In vivo expression of neuroglobin in reactive astrocytes during neuropathology in murine models of traumatic brain injury, cerebral malaria, and autoimmune encephalitis

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In vivo expression of neuroglobin in reactive astrocytes during neuropathology in murine models of traumatic brain injury, cerebral malaria, and autoimmune encephalitis. / DellaValle, Brian; Hempel, Casper; Kurtzhals, Jørgen AL; Penkowa, Milena.

In: Glia, Vol. 58, No. 10, 2010, p. 1220-7.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

DellaValle, B, Hempel, C, Kurtzhals, JAL & Penkowa, M 2010, 'In vivo expression of neuroglobin in reactive astrocytes during neuropathology in murine models of traumatic brain injury, cerebral malaria, and autoimmune encephalitis', Glia, vol. 58, no. 10, pp. 1220-7. https://doi.org/10.1002/glia.21002

APA

DellaValle, B., Hempel, C., Kurtzhals, J. AL., & Penkowa, M. (2010). In vivo expression of neuroglobin in reactive astrocytes during neuropathology in murine models of traumatic brain injury, cerebral malaria, and autoimmune encephalitis. Glia, 58(10), 1220-7. https://doi.org/10.1002/glia.21002

Vancouver

DellaValle B, Hempel C, Kurtzhals JAL, Penkowa M. In vivo expression of neuroglobin in reactive astrocytes during neuropathology in murine models of traumatic brain injury, cerebral malaria, and autoimmune encephalitis. Glia. 2010;58(10):1220-7. https://doi.org/10.1002/glia.21002

Author

DellaValle, Brian ; Hempel, Casper ; Kurtzhals, Jørgen AL ; Penkowa, Milena. / In vivo expression of neuroglobin in reactive astrocytes during neuropathology in murine models of traumatic brain injury, cerebral malaria, and autoimmune encephalitis. In: Glia. 2010 ; Vol. 58, No. 10. pp. 1220-7.

Bibtex

@article{dd8a97607a3f11df928f000ea68e967b,
title = "In vivo expression of neuroglobin in reactive astrocytes during neuropathology in murine models of traumatic brain injury, cerebral malaria, and autoimmune encephalitis",
abstract = "Neuroglobin (Ngb) is proposed to be a neuron-specific, hypoxia-responsive, neuroprotective protein. However, results are conflicting concerning both Ngb's physiological and pathological significance. This study was designed to investigate the in vivo localization and regulation of Ngb in different neuropathological models representing traumatic injury, infectious, autoimmune, and excitotoxic pathogeneses. We profiled Ngb immunohistochemistry in murine models of traumatic brain injury, cerebral malaria, experimental autoimmune encephalitis, and kainic acid (KA)-mediated epileptic seizures that, to our knowledge, have not been studied in the context of Ngb. In control mice Ngb was expressed exclusively in neurons. In all pathological models except KA, in addition to neurons Ngb was present in reactive astrocytes. Ngb positive astrocytes were found within regions associated with most severe pathology and the astroglial scar. This is the first report of Ngb present in reactive astroglia and in scar-forming astrocytes in response to different pathological conditions relevant to human disease. In light of previously reported cyto-protective properties of Ngb, further insight may result in therapeutic ramifications.",
author = "Brian DellaValle and Casper Hempel and Kurtzhals, {J{\o}rgen AL} and Milena Penkowa",
note = "(c) 2010 Wiley-Liss, Inc.",
year = "2010",
doi = "10.1002/glia.21002",
language = "English",
volume = "58",
pages = "1220--7",
journal = "GLIA",
issn = "0894-1491",
publisher = "JohnWiley & Sons, Inc.",
number = "10",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - In vivo expression of neuroglobin in reactive astrocytes during neuropathology in murine models of traumatic brain injury, cerebral malaria, and autoimmune encephalitis

AU - DellaValle, Brian

AU - Hempel, Casper

AU - Kurtzhals, Jørgen AL

AU - Penkowa, Milena

N1 - (c) 2010 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

PY - 2010

Y1 - 2010

N2 - Neuroglobin (Ngb) is proposed to be a neuron-specific, hypoxia-responsive, neuroprotective protein. However, results are conflicting concerning both Ngb's physiological and pathological significance. This study was designed to investigate the in vivo localization and regulation of Ngb in different neuropathological models representing traumatic injury, infectious, autoimmune, and excitotoxic pathogeneses. We profiled Ngb immunohistochemistry in murine models of traumatic brain injury, cerebral malaria, experimental autoimmune encephalitis, and kainic acid (KA)-mediated epileptic seizures that, to our knowledge, have not been studied in the context of Ngb. In control mice Ngb was expressed exclusively in neurons. In all pathological models except KA, in addition to neurons Ngb was present in reactive astrocytes. Ngb positive astrocytes were found within regions associated with most severe pathology and the astroglial scar. This is the first report of Ngb present in reactive astroglia and in scar-forming astrocytes in response to different pathological conditions relevant to human disease. In light of previously reported cyto-protective properties of Ngb, further insight may result in therapeutic ramifications.

AB - Neuroglobin (Ngb) is proposed to be a neuron-specific, hypoxia-responsive, neuroprotective protein. However, results are conflicting concerning both Ngb's physiological and pathological significance. This study was designed to investigate the in vivo localization and regulation of Ngb in different neuropathological models representing traumatic injury, infectious, autoimmune, and excitotoxic pathogeneses. We profiled Ngb immunohistochemistry in murine models of traumatic brain injury, cerebral malaria, experimental autoimmune encephalitis, and kainic acid (KA)-mediated epileptic seizures that, to our knowledge, have not been studied in the context of Ngb. In control mice Ngb was expressed exclusively in neurons. In all pathological models except KA, in addition to neurons Ngb was present in reactive astrocytes. Ngb positive astrocytes were found within regions associated with most severe pathology and the astroglial scar. This is the first report of Ngb present in reactive astroglia and in scar-forming astrocytes in response to different pathological conditions relevant to human disease. In light of previously reported cyto-protective properties of Ngb, further insight may result in therapeutic ramifications.

U2 - 10.1002/glia.21002

DO - 10.1002/glia.21002

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 20544857

VL - 58

SP - 1220

EP - 1227

JO - GLIA

JF - GLIA

SN - 0894-1491

IS - 10

ER -

ID: 20344293