Sunday, January 27, 2013

The Role of Pericytes in Blood-Brain Barrier Function and Stroke

And maybe pericytes will finally get enough research to figure out how they can be controlled in the hyperacute phase of stroke. Somehow I missed this last August. An unacceptable failure on my part.
http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/ben/cpd/2012/00000018/00000025/art00006
Abstract:
Central nervous system pericytes have critical and complex inductive, structural, and regulatory roles interacting with other cell types of the neurovascular unit, especially endothelial cells and astrocytes. Pericyte-endothelial interactions are particularly prominent for blood-brain barrier (BBB) maintenance, with profound effects on basement membrane and endothelial tight junction structure and function. Under experimental conditions of hypoxia-ischemia mimicking stroke, pericytes migrate from their usual microvascular location and influence, directly or indirectly, BBB permeability. The contractile properties of pericytes provide the capacity to regulate capillary blood flow, but this may have detrimental effects on ischemic injury. Stem cell characteristics of pericytes imply an important regenerative role following stroke. Pericytes thus appear to orchestrate multiple critical functions in stroke, involving blood flow, permeability, and repair of the neurovascular unit.

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