نتایج جستجو برای: glial scar

تعداد نتایج: 34177  

Journal: :Journal of cerebral blood flow and metabolism : official journal of the International Society of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism 2012
Yi Bao Luye Qin Eunhee Kim Sangram Bhosle Hengchang Guo Maria Febbraio Renee E Haskew-Layton Rajiv Ratan Sunghee Cho

Inflammation is an essential component for glial scar formation. However, the upstream mediator(s) that triggers the process has not been identified. Previously, we showed that the expression of CD36, an inflammatory mediator, occurs in a subset of astcotyes in the peri-infarct area where the glial scar forms. This study investigates a role for CD36 in astrocyte activation and glial scar format...

Journal: :The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 2014
Justin P Rodriguez Michael Coulter Jill Miotke Ronald L Meyer Ken-Ichi Takemaru Joel M Levine

When the brain or spinal cord is injured, glial cells in the damaged area undergo complex morphological and physiological changes resulting in the formation of the glial scar. This scar contains reactive astrocytes, activated microglia, macrophages and other myeloid cells, meningeal cells, proliferating oligodendrocyte precursor cells (OPCs), and a dense extracellular matrix. Whether the scar i...

2017
Francois Renault-Mihara Masahiko Mukaino Munehisa Shinozaki Hiromi Kumamaru Satoshi Kawase Matthieu Baudoux Toshiki Ishibashi Soya Kawabata Yuichiro Nishiyama Keiko Sugai Kaori Yasutake Seiji Okada Masaya Nakamura Hideyuki Okano

Understanding how the transcription factor signal transducer and activator of transcription-3 (STAT3) controls glial scar formation may have important clinical implications. We show that astrocytic STAT3 is associated with greater amounts of secreted MMP2, a crucial protease in scar formation. Moreover, we report that STAT3 inhibits the small GTPase RhoA and thereby controls actomyosin tonus, a...

Journal: :The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 1990
J S Rudge J Silver

Traumatic injury to the adult mammalian CNS results in the formation of an astroglial-mesenchymal scar that seals the wound site but blocks axonal regeneration in the process. The mechanism that leads to this inhibition of axon outgrowth has been proposed to be either a physical barrier blocking the advancement of the growth cone or chemical factors actively inhibiting axon outgrowth. At presen...

Journal: :The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 1996
E E Geisert L Yang M H Irwin

Reactive astrocytes form a scar after injury to the CNS that many investigators believe contributes to the lack of functional regeneration. In the present study, we identify an astrocytic membrane protein that appears to play an important role in reactive gliosis and scar formation. Cultures of rat astrocytes were used as a model system to produce and to screen monoclonal antibodies that would ...

2016
Amber R. Hackett Jae K. Lee

NG2 cells, also known as oligodendrocyte progenitor cells, are located throughout the central nervous system and serve as a pool of progenitors to differentiate into oligodendrocytes. In response to spinal cord injury (SCI), NG2 cells increase their proliferation and differentiation into remyelinating oligodendrocytes. While astrocytes are typically associated with being the major cell type in ...

Journal: :The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 2008
Jung-Yu C Hsu Lilly Y W Bourguignon Christen M Adams Karine Peyrollier Haoqian Zhang Thomas Fandel Christine L Cun Zena Werb Linda J Noble-Haeusslein

In the injured spinal cord, a glial scar forms and becomes a major obstacle to axonal regeneration. Formation of the glial scar involves migration of astrocytes toward the lesion. Matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs), including MMP-9 and MMP-2, govern cell migration through their ability to degrade constituents of the extracellular matrix. Although MMP-9 is expressed in reactive astrocytes, its inv...

Journal: :JAMA neurology 2015
Moa Stenudd Hanna Sabelström Jonas Frisén

Spinal cord injury is followed by glial scar formation, which has positive and negative effects on recovery from the lesion. More than half of the astrocytes in the glial scar are generated by ependymal cells, the neural stem cells in the spinal cord. We recently demonstrated that the neural stem cell-derived scar component has several beneficial functions, including restricting tissue damage a...

Journal: :مجله علوم اعصاب شفای خاتم 0
sajad sahab negah a. shefa neuroscience research center, khatam alanbia hospital, tehran, iran b. histology and embryology group, basic science department, faculty of veterinary medicine, shiraz university, shiraz, iran zabihollah khaksar histology and embryology group, basic science department, faculty of veterinary medicine, shiraz university, shiraz, iran elham mohammad zadeh shefa neuroscience research center, khatam alanbia hospital, tehran, iran mostafa modarres mousavi shefa neuroscience research center, khatam alanbia hospital, tehran, iran ali jahanbazi jahan-abad shefa neuroscience research center, khatam alanbia hospital, tehran, iran

a common pathological process that occurred after brain injury is gliosis. gliosis involves the activation of glial cells to proliferate and become hypertrophic to occupy the injured brain areas. in order to form a defense system against the invasion of micro-organisms and cytotoxins into surrounding tissue, glial cells including astrocytes and microglia undergo reactive response to injury. neu...

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