Abstract

Brain edema formation and the ensuing brain damages are the major cause of high mortality and long term disability following the occurrence of ischemic stroke. In this process, oxygen and glucose deprivation and the resulting reperfusion injury play primary roles. In response to the ischemic insult, the neurovascular unit experiences both intracellular and extracellular edemas, associated with maladapted astrocytic plasticity. The astrocytic plasticity includes both morphological and functional plasticity. The former involves a reactive gliosis and the subsequent glial retraction. It relates to the capacity of astrocytes to buffer changes in extracellular chemical levels, particularly K+ and glutamate, as well as the integrity of the blood-brain barrier (BBB). The latter involves the expression and activity of a series of ion and water transport proteins. These molecules are grouped together around glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) and water channel protein aquaporin 4 (AQP4) to form functional networks, regulate hydromineral balance across cell membranes and maintain the integrity of the BBB. Intense ischemic challenges can disrupt these capacities of astrocytes and result in their maladaptation. The maladapted astrocytic plasticity in ischemic stroke cannot only disrupt the hydromineral homeostasis across astrocyte membrane and the BBB, but also leads to disorders of the whole neurovascular unit. This review focuses on how the maladapted astrocytic plasticity in ischemic stroke plays the central role in the brain edema formation.

Highlights

  • Brain edema formation and the ensuing brain damages are the major cause of high mortality and long term disability following the occurrence of ischemic stroke

  • This review focuses on how the maladapted astrocytic plasticity in ischemic stroke plays the central role in the brain edema formation

  • This review focuses on the causal relationship between maladapted astrocytic plasticity and brain edema formation during ischemic stroke

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Summary

Central Role of Maladapted Astrocytic Plasticity in Ischemic Brain

Brain edema formation and the ensuing brain damages are the major cause of high mortality and long term disability following the occurrence of ischemic stroke In this process, oxygen and glucose deprivation and the resulting reperfusion injury play primary roles. The former involves a reactive gliosis and the subsequent glial retraction It relates to the capacity of astrocytes to buffer changes in extracellular chemical levels, K+ and glutamate, as well as the integrity of the blood-brain barrier (BBB). The brain edema formation mainly results from oxygen and glucose deprivation and reperfusion injury as well as a series of secondary events (Rutkowsky et al, 2011; O’Donnell et al, 2013) These events cause disturbance of hydromineral balance in the neurovascular unit (Kempski, 2001). The edema can lead to high intracranial pressure, cerebral herniation and death (Khanna et al, 2014) and becomes a focus of studies on ischemic stroke

Ischemic Stroke and Astrocytes
ASTROCYTIC MORPHOLOGICAL PLASTICITY AND BRAIN EDEMA FORMATION
Reactive Gliosis
Glial Retraction
ASTROCYTIC FUNCTIONAL PLASTICITY AND EDEMA FORMATION
GFAP and Edema
Ion Transport and the Edema
Temporal Features
Spatial Features
CENTRAL ROLE OF ASTROCYTIC PLASTICITY IN BRAIN EDEMA FORMATION
Determining Factor of Ischemic Brain Edema
Spatiotemporal Correlation
Continuous Involvement
Findings
CONCLUSION
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