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Cell recruitment during glial repair: the role of exogenous cells
Authors:J. E. Treherne  P. J. S. Smith  E. A. Howes
Affiliation:(1) Department of Zoology, A.F.R.C. Unit of Insect Neurophysiology and Pharmacology, Downing Street, Cambridge, UK;(2) Department of Zoology, A.F.R.C. Unit of Insect Neurophysiology and Pharmacology, Downing Street, CB2 3EJ Cambridge, UK
Abstract:Summary Selective disruption of the neuroglia in penultimate abdominal connectives of the cockroach nerve is followed by a rapid accumulation of cells in the perineurial layer of the lesion. Subsequently, there is an abrupt, secondary, rise in cell numbers in the undamaged perineurial tissues, anterior to the lesion and adjacent to the 4th abdominal ganglia. By 7 days the increased cell numbers are again effectively confined to the original lesion zone. The initial rise in cell numbers is postulated to result from an invasion by blood-borne haemocytes and the subsequent increase, in undamaged perineurial tissues, from the mobilization of endogenous reactive cells. Recruitment of the endogenous cells is inhibited if the haemocytes are excluded from the lesion. There is a slower mobilization of sub-perineurial cells, which, again, is inhibited following exclusion of haemocytes from the lesion zone. It is postulated that the recruitment of the endogenous reactive cells is initiated by the invading haemocytes which transform to granule-containing cells and release diffusible morphogenic and/or mitogenic factors.
Keywords:Glia  Neural repair  CNS  Insect, Periplaneta americana
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