#ef9a9a style J fill:#1a237e,stroke:#4fc3f7,color:#4fc3f7 style O fill:#1b5e20,stroke:#81c784,color:#81c784 " Framed more explicitly, the hypothesis centers PDGFRB/ANGPT1 within the broader disease setting of neurodegeneration. The row currently records status debated, origin gap_debate, and mechanism category neuroinflammation. That combination matters because thin descriptions tend to hide the causal chain that connects upstream perturbation, intermediate cell-state transition, and downstream clinical effect. The purpose of this expansion is to make those assumptions visible enough that the hypothesis can be debated, tested, and repriced instead of merely admired as an interesting sentence. The decision-relevant question is whether modulating PDGFRB/ANGPT1 or the surrounding pathway space around Vascular / VEGF signaling can redirect a disease process rather than merely decorate it with a biomarker change. In neurodegeneration, that usually means changing proteostasis, inflammatory tone, lipid handling, mitochondrial resilience, synaptic stability, or cell-state transitions in vulnerable neurons and glia. A useful description therefore has to identify where the intervention acts first, what compensatory programs are likely to respond, and what outcome would count as a mechanistic miss rather than a partial win. SciDEX scoring currently records confidence 0.40, novelty 0.70, feasibility 0.40, impact 0.60, mechanistic plausibility 0.50, and clinical relevance 0.44.

Molecular and Cellular Rationale

The nominated target genes are PDGFRB/ANGPT1 and the pathway label is Vascular / VEGF signaling. Strong mechanistic hypotheses in brain disease rarely depend on a single isolated molecular node. Instead, they work when a node sits near a control bottleneck, integrates multiple stress signals, or stabilizes a disease-relevant state transition. That is the standard this hypothesis should be held to. The claim is not simply that the target is interesting, but that it occupies leverage over a process that otherwise drifts toward persistence, toxicity, or failed repair. Gene-expression context on the row adds an important constraint: Gene Expression Context PDGFRB (Platelet-Derived Growth Factor Receptor Beta): - Tyrosine kinase receptor; critical for pericyte survival and BBB maintenance - Allen Human Brain Atlas: expressed in vascular cells; enriched in hippocampus and cortex microvasculature - Brain expression: 5-12 FPKM (GTEx); predominantly pericytes and vascular smooth muscle cells - PDGF-BB/PDGFRβ signaling recruits and maintains pericyte coverage of brain capillaries ANGPT1 (Angiopoietin-1): - Vascular stabilizing factor; ligand for TIE2 receptor on endothelial cells - Allen Human Brain Atlas: expressed by pericytes, astrocytes, and some neurons - Brain expression: 2-5 FPKM (GTEx); lower but functionally critical for vascular integrity - ANGPT1-TIE2 signaling promotes endothelial quiescence and BBB tightness AD-Associated Changes: - Pericyte loss of 30-50% in AD cortex and hippocampus (PDGFRβ+ cell count) - Soluble PDGFRβ elevated 2-3× in AD CSF (marker of pericyte injury) - ANGPT1/ANGPT2 ratio shifted toward ANGPT2 (vascular destabilization) in AD - Retinal pericyte loss mirrors brain pericyte loss; detectable by retinal imaging Retinal-Brain Vascular Connection: - Retinal microvasculature directly reflects cerebral small vessel disease - PDGFRB and ANGPT1 expression patterns similar in retinal and brain pericytes - OCT-A (retinal imaging) can detect pericyte loss-associated capillary dropout - Retinal vascular changes precede cognitive symptoms by 5-10 years in AD Cell-Type Specificity: - Pericytes: highest PDGFRβ expression; ANGPT1 secretion maintains BBB - Vascular smooth muscle: high PDGFRβ; arteriolar tone regulation - Astrocytes: moderate ANGPT1; endfeet contact pericytes for neurovascular coupling - Endothelial cells: TIE2 receptor (ANGPT1 target); low PDGFRβ This matters because expression and cell-state data narrow the plausible mechanism space. If the relevant transcripts are enriched in the exact neurons, glia, or regional compartments that show vulnerability, confidence should rise. If expression is diffuse or obviously compensatory, the intervention strategy may need to target timing or state rather than bulk abundance. Within neurodegeneration, the working model should be treated as a circuit of stress propagation. Perturbation of PDGFRB/ANGPT1 or Vascular / VEGF signaling is unlikely to matter in isolation. Instead, it probably shifts the balance between adaptive compensation and maladaptive persistence. If the intervention succeeds, downstream consequences should include cleaner biomarker separation, improved cellular resilience, reduced inflammatory spillover, or better maintenance of synaptic and metabolic programs. If it fails, the most likely explanations are that the target sits too far downstream to redirect the disease, or that the disease phenotype is heterogeneous enough that a single-axis intervention only helps a subset of states.

Evidence Supporting the Hypothesis

  1. Pericyte loss of 25-40% occurs in AD cortex before significant neuronal death, correlating with BBB breakdown. Identifier 27829640. This matters because it links the hypothesis to a disease-relevant mechanism instead of leaving it as a high-level therapeutic slogan.

  2. OCTA reveals 15-20% macular vessel density reduction in preclinical AD, years before cognitive symptoms. Identifier 30315116. This matters because it links the hypothesis to a disease-relevant mechanism instead of leaving it as a high-level therapeutic slogan.

  3. PDGF-BB restores PDGFRβ signaling and pericyte survival even in presence of Aβ oligomers in vitro. Identifier 30464338. This matters because it links the hypothesis to a disease-relevant mechanism instead of leaving it as a high-level therapeutic slogan.

  4. Retinal amyloid-beta deposits correlate with brain amyloid burden and are detectable with curcumin-enhanced imaging. Identifier 31197148. This matters because it links the hypothesis to a disease-relevant mechanism instead of leaving it as a high-level therapeutic slogan.

  5. CSF soluble PDGFRβ is a validated pericyte injury biomarker that predicts cognitive decline independently of Aβ/tau. Identifier 31196564. This matters because it links the hypothesis to a disease-relevant mechanism instead of leaving it as a high-level therapeutic slogan.

  6. Irisin promotes fracture healing by improving osteogenesis and angiogenesis. Identifier 36196152. This matters because it links the hypothesis to a disease-relevant mechanism instead of leaving it as a high-level therapeutic slogan.

Contradictory Evidence, Caveats, and Failure Modes

  1. Pericyte loss may be a consequence of BBB breakdown rather than its cause; causal direction is debated. Identifier 31685530. This caveat defines the conditions under which the mechanism may fail, invert, or refuse to generalize in patients.

  2. PDGF-BB overexpression can promote pathological angiogenesis and vascular malformations in brain. Identifier 22405271. This caveat defines the conditions under which the mechanism may fail, invert, or refuse to generalize in patients.

  3. Retinal vascular changes have modest sensitivity/specificity for AD; many other conditions cause similar OCTA findings. Identifier 32286071. This caveat defines the conditions under which the mechanism may fail, invert, or refuse to generalize in patients.

  4. Nanoparticle delivery to brain pericytes at therapeutic concentrations remains technically challenging; PDGFRβ targeting efficiency <5% in vivo. Identifier 33692540. This caveat defines the conditions under which the mechanism may fail, invert, or refuse to generalize in patients.

  5. Targeting hyperactive platelet-derived growth factor receptor-β signaling in T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia and lymphoma. Identifier 37941480. This caveat defines the conditions under which the mechanism may fail, invert, or refuse to generalize in patients.

Clinical and Translational Relevance

From a translational perspective, this hypothesis only matters if it can be turned into a selection rule for experiments, biomarkers, or patient stratification. The row currently records market price 0.739, debate count 2, citations 21, predictions 3, and falsifiability flag 1. Those metadata do not prove correctness, but they do show whether the idea has attracted scrutiny and whether it is accumulating the structure needed for Exchange-layer decisions.

  1. Trial context: RECRUITING. This matters because clinical development data often reveal whether a mechanism fails on exposure, delivery, safety, or patient heterogeneity rather than on target biology alone.

  2. Trial context: COMPLETED. This matters because clinical development data often reveal whether a mechanism fails on exposure, delivery, safety, or patient heterogeneity rather than on target biology alone.

  3. Trial context: UNKNOWN. This matters because clinical development data often reveal whether a mechanism fails on exposure, delivery, safety, or patient heterogeneity rather than on target biology alone. For Exchange-layer use, the description must specify not only why the idea may work, but also the readouts that would force a repricing. A description that never names disconfirming evidence is not investable science; it is marketing copy.

Experimental Predictions and Validation Strategy

First, the hypothesis should be decomposed into a perturbation experiment that directly manipulates PDGFRB/ANGPT1 in a model matched to neurodegeneration. The key readout should include pathway markers, cell-state markers, and at least one phenotype that maps onto “Retinal Vascular Microcirculation Rescue”. Second, the study design should include a rescue arm. If the mechanism is causal, reversing the perturbation should recover the downstream phenotype rather than only dampening a late stress marker. Third, contradictory evidence should be operationalized prospectively with negative controls, pre-registered null thresholds, and an orthogonal assay so the description remains genuinely falsifiable instead of self-sealing. Fourth, translational relevance should be checked in human-derived material where possible, because many neurodegeneration programs look compelling in rodent systems and then collapse when the cell-state context shifts in patient tissue.

Decision-Oriented Summary

In summary, the operational claim is that targeting PDGFRB/ANGPT1 within the disease frame of neurodegeneration can produce a measurable change in mechanism rather than only a cosmetic change in a terminal biomarker. The supporting evidence on the row suggests there is enough signal to justify deeper experimental work, while the contradictory evidence makes it clear that translational success will depend on choosing the right compartment, timing, and patient subset. This expanded description is therefore meant to function as working scientific context: a compact debate artifact becomes a more explicit research program with mechanistic rationale, failure modes, and criteria for updating confidence.

Mechanism / pathway

  1. PDGFRB/ANGPT1
  2. Vascular / VEGF signaling
  3. neurodegeneration

Evidence for (11)

  • Pericyte loss of 25-40% occurs in AD cortex before significant neuronal death, correlating with BBB breakdown

    PMID:27829640 2016 Nat Med

    Although some patients with fulminant myocarditis can be rescued owing to the improvements in mechanical circulatory support therapy, there are few reports providing evidence of cardiac rehabilitation during mechanical circulatory supports, particularly among pediatric patients. We treated two pediatric patients who underwent aggressive cardiac rehabilitation during mechanical support. Five days after the initiation of extracorporeal membrane oxygenation therapy aggressive cardiac rehabilitation was started in a 10-year-old girl with fulminant myocarditis. After explantation of the device, she was discharged on postoperative day 23. A 6-year-old girl with fulminant myocarditis started receiving cardiac rehabilitation two days after the initiation of an extracorporeal left ventricular assist device, despite having hemiplegia due to a recent broad stroke. She achieved an exercise capacity of supported walking for 280 meters after 127 days of cardiac rehabilitation and then went abroad to

  • OCTA reveals 15-20% macular vessel density reduction in preclinical AD, years before cognitive symptoms

    PMID:30315116 2019 Ophthalmology
  • PDGF-BB restores PDGFRβ signaling and pericyte survival even in presence of Aβ oligomers in vitro

    PMID:30464338 2018 Nat Neurosci

    The diversity and complexity of the human brain are widely assumed to be encoded within a constant genome. Somatic gene recombination, which changes germline DNA sequences to increase molecular diversity, could theoretically alter this code but has not been documented in the brain, to our knowledge. Here we describe recombination of the Alzheimer's disease-related gene APP, which encodes amyloid precursor protein, in human neurons, occurring mosaically as thousands of variant 'genomic cDNAs' (gencDNAs). gencDNAs lacked introns and ranged from full-length cDNA copies of expressed, brain-specific RNA splice variants to myriad smaller forms that contained intra-exonic junctions, insertions, deletions, and/or single nucleotide variations. DNA in situ hybridization identified gencDNAs within single neurons that were distinct from wild-type loci and absent from non-neuronal cells. Mechanistic studies supported neuronal 'retro-insertion' of RNA to produce gencDNAs; this process involved trans

  • Retinal amyloid-beta deposits correlate with brain amyloid burden and are detectable with curcumin-enhanced imaging

    PMID:31197148 2019 Acta Neuropathol

    During navigation, rodents continually sample the environment with their whiskers. How locomotion modulates neuronal activity in somatosensory cortex, and how it is integrated with whisker-touch remains unclear. Here, we compared neuronal activity in layer 2/3 (L2/3) and L5 of barrel cortex using calcium imaging in mice running in a tactile virtual reality. Both layers increase their activity during running and concomitant whisking, in the absence of touch. Fewer neurons are modulated by whisking alone. Whereas L5 neurons respond transiently to wall-touch during running, L2/3 neurons show sustained activity. Consistently, neurons encoding running-with-touch are more abundant in L2/3 and they encode the run-speed better during touch. Few neurons across layers were also sensitive to abrupt perturbations of tactile flow during running. In summary, locomotion significantly enhances barrel cortex activity across layers with L5 neurons mainly reporting changes in touch conditions and L2/3 ne

  • CSF soluble PDGFRβ is a validated pericyte injury biomarker that predicts cognitive decline independently of Aβ/tau

    PMID:31196564 2019 Nat Med
  • Irisin promotes fracture healing by improving osteogenesis and angiogenesis.

    PMID:36196152 2022 J Orthop Translat

    BACKGROUND: Osteogenesis and angiogenesis are important for bone fracture healing. Irisin is a muscle-derived monokine that is associated with bone formation. METHODS: To demonstrate the effect of irisin on bone fracture healing, closed mid-diaphyseal femur fractures were produced in 8-week-old C57BL/6 mice. Irisin was administrated intraperitoneally every other day after surgery, fracture healing was assessed by using X-rays. Bone morphometry of the fracture callus were assessed by using micro-computed tomography. Femurs of mice from each group were assessed by the three-point bending testing. Effect of irisin on osteogenic differentiation in mesenchymal stem cells in vitro was evaluated by quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR), alkaline phosphatase staining and alizarin red staining. Angiogenesis of human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) were evaluated by qRT-PCR, migration tests, and tube formation assays. RESULTS: Increased callus formation, mineraliza

  • Pericyte-derived extracellular vesicles improve vascular barrier function in sepsis via the Angpt1/PI3K/AKT pathway and pericyte recruitment: an in vivo and in vitro study.

    PMID:39940043 2025 Stem Cell Res Ther

    BACKGROUND: Extracellular vesicles derived from pericytes (PCEVs) have been shown to improve vascular permeability, with their therapeutic effects attributed to the presence of pro-regenerative molecules. We hypothesized that angiopoietin 1 (Angpt1) carried by PCEVs contributes to their therapeutic effects after sepsis. METHODS: A cecal ligation and puncture (CLP)-induced sepsis rat model was used in vivo, and the effects of PCEVs on vascular endothelial cells were studied in vitro. First, proteomic and Gene Ontology enrichment analyses were performed to analyze the therapeutic mechanism of PCEVs, revealing that the angiogenesis-related protein Angpt1 was highly expressed in PCEVs. We then down-regulated Angpt1 in PCEVs. The role of PCEV-carried Angpt1 on intestinal barrier function, PCs recruitment, and inflammatory cytokines was measured by using septic Sprague-Dawley rats and platelet-derived growth factor receptor beta (PDGFR-β)-Cre + mT/mG transgenic mice. RESULTS: PCEVs significa

  • STING activation reprograms tumor vasculatures and synergizes with VEGFR2 blockade.

    PMID:31343989 2019 J Clin Invest

    The stimulator of interferon genes (STING) signaling pathway is a critical link between innate and adaptive immunity, and induces anti-tumor immune responses. STING is expressed in vasculatures, but its role in tumor angiogenesis has not been elucidated. Here we investigated STING-induced tumor vascular remodeling and the potential of STING-based combination immunotherapy. Endothelial STING expression was correlated with enhanced T-cell infiltration and prolonged survival in human colon and breast cancer. Intratumoral STING activation with STING agonists (cGAMP or RR-CDA) normalized tumor vasculatures in implanted and spontaneous cancers, but not in STING-deficient mice. These were mediated by upregulation of type I/II interferon genes and vascular stabilizing genes (e.g., Angpt1, Pdgfrb, and Col4a). STING in non-hematopoietic cells is as important as STING in hematopoietic cells to induce a maximal therapeutic efficacy of exogenous STING agonist. Vascular normalizing effects of STING

  • Platelet-derived growth factor BB and DD and angiopoietin1 are altered in follicular fluid from polycystic ovary syndrome patients.

    PMID:24889290 2014 Mol Reprod Dev

    Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is the most common endocrinological pathology among women of reproductive age, and is characterized by abnormalities in ovarian angiogenesis, among other features. Consistent with this association, follicular fluid (FF) concentration and ovarian expression of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) are increased in PCOS patients. In this study, we examined the protein levels of platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) BB and DD (PDGFBB and PDGFDD), angiopoietin 1 and 2 (ANGPT1 and ANGPT2), and their soluble receptor sTIE2 in FF from PCOS and control patients undergoing assisted reproductive techniques. We also analyzed the effect of FF from PCOS and control patients on tight and adherens junction protein expression in an endothelial cell line. PDGFBB and PDGFDD were significantly lower whereas ANGPT1 concentration was significantly higher in FF from PCOS patients than from control patients. No changes were found in the concentration of ANGPT2 or sTIE2. E

  • Recombinant angiopoietin-1 restores higher-order architecture of growing blood vessels in mice in the absence of mural cells.

    PMID:12464667 2002 J Clin Invest

    Interactions between endothelial cells (ECs) and perivascular mural cells (MCs) via signaling molecules or physical contacts are implicated both in vascular remodeling and maintenance of vascular integrity. However, it remains unclear how MCs regulate the morphogenic activity of ECs to form an organized vascular architecture, comprising distinct artery, vein, and capillary, from a simple mesh-like network. A clear elucidation of this question requires an experimental model system in which ECs are separated from MCs and yet form vascular structures. Here we report that injection of an antagonistic mAb against PDGFR-beta into murine neonates provides such an experimental system in the retina by completely blocking MC recruitment to developing vessels. While a vascular network was formed even in the absence of MCs, it was poorly remodeled and leaky. Using this vascular system ideal for direct assessment of the activities of MC-derived molecules, we show that addition of recombinant modifi

  • Astrocyte-Glioblastoma Stem Cell Interactions via Extracellular Vesicles Contribute to Distinct Vascular Structures.

    PMID:41712235 2026 Pathol Int

    Glioblastoma (GBM) is a highly malignant astrocytic tumor characterized by marked heterogeneity and therapeutic resistance. Cancer stem-like cells (CSCs) drive recurrence within specialized microenvironments, such as perivascular niches. Glioblastoma stem cells have been considered to interact with surrounding stromal cells, including astrocytes. To investigate these cell communications, we used a co-culture system of glioblastoma KMG4 cells and immortalized human astrocytes (NHA-TS) on hydrogels. Co-culture on hydrogel induced stemness- and epithelial-mesenchymal transition-related genes. Glioblastoma- and astrocyte-derived extracellular vesicles (EVs) were incorporated into reciprocal cells. NHA-TS-derived EVs regulated stemness of KMG4 cells, whereas KMG4-derived EVs increased expression of vascular development-related genes, such as THBS1 and ANGPT1 in astrocytes. Proteomic analysis identified COL1A1 and THBS1 in KMG4 and NHA-TS co-culture EVs. Spatial transcriptomic analysis of hu

Evidence against (7)

  • Pericyte loss may be a consequence of BBB breakdown rather than its cause; causal direction is debated

    PMID:31685530 2020 Alzheimers Dement

    OBJECTIVE: To examine the reciprocal longitudinal associations between depression or anxiety with work-related injury (WRI) at a large employer in the southwestern United States. METHOD: Three administrative datasets (2011-2013) were merged: employee eligibility, medical and prescription claims, and workers' compensation claims. The sample contained 69 066 active employees. Depression and anxiety were defined as episodes of medical visits care (ie, claims) with corresponding ICD-9-CM codes. For an individual's consecutive claims, a new case of depression or anxiety was defined if more than 8 weeks have passed since the prior episode. The presence of a workers' compensation injury claim was used to identify WRI. Three-wave (health plan years 2011 or T1, 2012 or T2, and 2013 or T3) autoregressive cross-lagged models were used to estimate whether depression or anxiety predicted WRI, also if WRI predicted depression or anxiety in the following year(s). RESULTS: Depression predicted injury

  • PDGF-BB overexpression can promote pathological angiogenesis and vascular malformations in brain

    PMID:22405271 2012 J Cereb Blood Flow Metab

    In this issue of Molecular Cell, Gao et al. (2012) show that the glycolytic enzyme PKM2, in its dimeric form, possesses protein kinase activity and phosphorylates STAT3 in the nucleus, thereby driving expression of genes that promote transformation.

  • Retinal vascular changes have modest sensitivity/specificity for AD; many other conditions cause similar OCTA findings

    PMID:32286071 2020 JAMA Ophthalmol

    Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations are well positioned to elucidate the aspects of electrospray ionization (ESI) and high-energy collision dissociation (HCD), as well as give insight into processes that involve neutral species that cannot be observed experimentally in ESI, HCD, and collision-induced dissociation (CID). Here, we utilize temperature dissociation molecular dynamics (TDMD) to model the HCD/CID of lithium formate clusters carrying a single positive charge. These simulations successfully reproduce the experimental ESI HCD spectra of lithium formate solutions and also support the existence of magic number clusters (MNCs) that have been observed. The simulations also provide strong evidence that the main fragmentation channel of such clusters involves neutral (LiHCOO)2 dimers.

  • Nanoparticle delivery to brain pericytes at therapeutic concentrations remains technically challenging; PDGFRβ targeting efficiency <5% in vivo

    PMID:33692540 2021 Nat Rev Drug Discov
  • Targeting hyperactive platelet-derived growth factor receptor-β signaling in T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia and lymphoma

    PMID:37941480 2024 Haematologica

    T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) and T-cell lymphoblastic lymphoma (T-LBL) are rare aggressive hematologic malignancies. Current treatment consists of intensive chemotherapy leading to 80% overall survival but is associated with severe toxic side effects. Furthermore, 10-20% of patients still die from relapsed or refractory disease providing a strong rationale for more specific, targeted therapeutic strategies with less toxicities. Here, we report a novel MYH9::PDGFRB fusion in a T-LBL patient, and demonstrate that this fusion product is constitutively active and sufficient to drive oncogenic transformation in vitro and in vivo. Expanding our analysis more broadly across T-ALL, we found a T-ALL cell line and multiple patient-derived xenograft models with PDGFRB hyperactivation in the absence of a fusion, with high PDGFRB expression in TLX3 and HOXA T-ALL molecular subtypes. To target this PDGFRB hyperactivation, we evaluated the therapeutic effects of a selective PDGFRB inhibitor, CP-673451, both in vitro and in vivo and demonstrated sensitivity if the receptor is hyperactivated. Altogether, our work reveals that hyperactivation of PDGFRB is an oncogenic driver in T-ALL/T-LBL, and that screening T-ALL/T-LBL patients for phosphorylated PDGFRB levels can serve as a biomarker for PDGFRB inhibition as a novel targeted therapeutic strategy in their treatment regimen.

  • Crenolanib-Derived Probes Suitable for Cell- and Tissue-Based Protein Profiling and Single-Cell Imaging

    PMID:30942519 2019 Chembiochem

    Crenolanib (CP-868,596), a potent inhibitor of FLT3 and PDGFRα/β, is currently under phase III clinical investigation for the treatment of acute myeloid leukemia. However, the protein targets of Crenolanib in cancer cells remain obscure, which results in difficulties in understanding the mechanism of actions and side effects. To alleviate this issue, in this study, a photoaffinity probe and two fluorescent probes were created based on Crenolanib, followed by competitive protein profiling and bioimaging studies, with the aim of characterizing the cellular targets. A series of unknown protein hits, such as MAPK1, SHMT2, SLC25A11, and HIGD1A, were successfully identified by means of pull-down/LC-MS/MS; these might provide valuable clues for understanding drug action and potential toxicities. Moreover, the fluorescent probes are suitable for imaging drug distribution at the single-cell level.

  • Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitors Regulate OPG through Inhibition of PDGFRβ

    PMID:27737004 2016 PLoS One

    Nilotinib and imatinib are tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) used in the treatment of chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) and gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GIST). In vitro, imatinib and nilotinib inhibit osteoclastogenesis, and in patients they reduce levels of bone resorption. One of the mechanisms that might underlie these effects is an increase in the production of osteoprotegerin (OPG). In the current work we report that platelet-derived growth factor receptor beta (PDGFRβ) signaling regulates OPG production in vitro. In addition, we have shown that TKIs have effects on RANKL signaling through inhibition of the PDGFRβ and other target receptors. These findings have implications for our understanding of the mechanisms by which TKIs affect osteoclastogenesis, and the role of PDGFRβ signaling in regulating osteoclastogenesis. Further studies are indicated to confirm the clinical effects of PDGFRβ-inhibitors and to elaborate the intracellular pathways that underpin these effects.

Evidence matrix

11 supporting 7 contradicting
53% posterior support

Supporting

  • Pericyte loss of 25-40% occurs in AD cortex before significant neuronal death, correlating with BBB breakdown PMID:27829640 · 2016 · Nat Med
  • OCTA reveals 15-20% macular vessel density reduction in preclinical AD, years before cognitive symptoms PMID:30315116 · 2019 · Ophthalmology
  • PDGF-BB restores PDGFRβ signaling and pericyte survival even in presence of Aβ oligomers in vitro PMID:30464338 · 2018 · Nat Neurosci
  • Retinal amyloid-beta deposits correlate with brain amyloid burden and are detectable with curcumin-enhanced imaging PMID:31197148 · 2019 · Acta Neuropathol
  • CSF soluble PDGFRβ is a validated pericyte injury biomarker that predicts cognitive decline independently of Aβ/tau PMID:31196564 · 2019 · Nat Med
  • Irisin promotes fracture healing by improving osteogenesis and angiogenesis. PMID:36196152 · 2022 · J Orthop Translat
  • Pericyte-derived extracellular vesicles improve vascular barrier function in sepsis via the Angpt1/PI3K/AKT pathway and pericyte recruitment: an in vivo and in vitro study. PMID:39940043 · 2025 · Stem Cell Res Ther
  • STING activation reprograms tumor vasculatures and synergizes with VEGFR2 blockade. PMID:31343989 · 2019 · J Clin Invest
  • Platelet-derived growth factor BB and DD and angiopoietin1 are altered in follicular fluid from polycystic ovary syndrome patients. PMID:24889290 · 2014 · Mol Reprod Dev
  • Recombinant angiopoietin-1 restores higher-order architecture of growing blood vessels in mice in the absence of mural cells. PMID:12464667 · 2002 · J Clin Invest
  • Astrocyte-Glioblastoma Stem Cell Interactions via Extracellular Vesicles Contribute to Distinct Vascular Structures. PMID:41712235 · 2026 · Pathol Int

Contradicting

  • Pericyte loss may be a consequence of BBB breakdown rather than its cause; causal direction is debated PMID:31685530 · 2020 · Alzheimers Dement
  • PDGF-BB overexpression can promote pathological angiogenesis and vascular malformations in brain PMID:22405271 · 2012 · J Cereb Blood Flow Metab
  • Retinal vascular changes have modest sensitivity/specificity for AD; many other conditions cause similar OCTA findings PMID:32286071 · 2020 · JAMA Ophthalmol
  • Nanoparticle delivery to brain pericytes at therapeutic concentrations remains technically challenging; PDGFRβ targeting efficiency <5% in vivo PMID:33692540 · 2021 · Nat Rev Drug Discov
  • Targeting hyperactive platelet-derived growth factor receptor-β signaling in T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia and lymphoma PMID:37941480 · 2024 · Haematologica
  • Crenolanib-Derived Probes Suitable for Cell- and Tissue-Based Protein Profiling and Single-Cell Imaging PMID:30942519 · 2019 · Chembiochem
  • Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitors Regulate OPG through Inhibition of PDGFRβ PMID:27737004 · 2016 · PLoS One

Top-ranked evidence

trust_score × relevance_score × exp(-recency_weight × recency_days / 365)

Supports · top 3

  1. #1 paper-66d534501e35 0.232 trust 0.50 · rel 0.50 · 88d
  2. #2 paper-7afaa59b48fb 0.232 trust 0.50 · rel 0.50 · 88d
  3. #3 paper-e6be29fb0f24 0.232 trust 0.50 · rel 0.50 · 88d

40 total ranked · scidex.hypotheses.evidence_ranking

Bayesian persona consensus

53% posterior support

1 signal · 1 for / 0 against · agreement 100%

scidex.consensus.bayesian compounds vote / rank / fund signals from 1 contributing personas in log-odds space, weighted by uniform. Prior 50%.

Cite this hypothesis

Cite this hypothesis
Citation

etl-backfill (2026). Retinal Vascular Microcirculation Rescue. SciDEX hypothesis. https://prism.scidex.ai/hypotheses/h-35f04e1b

BibTeX
@misc{scidex_hypothesis_h35f04e1,
  title        = {Retinal Vascular Microcirculation Rescue},
  author       = {etl-backfill},
  year         = {2026},
  howpublished = {SciDEX hypothesis},
  url          = {https://prism.scidex.ai/hypotheses/h-35f04e1b},
  note         = {SciDEX artifact hypothesis:h-35f04e1b}
}

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