نتایج جستجو برای: reactive astrocytes

تعداد نتایج: 171535  

2011
Heléne Andersson

Stroke and other brain injuries trigger an extensive glial cell response referred to as reactive gliosis. Reactive gliosis is characterized by hypertrophic and proliferating astrocytes, proliferating microglia and NG2-positive cells, which eventually form a bordering glial scar around the damaged area. Although reactive gliosis may protect the injured brain initially, the resulting glial scar i...

Journal: :The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 2012
Issei S Shimada Matthew D LeComte Jerrica C Granger Noah J Quinlan Jeffrey L Spees

In response to stroke, subpopulations of cortical reactive astrocytes proliferate and express proteins commonly associated with neural stem/progenitor cells such as glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) and Nestin. To examine the stem cell-related properties of cortical reactive astrocytes after injury, we generated GFAP-CreER(TM);tdRFP mice to permanently label reactive astrocytes. We isolate...

2013
Linda Block Per Jörneberg Ulrika Björklund Anna Westerlund Björn Biber Elisabeth Hansson

Bupivacaine is a widely used, local anesthetic agent that blocks voltage-gated Na(+) channels when used for neuro-axial blockades. Much lower concentrations of bupivacaine than in normal clinical use, < 10(-8)  m, evoked Ca(2+) transients in astrocytes from rat cerebral cortex, that were inositol trisphosphate receptor-dependent. We investigated whether bupivacaine exerts an influence on the Ca...

Journal: :Brain research 2001
J E Torres-Muñoz M Redondo C Czeisler B Roberts N Tacoronte C K Petito

Since clusterin (CLU) production in reactive astrocytes may be neuroprotective, we examined its distribution in AIDS brains where brain injury and reactive astrocytosis are common. The relative area and number of CLU-positive astrocytes, as well as their percent total of all white matter glia, significantly increased in AIDS brains with and without HIV encephalitis (P<0.05). Proliferation marke...

2009
Mathieu Desclaux Marisa Teigell Lahouari Amar Roland Vogel Minerva Gimenez y Ribotta Alain Privat Jacques Mallet

BACKGROUND The lack of axonal regeneration in the central nervous system is attributed among other factors to the formation of a glial scar. This cellular structure is mainly composed of reactive astrocytes that overexpress two intermediate filament proteins, the glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) and vimentin. Indeed, in vitro, astrocytes lacking GFAP or both GFAP and vimentin were shown t...

Journal: :The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 2010
Daniel Sun Ming Lye-Barthel Richard H Masland Tatjana C Jakobs

Reactive astrocytes are a pathological hallmark of many CNS injuries and neurodegenerations. They are characterized by hypertrophy of the soma and processes and an increase in the expression of glial fibrillary acidic protein. Because the cells obscure each other in immunostaining, little is known about the behavior of a single reactive astrocyte, nor how single astrocytes combine to form the g...

Journal: :The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 2007
Ana M Fernandez Silvia Fernandez Paloma Carrero Miguel Garcia-Garcia Ignacio Torres-Aleman

Maladaptive inflammation is a major suspect in progressive neurodegeneration, but the underlying mechanisms are difficult to envisage in part because reactive glial cells at lesion sites secrete both proinflammatory and anti-inflammatory mediators. We now report that astrocytes modulate neuronal resilience to inflammatory insults through the phosphatase calcineurin. In quiescent astrocytes, inf...

Journal: :Genomics data 2016
Cindy Birck Eric Koncina Tony Heurtaux Enrico Glaab Alessandro Michelucci Paul Heuschling Luc Grandbarbe

Astrocytes, the most abundant glial cell population in the central nervous system, have important functional roles in the brain as blood brain barrier maintenance, synaptic transmission or intercellular communications [1], [2]. Numerous studies suggested that astrocytes exhibit a functional and morphological high degree of plasticity. For example, following any brain injury, astrocytes become r...

Journal: :The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 2009
Shinrye Lee Jae-Yong Park Won-Ha Lee Ho Kim Hae-Chul Park Kiyoshi Mori Kyoungho Suk

Astrocytes, the most abundant glial cell type in the brain, provide metabolic and trophic support to neurons and modulate synaptic activity. In response to a brain injury, astrocytes proliferate and become hypertrophic with an increased expression of intermediate filament proteins. This process is collectively referred to as reactive astrocytosis. Lipocalin 2 (lcn2) is a member of the lipocalin...

2012
Willem Kamphuis Carlyn Mamber Martina Moeton Lieneke Kooijman Jacqueline A. Sluijs Anne H. P. Jansen Monique Verveer Lody R. de Groot Vanessa D. Smith Sindhoo Rangarajan José J. Rodríguez Marie Orre Elly M. Hol

Glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) is the main astrocytic intermediate filament (IF). GFAP splice isoforms show differential expression patterns in the human brain. GFAPδ is preferentially expressed by neurogenic astrocytes in the subventricular zone (SVZ), whereas GFAP(+1) is found in a subset of astrocytes throughout the brain. In addition, the expression of these isoforms in human brain ...

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