| Literature DB >> 33675569 |
Alexander Popov1,2, Alexey Brazhe1,3, Pavel Denisov1,2, Oksana Sutyagina1,2, Li Li4, Natalia Lazareva5, Alexei Verkhratsky5,6,7,8, Alexey Semyanov1,3,5,4.
Abstract
Little is known about age-dependent changes in structure and function of astrocytes and of the impact of these on the cognitive decline in the senescent brain. The prevalent view on the age-dependent increase in reactive astrogliosis and astrocytic hypertrophy requires scrutiny and detailed analysis. Using two-photon microscopy in conjunction with 3D reconstruction, Sholl and volume fraction analysis, we demonstrate a significant reduction in the number and the length of astrocytic processes, in astrocytic territorial domains and in astrocyte-to-astrocyte coupling in the aged brain. Probing physiology of astrocytes with patch clamp, and Ca2+ imaging revealed deficits in K+ and glutamate clearance and spatiotemporal reorganisation of Ca2+ events in old astrocytes. These changes paralleled impaired synaptic long-term potentiation (LTP) in hippocampal CA1 in old mice. Our findings may explain the astroglial mechanisms of age-dependent decline in learning and memory.Entities:
Keywords: K+ buffering; ageing; astrocyte; astrocytic complexity; astrocytic cradle; glutamate uptake; perisynaptic astrocytic processes
Year: 2021 PMID: 33675569 DOI: 10.1111/acel.13334
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Aging Cell ISSN: 1474-9718 Impact factor: 9.304