The sleep-wake cycle is a highly regulated behavior in which a circadian clock times sleep and waking, whereas a homeostatic process controls sleep need. Both the clock and the sleep homeostat interact, but to what extent they influence each other is not understood. There is evidence that clock genes, in particular (), might be implicated in the sleep homeostatic process.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInfiltration of macrophages into the central nervous system and activation of microglia are hallmarks of multiple sclerosis and its animal model-experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE). Cell death in EAE has been demonstrated as an essential mechanism in the local regulation of the inflammatory reaction, but also as one of the major factors contributing to the destruction of the nervous tissue. The focus of this study was on detection of cell death among ED1(+) cells (macrophages/activated microglia) in the spinal cord of Dark Agouti rats at the peak of EAE.
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