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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Plasma albumin is a potent trigger of calcium signals and DNA synthesis in astrocytes.

TLDR
It is shown that albumin is an important blood component responsible for inducing astrocyte proliferation and generates maintained trains of calcium spikes inAstrocytes, and that neither activity depends on blood coagulation.
Abstract
Cells in the central nervous system are normally prevented from coming into contact with albumin and other protein components of blood by the existence of a tight blood-brain barrier. Astrocytes and other glial cells proliferate to form glial scars when the blood-brain barrier is breached. In this report we show that albumin is an important blood component responsible for inducing astrocyte proliferation. Albumin also generates maintained trains of calcium spikes in astrocytes. Neither activity depends on blood coagulation, as albumins from both serum and plasma are approximately equally effective. Methanol extraction of albumin abolishes both actions, and recombination of the methanol-extracted factor with extracted albumin restores full activity indistinguishable from that of native albumin. The factor is sensitive to lipase, and the solvent extraction profile is that of a polar lipid.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Structure and function of the blood–brain barrier

TL;DR: The structure and function of the BBB is summarised, the physical barrier formed by the endothelial tight junctions, and the transport barrier resulting from membrane transporters and vesicular mechanisms are described.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Blood-Brain Barrier: Bottleneck in Brain Drug Development

TL;DR: This work has shown that the blood-brain barrier provides the platform for CNS drug delivery programs, which should be developed in parallel with traditional CNS drug discovery efforts in the molecular neurosciences.
Journal ArticleDOI

Blood-brain barrier delivery.

TL;DR: Brain drug development programs of the future need to be re-configured so that drugs are formulated to enable transport into the brain via endogenous BBB transporters.
Journal ArticleDOI

Glial Calcium: Homeostasis and Signaling Function

TL;DR: By controlling gap junction conductance, Ca2+ waves may define the limits of functional glial networks, and there is some evidence that glial [Ca2+]i waves can affect neurons.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ultrasmall implantable composite microelectrodes with bioactive surfaces for chronic neural interfaces

TL;DR: An integrated composite electrode consisting of a carbon-fibre core, a poly(p-xylylene)-based thin-film coating that acts as a dielectric barrier and that is functionalized to control intrinsic biological processes, and apoly(thiophene)-based recording pad is developed, found to elicit much reduced chronic reactive tissue responses and enabled single-neuron recording in acute and early chronic experiments in rats.
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