Literature DB >> 15163694

Absence of glial fibrillary acidic protein and vimentin prevents hypertrophy of astrocytic processes and improves post-traumatic regeneration.

Ulrika Wilhelmsson1, Lizhen Li, Marcela Pekna, Claes-Henric Berthold, Sofia Blom, Camilla Eliasson, Oliver Renner, Eric Bushong, Mark Ellisman, Todd E Morgan, Milos Pekny.   

Abstract

The regenerative capacity of the CNS is extremely limited. The reason for this is unclear, but glial cell involvement has been suspected, and oligodendrocytes have been implicated as inhibitors of neuroregeneration (Chen et al., 2000, GrandPre et al., 2000; Fournier et al., 2001). The role of astrocytes in this process was proposed but remains incompletely understood (Silver and Miller, 2004). Astrocyte activation (reactive gliosis) accompanies neurotrauma, stroke, neurodegenerative diseases, or tumors. Two prominent hallmarks of reactive gliosis are hypertrophy of astrocytic processes and upregulation of intermediate filaments. Using the entorhinal cortex lesion model in mice, we found that reactive astrocytes devoid of the intermediate filament proteins glial fibrillary acidic protein and vimentin (GFAP-/-Vim-/-), and consequently lacking intermediate filaments (Colucci-Guyon et al., 1994; Pekny et al., 1995; Eliasson et al., 1999), showed only a limited hypertrophy of cell processes. Instead, many processes were shorter and not straight, albeit the volume of neuropil reached by a single astrocyte was the same as in wild-type mice. This was accompanied by remarkable synaptic regeneration in the hippocampus. On a molecular level, GFAP-/-Vim-/- reactive astrocytes could not upregulate endothelin B receptors, suggesting that the upregulation is intermediate filament dependent. These findings show a novel role for intermediate filaments in astrocytes and implicate reactive astrocytes as potent inhibitors of neuroregeneration.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15163694      PMCID: PMC6729371          DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0820-04.2004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurosci        ISSN: 0270-6474            Impact factor:   6.167


  143 in total

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7.  Redefining the concept of reactive astrocytes as cells that remain within their unique domains upon reaction to injury.

Authors:  Ulrika Wilhelmsson; Eric A Bushong; Diana L Price; Benjamin L Smarr; Van Phung; Masako Terada; Mark H Ellisman; Milos Pekny
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Review 10.  Dual roles of astrocytes in plasticity and reconstruction after traumatic brain injury.

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