Astrocytes: Wiring the Brain (Frontiers in Neuroscience) - Hardcover

 
9781032756165: Astrocytes: Wiring the Brain (Frontiers in Neuroscience)

Inhaltsangabe

This is a second edition of a book that provides an overview of the most current findings on the diverse roles played by astrocytes in the function and dysfunction of the central nervous system (CNS), with emphasis on their cellular connections. Astrocytes are highly elaborated cells and likely the only neural cells that simultaneously establish associations with different cellular types. The fine processes of astrocytes are found in practically all nearby cellular types in the CNS, including astrocytes themselves, neurons, oligodendrocytes, microglia, and brain endothelial cells. Such close morphological associations, together with the fact that astrocytes express a multitude of ion channels, transporters, and membrane receptors, endow these cells with the unique capability to sense and influence diverse CNS functions. Disruption of these elaborated connections and altered astrocyte polarization are implicated in numerous pathological conditions, such as epilepsy, stroke, leukodystrophies, Alzheimer’s, and autism, and also certain psychiatric disorders, major depression, and schizophrenia.

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Über die Autorin bzw. den Autor

Dr. Eliana Scemes is a professor at New York Medical College. She obtained her Ph.D. in general physiology from the University of Sao Paulo, Brazil, and obtained further postdoctoral training in neurobiology in Brazil and in neuroscience at Albert Einstein College of Medicine. Her research has made significant contributions to the understanding of astrocyte biology, focusing on gap junction proteins (connexins and pannexins) and their impact on CNS physiopathology. She has contributed over 100 publications, with an h-index of 49, in the form of research and review articles and book chapters, and has been a member of numerous professional societies and the editorial board member of many scientific journals.

>100, and with Dr. Scemes, he has co-authored more than 50 original articles and reviews, primarily dealing with gap junctions and astrocytes. He has served on NIH study sections, including Molecular and Cellular Biology of Glia, which he chaired, and is on the editorial boards of numerous journals, including Glia.

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