Authors
Imai, T., Krishnan, V., Lai, J. H., Alber, E., Hawley, L., Gandhi, A., Kalailingam, P., Yang, J., Tambala, D., Hike, D., Zhou, X. A., Fong, C., Ondeck, B., Da Cruz, E. T., Liu, X., Siv, A., Oncel, M., Das, S., Sakadzic, S., Ayata, C., Yu, X., Lindsay, M. E., Musolino, P. L., Chung, D. Y.
Abstract
Background: Failure of cerebrovascular reserve is a fundamental determinant of ischemic vulnerability, yet the mechanisms by which vascular smooth muscle dysfunction compromises reserve and predisposes the brain to injury remain incompletely defined. We therefore tested whether a pathogenic smooth muscle mutation produces a baseline failure of cerebrovascular reserve sufficient to render the brain vulnerable to hypoperfusion, even in the absence of fixed arterial occlusion. Methods: We examined cerebrovascular structure, hemodynamics, and reserve in a genetically defined mouse model of ACTA2-associated multisystemic smooth muscle dysfunction syndrome with systemic or brain-restricted expression of the mutant allele. Cerebral artery morphology was assessed using magnetic resonance angiography and black ink angiography. Vascular smooth muscle phenotype was evaluated by immunohistochemistry and proliferation assays. Blood pressure reactivity and cerebral blood flow (CBF) were measured simultaneously using femoral arterial catheterization and laser speckle flowmetry during vasoactive challenges and controlled hypotension. Cerebrovascular stress responses were tested using unilateral common carotid artery occlusion. Downstream brain effects were assessed by histology, resting-state functional connectivity imaging, and behavioral testing. Results: Impaired smooth muscle contractility drove rectification and narrowing of major cerebral arteries, downregulation of contractile markers, and increased vascular cell proliferation. These structural changes produced a distinct physiological phenotype: mutant mice exhibited blunted vasoreactivity, diminished spontaneous vasodynamic activity, and a downward shift in the blood pressure-CBF relationship across a wide range of arterial pressures, consistent with loss of cerebrovascular reserve. As a result, CBF was reduced at baseline and could not be maintained during hypotension or acute vascular stress. During carotid occlusion, mutant mice showed impaired compensatory perfusion, greater physiological instability, and worse behavioral outcomes. Chronic reserve failure coincided with white matter loss, reduced neuronal density, disrupted large-scale functional connectivity, and deficits in locomotion, anxiety-related behavior, and working memory. Conclusions: Pathogenic smooth muscle dysfunction caused by ACTA2 mutation produces a baseline failure of cerebrovascular reserve that renders the brain vulnerable to hypoperfusion and stress-induced ischemic injury. These findings establish cerebrovascular reserve failure as a central physiological mechanism linking vascular dysfunction to end-organ brain injury and identify reserve preservation as a critical, potentially actionable determinant of brain health in hypotension-prone vascular disease.
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bioRxiv
The authors list and abstract were imported from bioRxiv on 28 Jan 2026.
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