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Original Article

Detailed Disease Processes of Cerebral Pericytes and Astrocytes in Stroke-Prone SHR

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Pages 1069-1075 | Published online: 03 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

We examined ultrastructurally cerebral pericytes and astrocytes in 20 normotensive Wistar Kyoto rats and 60 asymptomatic stroke-prone spontaneously hypertensive rats, which were sequentially killed at 4–52 weeks of age. Another 30 SHRSP were killed soon after they showed symptoms of stroke. We found two kinds of pericytes around the capillaries; granular pericytes and filamentous pericytes. Granular pericytes possibly serve as scavenger cells in the central nervous system and became active and grew in size with time. In contrast, filamentous pericytes degenerated during the development of hypertension. Degeneration of the filamentous pericytes was involved in an increase of endothelial permeability. Increased permeability caused focal and then circumferential swelling of the astrocytes around the capillaries. Swelling of the astrocytes seemed to accelerate the production of attachment plaques. Following this increase in the number of attachment plaques, numerous astrocytic filaments were produced within the cytoplasm. As a result, fibrous astrocytes were fully developed. Adjacent to the fibrous astrocytes we detected opening of the interendothelial junctions as well as dead neurons. From these observations we propose that astrocytes perform the main function in trophic interactions among cerebral endothelial cells, astrocytes, and neurons and that dysfunction of astrocytes disturbs the neural environment, resulting in neuronal death.

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