Recently, SEU Prof. Zhu Xinjian’s research team published a paper titledCircular RNA PTPN4 Contributes to Blood-Brain Barrier Disruption during Early Epileptogenesis in
Advanced Science, a a leading international journal. This study provides the first systematic elucidation of a novel molecular mechanism in which a circular RNA called
CircPTPN4 is critically involved in disrupting the blood-brain barrier (BBB) during the early stages of epilepsy. The findings offer a promising new target and biomarker for
the diagnosis and intervention of epilepsy-related neurological damage.
The blood-brain barrier (BBB) is a crucial structure that protects the central nervous system by maintaining a stable internal environment. Its integrity is essential for brain
health. Following epileptic seizures, the BBB’s integrity is usually damaged, which is considered a key factor in worsening the disease. The breakdown of the barrier allows
harmful peripheral substances and inflammatory cells to invade the brain tissue, triggering more severe neuroinflammation, which further lowers the threshold for seizures
and results in more frequent and severe episodes. However, the exact mechanisms behind how epilepsy “breaches” this critical protective barrier have remained unclear,
and this has become a major obstacle in the clinical prevention of secondary neurological damage.

This study directly addresses this critical question. The research team used high-throughput circular RNA sequencing technology to discover that the expression of
CircPTPN4 was significantly elevated in the cortical tissue of epileptic model mice. Subsequent cellular and in vivo experiments confirmed that this molecule was specifically
upregulated in the brain microvascular endothelial cells under epileptic conditions, acting as a molecular “switch” for BBB disruption. Functional experiments showed that
overexpression of CircPTPN4 directly increased the permeability of endothelial cells in the brain, damaging the BBB, whereas knocking down its expression alleviated barrier
damage and significantly reduced the frequency of spontaneous seizures in chronic-stage mice.
At the mechanistic level, the research team outlined a clear and complete molecular pathway: CircPTPN4 acts as a “molecular sponge” within cells, competitively binding and
inhibiting the protective microRNA miR-145a-5p. This binding leads to an increase in the expression of one of miR-145a-5p’s target genes, endothelin-converting enzyme 1
(ECE-1). Elevated ECE-1 catalyzes the production of more endothelin-1 (ET-1), which has potent vasoconstrictive and pro-inflammatory effects. ET-1 further activates the
p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (p38/MAPK) signaling pathway within endothelial cells, ultimately leading to downregulation of tight junction proteins such as ZO-1 and
Occludin, which are critical for maintaining cell-cell junction integrity. This cascade from CircPTPN4 to p38/MAPK forms the core mechanism responsible for increased BBB
permeability during the early stages of epilepsy.
The study also found that the plasma levels of CircPTPN4 in epileptic mice correlated positively with the severity of BBB damage, and confirmed that this RNA originated from
the endothelial cells in the brain. This discovery suggests that CircPTPN4 in plasma could potentially serve as a convenient and non-invasive liquid biopsy marker for early
warning and dynamic monitoring of BBB status in epilepsy patients. In terms of treatment, the study identified the CircPTPN4/miR-145a-5p/ECE-1 axis as a novel therapeutic
target. In the future, drugs or gene therapies designed to specifically inhibit CircPTPN4 could potentially prevent BBB disruption caused by epilepsy at its source, thereby i
nterrupting the pathological chain of events that exacerbate neurological damage and opening up new avenues for the development of neuroprotective treatments for epilepsy.
The first author of this paper is Yang Jiurong, a PhD student from SEU, with Associate Professor Zhu Xinjian being the corresponding author and SEU being the first
corresponding institution. This research was funded by the National Natural Science Foundation of China, the Jiangsu Provincial Natural Science Foundation, and the Special
Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities, among other sources.
Paper’s link:
https://advanced.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/advs.202502250Sourced from: The School of Medicine, SEU
Translated by: Melody Zhang
Proofread by: Gao Min
Edited by: Li Xinchang















