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      Astrocyte roles in traumatic brain injury

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      Experimental neurology

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          Abstract

          Astrocytes sense changes in neural activity and extracellular space composition. In response, they exert homeostatic mechanisms critical for maintaining neural circuit function, such as buffering neurotransmitters, modulating extracellular osmolarity and calibrating neurovascular coupling. In addition to upholding normal brain activities, astrocytes respond to diverse forms of brain injury with heterogeneous and progressive changes of gene expression, morphology, proliferative capacity and function that are collectively referred to as reactive astrogliosis. Traumatic brain injury (TBI) sets in motion complex events in which noxious mechanical forces cause tissue damage and disrupt central nervous system (CNS) homeostasis, which in turn trigger diverse multi-cellular responses that evolve over time and can lead either to neural repair or secondary cellular injury. In response to TBI, astrocytes in different cellular microenvironments tune their reactivity to varying degrees of axonal injury, vascular disruption, ischemia and inflammation. Here we review different forms of TBI-induced astrocyte reactivity and the functional consequences of these responses for TBI pathobiology. Evidence regarding astrocyte contribution to post-traumatic tissue repair and synaptic remodeling is examined, and the potential for targeting specific aspects of astrogliosis to ameliorate TBI sequelae is considered.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          0370712
          3660
          Exp Neurol
          Exp. Neurol.
          Experimental neurology
          0014-4886
          1090-2430
          14 July 2015
          28 March 2015
          January 2016
          01 January 2017
          : 275
          : 0 3
          : 305-315
          Affiliations
          Department of Neurobiology and Brain Research Institute, University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1763, USA
          Author notes
          Article
          PMC4586307 PMC4586307 4586307 nihpa680163
          10.1016/j.expneurol.2015.03.020
          4586307
          25828533
          84116c32-5fd1-46a2-b0d6-28743309508c
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