Literature DB >> 27992989

[Facial nerve injuries cause changes in central nervous system microglial cells].

Jeimmy Cerón1, Julieta Troncoso.   

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Our research group has described both morphological and electrophysiological changes in motor cortex pyramidal neurons associated with contralateral facial nerve injury in rats. However, little is known about those neural changes, which occur together with changes in surrounding glial cells.
OBJECTIVE: To characterize the effect of the unilateral facial nerve injury on microglial proliferation and activation in the primary motor cortex.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: We performed immunohistochemical experiments in order to detect microglial cells in brain tissue of rats with unilateral facial nerve lesion sacrificed at different times after the injury. We caused two types of lesions: reversible (by crushing, which allows functional recovery), and irreversible (by section, which produces permanent paralysis). We compared the brain tissues of control animals (without surgical intervention) and sham-operated animals with animals with lesions sacrificed at 1, 3, 7, 21 or 35 days after the injury.
RESULTS: In primary motor cortex, the microglial cells of irreversibly injured animals showed proliferation and activation between three and seven days post-lesion. The proliferation of microglial cells in reversibly injured animals was significant only three days after the lesion.
CONCLUSIONS: Facial nerve injury causes changes in microglial cells in the primary motor cortex. These modifications could be involved in the generation of morphological and electrophysiological changes previously described in the pyramidal neurons of primary motor cortex that command facial movements.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Microglial; motor cortex; pyramidal cells; rat

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27992989     DOI: 10.7705/biomedica.v36i4.3259

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biomedica        ISSN: 0120-4157            Impact factor:   0.935


  1 in total

1.  Potassium Channels Kv1.3 and Kir2.1 But Not Kv1.5 Contribute to BV2 Cell Line and Primary Microglial Migration.

Authors:  Ruxandra Anton; Mihail Ghenghea; Violeta Ristoiu; Christophe Gattlen; Marc-Rene Suter; Petre Alexandru Cojocaru; Aurel Popa-Wagner; Bogdan Catalin; Alexandru-Florian Deftu
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2021-02-19       Impact factor: 5.923

  1 in total

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