Glial repair in an insect central nervous system: effects of selective glial disruption
Glial repair in an insect central nervous system: effects of selective glial disruption
In vivo application of ethidium bromide to cockroach central nervous connectives caused extensive disruption of the neuroglia within 24 hr. Axonal conduction persisted following treatment with the glial toxin. A consistent feature of glial damage and repair was the prominent involvement of granule-containing cells. These cells (which were never seen in control cords) shared a number of cytological features with hemocytes that were seen adhering to and penetrating the neural lamella, in the early stages of glial damage. The granule-containing cells appear to serve dual functions: phagocytosis and structural repair. After 48 hr, granule-containing cells, or their processes, formed layers at the periphery of the connectives. By 4 to 6 days after treatment, the peripheral cells had assumed the morphological characteristics of normal perineurial cells and by 28 days were indistinguishable, ultrastructurally, from those of the perineurium of normal, untreated animals. These structural changes paralleled the re-establishment of the normal permeability properties of the blood-brain interface revealed by the exclusion of an extracellular tracer, ionic lanthanum, and electrophysiological observations.
2698-2711
Treherne, J.E.
585f48d3-4b89-4132-81ce-08f2b1770238
Smith, P.J.
003de469-9420-4f12-8f0e-8e8d76d28d6c
Leech, C.A.
7616e971-5d8d-4754-afd0-03b4558f5126
November 1984
Treherne, J.E.
585f48d3-4b89-4132-81ce-08f2b1770238
Smith, P.J.
003de469-9420-4f12-8f0e-8e8d76d28d6c
Leech, C.A.
7616e971-5d8d-4754-afd0-03b4558f5126
Treherne, J.E., Smith, P.J. and Leech, C.A.
(1984)
Glial repair in an insect central nervous system: effects of selective glial disruption.
Journal of Neuroscience, 4 (11), .
(PMID:6502199)
Abstract
In vivo application of ethidium bromide to cockroach central nervous connectives caused extensive disruption of the neuroglia within 24 hr. Axonal conduction persisted following treatment with the glial toxin. A consistent feature of glial damage and repair was the prominent involvement of granule-containing cells. These cells (which were never seen in control cords) shared a number of cytological features with hemocytes that were seen adhering to and penetrating the neural lamella, in the early stages of glial damage. The granule-containing cells appear to serve dual functions: phagocytosis and structural repair. After 48 hr, granule-containing cells, or their processes, formed layers at the periphery of the connectives. By 4 to 6 days after treatment, the peripheral cells had assumed the morphological characteristics of normal perineurial cells and by 28 days were indistinguishable, ultrastructurally, from those of the perineurium of normal, untreated animals. These structural changes paralleled the re-establishment of the normal permeability properties of the blood-brain interface revealed by the exclusion of an extracellular tracer, ionic lanthanum, and electrophysiological observations.
Text
2698.full.pdf
- Version of Record
Restricted to Repository staff only
Request a copy
More information
Published date: November 1984
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 190291
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/190291
ISSN: 0270-6474
PURE UUID: c5620579-cb21-4c66-912b-a679b346e61f
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 20 Jun 2011 08:39
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:38
Export record
Contributors
Author:
J.E. Treherne
Author:
C.A. Leech
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics