Abstract

The glymphatic system is critical for brain homeostasis by eliminating metabolic waste, whose disturbance contributes to the accumulation of pathogenic proteins in neurodegenerative diseases. Promoting glymphatic clearance is a potential and attractive strategy for several brain disorders, including neurodegenerative diseases. Previous studies have uncovered that 40Hz flickering augmented glymphatic flow and facilitated sleep (Zhou et al. in Cell Res 34:214-231, 2024) since sleep drives waste clearance via glymphatic flow (Xie et al. in Science 342:373-377, 2013). However, it remains unclear whether 40Hz light flickering directly increased glymphatic flow or indirectly by promoting sleep. A recent article published in Cell Discovery by Chen et al. (Sun et al. in Cell Discov 10:81, 2024) revealed that 40Hz light flickering facilitated glymphatic flow, by promoting the polarization of astrocytic aquaporin-4 (AQP4) and vasomotion through upregulated adenosine-A2A receptor (A2AR) signaling, independent of sleep. These findings suggest that 40Hz light flickering may be used as a non-invasive approach to control the function of the glymphatic-lymphatic system, to help remove metabolic waste in the brain, thereby presenting a potential strategy for neurodegenerative disease treatment.

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