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Roles of P2 receptors in glial cells: focus on astrocytes

Central nervous system glial cells release and respond to nucleotides under both physiological and pathological conditions, suggesting that these molecules play key roles in both normal brain function and in repair after damage. In particular, ATP released from astrocytes activates P2 receptors on a...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Abbracchio, Maria P., Ceruti, Stefania
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer Netherlands 2006
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2096663/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18404462
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11302-006-9016-0
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author Abbracchio, Maria P.
Ceruti, Stefania
author_facet Abbracchio, Maria P.
Ceruti, Stefania
author_sort Abbracchio, Maria P.
collection PubMed
description Central nervous system glial cells release and respond to nucleotides under both physiological and pathological conditions, suggesting that these molecules play key roles in both normal brain function and in repair after damage. In particular, ATP released from astrocytes activates P2 receptors on astrocytes and other brain cells, allowing a form of homotypic and heterotypic signalling, which also involves microglia, neurons and oligodendrocytes. Multiple P2X and P2Y receptors are expressed by both astrocytes and microglia; however, these receptors are differentially recruited by nucleotides, depending upon specific pathophysiological conditions, and also mediate the long-term trophic changes of these cells during inflammatory gliosis. In astrocytes, P2-receptor-induced gliosis occurs via activation of the extracellular-regulated kinases (ERK) and protein kinase B/Akt pathways and involves induction of inflammatory and anti-inflammatory genes, cyclins, adhesion and antiapoptotic molecules. While astrocytic P2Y(1) and P2Y(2,4) are primarily involved in short-term calcium-dependent signalling, multiple P2 receptor subtypes seem to cooperate to astrocytic long-term changes. Conversely, in microglia, exposure to inflammatory and immunological stimuli results in differential functional changes of distinct P2 receptors, suggesting highly specific roles in acquisition of the activated phenotype. We believe that nucleotide-induced activation of astrocytes and microglia may originally start as a defence mechanism to protect neurons from cytotoxic and ischaemic insults; dysregulation of this process in chronic inflammatory diseases eventually results in neuronal cell damage and loss. On this basis, full elucidation of the specific roles of P2 receptors in these cells may help exploit the beneficial neuroprotective features of activated glia while attenuating their harmful properties and thus provide the basis for novel neuroprotective strategies that specifically target the purinergic system.
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spelling pubmed-20966632008-02-27 Roles of P2 receptors in glial cells: focus on astrocytes Abbracchio, Maria P. Ceruti, Stefania Purinergic Signal Article Central nervous system glial cells release and respond to nucleotides under both physiological and pathological conditions, suggesting that these molecules play key roles in both normal brain function and in repair after damage. In particular, ATP released from astrocytes activates P2 receptors on astrocytes and other brain cells, allowing a form of homotypic and heterotypic signalling, which also involves microglia, neurons and oligodendrocytes. Multiple P2X and P2Y receptors are expressed by both astrocytes and microglia; however, these receptors are differentially recruited by nucleotides, depending upon specific pathophysiological conditions, and also mediate the long-term trophic changes of these cells during inflammatory gliosis. In astrocytes, P2-receptor-induced gliosis occurs via activation of the extracellular-regulated kinases (ERK) and protein kinase B/Akt pathways and involves induction of inflammatory and anti-inflammatory genes, cyclins, adhesion and antiapoptotic molecules. While astrocytic P2Y(1) and P2Y(2,4) are primarily involved in short-term calcium-dependent signalling, multiple P2 receptor subtypes seem to cooperate to astrocytic long-term changes. Conversely, in microglia, exposure to inflammatory and immunological stimuli results in differential functional changes of distinct P2 receptors, suggesting highly specific roles in acquisition of the activated phenotype. We believe that nucleotide-induced activation of astrocytes and microglia may originally start as a defence mechanism to protect neurons from cytotoxic and ischaemic insults; dysregulation of this process in chronic inflammatory diseases eventually results in neuronal cell damage and loss. On this basis, full elucidation of the specific roles of P2 receptors in these cells may help exploit the beneficial neuroprotective features of activated glia while attenuating their harmful properties and thus provide the basis for novel neuroprotective strategies that specifically target the purinergic system. Springer Netherlands 2006-06-20 2006-11 /pmc/articles/PMC2096663/ /pubmed/18404462 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11302-006-9016-0 Text en © Springer Science + Business Media B.V. 2006
spellingShingle Article
Abbracchio, Maria P.
Ceruti, Stefania
Roles of P2 receptors in glial cells: focus on astrocytes
title Roles of P2 receptors in glial cells: focus on astrocytes
title_full Roles of P2 receptors in glial cells: focus on astrocytes
title_fullStr Roles of P2 receptors in glial cells: focus on astrocytes
title_full_unstemmed Roles of P2 receptors in glial cells: focus on astrocytes
title_short Roles of P2 receptors in glial cells: focus on astrocytes
title_sort roles of p2 receptors in glial cells: focus on astrocytes
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2096663/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18404462
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11302-006-9016-0
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