BtRAIN employed a total of 12 ESRs with a different educational background. This interdisciplinary background was of fundamental importance The interdisciplinary background of the BtRAIN beneficiaries and the ESRs has provided the required skills and knowledge to successfully pursue pursue the research projects at hand.
Under Objective 1 BtRAIN has aimed to create and disseminate unique knowledge on characteristis of the brain barriers and how these change during development, agening and disease. To this end BtRAIN has established novel cell culture models of the brain barriers which allow for prediction if a specific drug can cross the BBB in the intact organism. Acccordingly BtRAIN has established culture models of the brain barrier better resembling the 3D situation in the live organism, e.g. exposing the cells to flow conditions mimicking the situation of the blood stream. These tissue culture models will now be suitable to mimic disease states of the BBB and investigate how this impacts on drug delivery or immune cell migration into the CNS. Furthermore, BtRAIN has established state-of-the art protocols for purifying brain barrier cells and methodologies allowing to isolate the molecule RNA as a readout for gene expression from these cells. High quality RNA is needed to perform the next-generation high throughput sequence analysis of the RNA molecules named „RNAseq”. Based on the number of copies found in the BBB one can determine, using modern bioinformatics tools, the precise profile of genes expressed at the brain barriers and their potential importance for regulating BBB specific mechanisms. BtRAIN has established a significant number of these novel RNAseq datasets, which are made available to the scientific community via the BBBHub, an online prlatform allowing to search these datasets. SOPs for the advanced protocols to purify brain barrier cells will be published accompanying the BBBHub. Making use of these datasets BtRAIN has found 77 conserved genes expressed in the BBB of vertebrates e.g. besides in man in zebrafish, mouse and rat that can thus be considered as “BBB signature”. In addition, BtRAIN found genes specifically expressed in the BBB in Alzheimer’s disease or during ageing in addition to genes expressed in the BCSFB of multiple sclerosis patients. Finally, BtRAIN was successful in defining and excluding novel therapeutic targets on the brain barriers suitable to influence immune cell trafficking across the brain barriers, stabilizing the brain barriers during neurological disorders and avoiding infection of the brain barriers.
Knowledge created in BtRAIN has been presented at many occasions at international meetings and has been published. A significant part of the knowledge created by BtRAIN will continue to be published in the near future. The RNAseq datasets are provided to the scientific community via the BBBHub in addition to the already available repositories.