Search results for "brain cell culture"

showing 3 items of 3 documents

Neuronal and BBB damage induced by sera from patients with secondary progressive multiple sclerosis.

2009

An important component of the pathogenic process of multiple sclerosis (MS) is the blood-brain barrier (BBB) damage. We recently set an in vitro model of BBB, based on a three-cell-type co-culture system, in which rat neurons and astrocytes synergistically induce brain capillary endothelial cells to form a monolayer with permeability properties resembling those of the physiological BBB. Herein we report that the serum from patients with secondary progressive multiple sclerosis (SPMS) has a damaging effect on isolated neurons. This finding suggests that neuronal damaging in MS could be a primary event and not only secondary to myelin damage, as generally assumed. SPMS serum affects the perme…

Pathologymedicine.medical_specialtyProgrammed cell deathBlotting WesternBiologyImmunofluorescenceOccludinModels BiologicalMyelinWestern blotOccludinGeneticsmedicineElectric ImpedanceAnimalsmultiple sclerosis brain cell cultures in vitro models of blood-brain barrier neuronal cell death transendothelial electrical resistanceMicroscopy Phase-ContrastRats WistarCells CulturedNeuronsmedicine.diagnostic_testTight junctionCell DeathMultiple sclerosisMembrane ProteinsGeneral MedicineMultiple Sclerosis Chronic Progressivemedicine.diseaseImmunohistochemistryRatsBlotmedicine.anatomical_structurenervous systemBlood-Brain BarrierAstrocytescardiovascular systemInternational journal of molecular medicine
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In vitro models of blood-brain barrier and application in the study of the multiple sclerosis

2008

in vitro modelSettore BIO/10 - Biochimicarat cortical neuronSettore MED/26 - Neurologiabrain cell culturemultiple sclerosisBBB
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Effect of the serum from multiple sclerosis patients on an in vitro model of blood-brain barrier.

2008

Multiple sclerosis (MS) is characterized by focal inflammatory demyelination, largely due to autoimmune responses against different components of the myelin sheet. It is also generally accepted that the pathogenesis of MS consists of inflammatory and neurodegenerative phases, where demyelination should produce partially reversible clinical deficits that can remit, due to limited remyelination, while axonal degeneration produces permanent non-remitting clinical damage. It is also assumed that nervous system inflammation is initiated by autoreactive, myelin-specific T cells that permeate the blood-brain barrier and trigger a series of events leading to tissue destruction. In addition to antib…

multiple sclerosiin vitro modelSettore BIO/10 - Biochimicaneuronal damageblood-brain barrierbrain cell culture
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