6 results match your criteria: "France. christian.giaume@college-de-france.fr[Affiliation]"

Connexin-based channels contribute to metabolic pathways in the oligodendroglial lineage.

J Cell Sci

May 2016

Department of Histology and Embryology, Faculty of Basic Medicine, Chongqing Key Laboratory of Neurobiology, Third Military Medical University, Chongqing 400038, China

Oligodendrocyte precursor cells (OPCs) undergo a series of energy-consuming developmental events; however, the uptake and trafficking pathways for their energy metabolites remain unknown. In the present study, we found that 2-NBDG, a fluorescent glucose analog, can be delivered between astrocytes and oligodendrocytes through connexin-based gap junction channels but cannot be transferred between astrocytes and OPCs. Instead, connexin hemichannel-mediated glucose uptake supports OPC proliferation, and ethidium bromide uptake or increase of 2-NBDG uptake rate is correlated with intracellular Ca(2+) elevation in OPCs, indicating a Ca(2+)-dependent activation of connexin hemichannels.

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Connexin-based channels in astrocytes: how to study their properties.

Methods Mol Biol

March 2012

CIRB, CNRS UMR7241/INSERM U1050 Collège de France, Paris, France.

A typical feature of astrocytes is their high level of connexin expression. These membrane proteins constitute the molecular basis of two types of channels: gap junction channels that allow direct cytoplasm-to-cytoplasm communication and hemichannels that provide a pathway for exchanges between the intra- and extracellular media. An unusual property of these channels is their permeability for ions but also for small signaling molecules.

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From a glial syncytium to a more restricted and specific glial networking.

J Physiol Paris

January 2012

CIRB, CNRS UMR UMR7241/INSERM U1050, MEMOLIFE Laboratory of Excellence and Paris Science Lettre, Collège de France, University Pierre et Marie Curie, ED, N°158, 11 Place Marcelin Berthelot, 75005 Paris, France.

In the brain, glia represents the cell population that expresses the highest level of connexins, the membrane protein constituents of gap junction channels and hemichannels. This statement has initially led to propose the existence of a glial syncytium. Since then, functional studies have established that connexin channel-mediated communication between glial cells was more restricted and plastic that primarily thought.

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Dynamic aspects of interactions between astrocytes, neurons and the vasculature have recently been in the neuroscience spotlight. It has emerged that not only neurons but also astrocytes are organized into networks. Whereas neuronal networks exchange information through electrical and chemical synapses, astrocytes are interconnected through gap junction channels that are regulated by extra- and intracellular signals and allow exchange of information.

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This review gives an overview of connexin expression in glial cells of the central nervous system, the different modes of connexin action, including gap junctional channels and hemichannels, as well as the available methodologies to measure their activity. We summarize the strengths and limitations of current pharmacological and genetic approaches to interfere with connexin channel functions. We outline new avenues not only to study specific mechanisms by which connexins exert these functions but also to selectively investigate well-defined coupling compartments among glial networks.

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Article Synopsis
  • Scientists are discovering that glial cells, especially astrocytes, work together with neurons in the brain, talking to each other and helping each other out.
  • The barrel cortex is a special area in the brain that helps researchers see how these cells interact, because its structure makes it a good model for study.
  • The review shows that astrocytes can change, adapt, and even influence how neurons behave, suggesting that understanding this interaction could answer big questions about how our brains work.
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