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Fig. 7. Reduced microvessel density, increased microvessel diameter,
microhemorrhage and focal astrogliosis in adult endothelium-specific
Pdgfb knockouts. (A-D) Double staining for ß-gal-positive PC
nuclei (blue) and PECAM1 (brown) in the striatum (A,B) and cerebellum (C,D) of
3-week-old control (flox/flox; A,C) and lox/ (B,D) mice. Note the
reduced number of PCs associated with the microvessels in the lox/
brain and the numerous pathological microvascular profiles seen in areas of
complete PC loss (B, arrows). Remaining PCs in lox/ striatum correlate
with more normal profiles, as judged by their even diameter and straight
outline (B, arrowheads). A dramatic reduction of microvascular density is seen
in lox/ cerebellum (D). Microhemorrhage, visible by macroscopic
inspection in vibratome sections of P12 mice (E), was analyzed further by
confocal microscopy using isolectin B4 coupled to FITC (green) and anti-GFAP
antibodies coupled to rhodamin (red). The regions around the microhemorrhages
(G,H; H represents the boxed region in G at higher magnification) showed
strong GFAP expression in reactive astrocytes (arrows), as well as isolectin
B4 staining of microglia (arrowheads). Regions in the lox/ brain
without signs of microhemorrhage lacked signs of reactive gliosis (F). pl,
pial surface; wm, white matter. Scale bars in A,C: 100 µm.