Proper neural wiring sounds incredibly important to stroke recovery. But only to survivors, I bet absolutely nothing will be done with this. Our fucking failures of stroke associations won't lift a finger, neither will your doctor or stroke hospital.
http://www.alphagalileo.org/ViewItem.aspx?ItemId=177722&CultureCode=en
A molecule produced by insulating glial cells facilitates the functional wiring of brain cells involved in motor coordination.
Researchers at Hokkaido University have found that the molecule
“L-gutamate/L-aspartate transporter” (GLAST) plays an essential role in
establishing and maintaining proper neural wiring of Purkinje cells in
the cerebellum.
Purkinje cells are among the largest nerve cells in the brain. They
are present in the cerebellum, a small structure in the back of the
brain influencing motor coordination. They are mainly hooked up to the
nervous system by means of two distinct types of nerve fibers, “parallel
fibers” and “climbing fibers.” Those fibers connect to different part
of Purkinje cell dendrites, or the branches projecting from the cell
body, segregating their territories.
GLAST is a molecule produced by specialized insulating cells, called
Bergmann glia, that wrap around Purkinje cell synapses (a synapse is the
structure connecting one nerve cell to another). GLAST’s role is to
remove excess glutamate, a neurotransmitter used by parallel and
climbing fibers to send signals to Purkinje cells. This facilitates a
“high-fidelity” signal, by allowing the right amount of glutamate to
reach the targeted nerve cell without spilling over onto its neighbors.
However, little is known about GLAST’s role in the development of neural
circuits.
Professor Masahiko Watanabe of Hokkaido University and his colleagues
in Japan compared the wiring of Purkinje cells in normal mice and
mutant mice lacking GLAST. The wiring of Purkinje cells in the mutant
mice was laden with abnormalities.
Each Purkinje cell is normally innervated by a single climbing fiber
as a result of competition between the fibers during development.
However, in the mutant mice, Purkinje cells were innervated by multiple
climbing fibers, which apparently caused the Purkinje cells to be
atypically excited.
Parallel fibers were also affected. They robustly increased the
number of connections with Purkinje cells, impairing the territorial
segregation between climbing fibers and parallel fibers. Furthermore, in
the knockout mice, Bergmann glial cells were improperly wrapped around
the Purkinje cells, exposing them to the external environment.
In a different experiment, they also found that functional blockade
of GLAST in normal adult mice results in similar abnormalities as seen
in the knockout mice.
“We have shown that the glutamate transporter, GLAST, plays important
roles in establishing and maintaining proper nerve wiring and
insulation in the cerebellum. Further investigation should reveal how
GLAST’s function is related to the plasticity of the neural network,”
says Masahiko Watanabe.
https://www.global.hokudai.ac.jp/blog/a-molecule-for-proper-neural-wiring-in-the-cerebellum/
regarding the Parkinsonian drug used to treat stroke victims, they used this in that movie Cocoon, that starred Robin Williams, and nothing permanent ever came out of it.
ReplyDeleteI actually found this: I would like your comment on it
This post discusses it. http://oc1dean.blogspot.com/2017/07/vegetative-stroke-patient-36-was-able.html
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