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1 ies virus and observed similar perimeters of gliosis.
2 ion pathology that is associated with robust gliosis.
3 n excess, were sufficient to induce reactive gliosis.
4 P23:Gfap-luc) mice, indicative of astrocytic gliosis.
5 ent maps might be associated with astrocytic gliosis.
6 l lethality associated with microcephaly and gliosis.
7 ile enhancing Abeta plaque load and reactive gliosis.
8 iseases of the retina involving fibrosis and gliosis.
9 ychosine accumulation, white matter loss and gliosis.
10 fic program of nonproliferative hypertrophic gliosis.
11 h as inflammation, edema, demyelination, and gliosis.
12 eper cortical layers that experienced higher gliosis.
13 als immediately before the onset of reactive gliosis.
14 s as an early step in oncogenic Kras-induced gliosis.
15 emyelination, immunological stimulation, and gliosis.
16 sident astrocytes, a process termed reactive gliosis.
17 in the mutant mice did not exhibit signs of gliosis.
18 PrP plaque formation, spongiform change, and gliosis.
19 epressor TDP-43, angiopathy, neuron loss and gliosis.
20 s that might be irreversible due to reactive gliosis.
21 pressing PDGFRbeta(D849V) exhibited reactive gliosis.
22 s well as reduction of motor neuron loss and gliosis.
23 = 0.02), but not prion protein deposition or gliosis.
24 tial Abeta concentration as well as reactive gliosis.
25 uggest that Olig2 is critical for postinjury gliosis.
26 essure and did not alter Muller or astrocyte gliosis.
27 tion in aged mice can ameliorate TBI-induced gliosis.
28 rebellar white matter associated with severe gliosis.
29 spongiform degeneration, neuronal loss, and gliosis.
30 resent important targets to control reactive gliosis.
31 l detachment and participation in subretinal gliosis.
32 a of fibroblasts in the cortex, and reactive gliosis.
33 terized by nigrostriatal dopamine damage and gliosis.
34 nd GFAP to assess neuronal loss and reactive gliosis.
35 roblasts in the cerebral cortex and reactive gliosis.
36 anced glymphatic influx of CSF, and reactive gliosis.
37 antagonism induced retinal degeneration and gliosis.
38 of Pyk2 does not alter Abeta accumulation or gliosis.
39 aques, neurofibrillary tangles, and reactive gliosis.
40 ng that these surfaces will not cause excess gliosis.
41 er nuclear layer (ONL) thinning, and retinal gliosis.
42 Abeta) plaque pathology and plaque-localised gliosis.
43 r mental disorders that lack robust reactive gliosis.
44 n ERG responses, photoreceptor cell loss and gliosis.
45 mine changes in the RPE, photoreceptors, and gliosis.
46 jacent areas of axonal myelin disruption and gliosis.
47 toreceptor disruption and loss and localized gliosis.
48 ogliosis or transcription factors regulating gliosis.
49 d levels of GFAP are the hallmark feature of gliosis, a non-specific response of astrocytes to a wide
50 the cell cycle, Muller glia undergo reactive gliosis, a pathological hallmark in the injured CNS of m
51 ession stalled, Muller glia undergo reactive gliosis, a pathological hallmark of the mammalian retina
52 to brain injury is the induction of reactive gliosis, a process whereby dormant astrocytes undergo mo
53 eded by neuropathological changes, including gliosis, accumulation of ubiquitinated protein aggregate
54 one morphogenetic protein (BMP) signaling in gliosis after SCI and find that BMPR1a and BMPR1b signal
55 ophic factor receptor (BDNF), contributes to gliosis after SCI, but little is known about the effects
57 fs4 in the VN, one of the principle sites of gliosis, also led to breathing abnormalities and prematu
58 any retinal diseases is reactive Muller cell gliosis, an untreatable condition that leads to tissue s
60 hological analysis showed diffuse astrocytic gliosis and activated microglia in the white matter, rar
62 ulation of Ras signaling in neurons promotes gliosis and astrocytoma formation in a cell nonautonomou
65 on loss, cortical spinal tract degeneration, gliosis and cytoplasmic neuronal inclusions formed by TD
67 c intervention reverses infection-associated gliosis and demyelination in the absence of changes in C
68 opment, synaptic transmission, cytoskeleton, gliosis and dopamine signaling that link DYT6 to other p
69 rain inflammation characterized by extensive gliosis and elevated blood-derived immune cell populatio
71 ay thus provide an approach for manipulating gliosis and enhancing functional outcomes after SCI.
72 changes, including neuronal loss, astrocytic gliosis and extensive prion protein (PrP) deposition in
74 chanism, but the upstream mechanisms driving gliosis and how important this is for seizures remain un
75 microvacuolation in the neuropil, as well as gliosis and huntingtin aggregates, which were exacerbate
76 and neuronal degeneration but coincided with gliosis and increased complement component C3, but not C
77 lso evident, with reductions in inflammation/gliosis and increased neural stem cell numbers in areas
78 gressive neurodegenerative changes including gliosis and increasing accumulation of p62- and ubiquiti
80 ation caused an increasing C-choline uptake, gliosis and inflammation potentially accounted for a hig
82 s levels of myelin disorders, axonal damage, gliosis and inflammation, and offer the opportunity for
83 ity recording but face challenges of chronic gliosis and instability due to mechanical and structural
85 Although dexamethasone profoundly inhibited gliosis and ischemia around the probe tracks it had only
86 methasone is highly effective at suppressing gliosis and ischemia but is limited in its neuroprotecti
88 gnificantly improved motor neuron counts, no gliosis and markedly reduced levels of total and hyperph
90 oculated mice exhibited prominent astrocytic gliosis and microglial activation as well as widespread
94 document neuronal cell loss, demyelination, gliosis and necrotic lesions in post-mortem material.
95 death, but detachments do not accentuate the gliosis and neurite sprouting already present and may in
97 owing that high saturated fat diets increase gliosis and neuroinflammation in reward-related brain re
98 ncy can develop in the absence of detectable gliosis and neuroinflammation, thereby dissociating micr
99 on diseases, but the mechanisms facilitating gliosis and neuronal damage in these diseases are not un
100 ical findings included bilateral hippocampal gliosis and neuronal loss in two patients who had post-m
101 recruitment, vascular permeability, reactive gliosis and neuronal patterning were evaluated by 3-dime
102 3D astrocytic network with reduced reactive gliosis and polarized aquaporin-4 (AQP4) distribution.
103 rescues neuronal impairment, and suppresses gliosis and recruitment of blood-derived immune cells, w
104 provide evidence that 5-FU induces reactive gliosis and reduction of enteric neurons in a S100B/RAGE
105 atric diseases, but the relationship between gliosis and response to therapeutics targeting effects o
107 ive disease is often accompanied by reactive gliosis and scarring, which are difficult to reverse wit
109 , a functional relationship between reactive gliosis and this cell proliferation has not been clearly
112 and activator of transcription 1 levels and gliosis, and 2) hyperphosphorylation and conformational
114 is sufficient to cause rapid demyelination, gliosis, and a microglial response that result in lesion
116 hology, including beta-amyloid accumulation, gliosis, and behavioral impairment, were examined under
117 ductions of brain Abeta and plaque deposits, gliosis, and behavioral memory deficits in the disease-e
118 bers and characterized microglia activation, gliosis, and both axonal integrity and retrograde tracer
120 olactinemia limited photoreceptor apoptosis, gliosis, and changes in neurotrophin expression, and it
121 ased brain amyloid-beta42, deposits of AGEs, gliosis, and cognitive deficits, accompanied by suppress
123 ted a reduced number of PR cell rows, active gliosis, and cytokine induction and macrophage infiltrat
125 later stages of disease, with neuronal loss, gliosis, and formation of diffuse cortical Lewy bodies i
126 d number of acellular capillaries, sustained gliosis, and increased capillary basement membrane thick
129 ive status and assessment of amyloid burden, gliosis, and molecular pathology during disease progress
130 t BMP inhibition alleviates hypomyelination, gliosis, and motor impairment in the survivors of IVH.
131 Prion infection leads to PrPres deposition, gliosis, and neuroinflammation in the central nervous sy
132 oscillatory potentials, Muller cell reactive gliosis, and neuronal cell death, as assayed by TUNEL st
135 markers synaptophysin and MAP2, reduced the gliosis, and preserved the capacity to elicit long-term
136 tokines to leak into the CNS, exacerbate the gliosis, and result in the vicious neuroinflammatory cas
138 a, profound granule cell depletion, Bergmann gliosis, and signs of Purkinje cell deafferentation; (ii
139 Exposure to HFD was associated with reactive gliosis, and this affected the structure of the blood-br
140 late of neuronal injury and the accompanying gliosis, and this signature could serve as a global biom
141 and temporal lobar atrophy, neuron loss and gliosis, and ubiquitin-positive inclusions (FTLD-U), whi
142 helial growth factor (VEGF) and anti-CD105], gliosis [anti-glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP)], p
143 erebral amyloidosis that precedes tauopathy, gliosis, apoptotic loss of neurons in the cerebral corte
145 ted lineage potential and that cell loss and gliosis are not sufficient to alter the lineage potentia
146 ide a demonstration that synaptotoxicity and gliosis are precocious events in MJD and that caffeine a
147 onstrate that neuroinflammation and reactive gliosis are prominent features of bilirubin brain toxici
148 Although neuroinflammation and reactive gliosis are prominent in virtually every CNS disease, gl
149 ration, apoptosis, neuronal degeneration and gliosis around the ventricles of pups with intraventricu
151 addition, chrysophanol ameliorated reactive gliosis, as demonstrated by a decrease in GFAP immunolab
154 formation in mice triggered neuron loss and gliosis at 3 months, but not in a tau-null background.
156 Finally, TDP-43PrP mice showed reactive gliosis, axonal and myelin degeneration, gait abnormalit
157 PO) is described as a biomarker for reactive gliosis, but its biological functions in retinal disease
158 glia respond to retinal injury by a reactive gliosis, but only rarely do mammalian glial cells re-ent
161 inhibition of inflammation-induced reactive gliosis by macrophage depletion abolishes SHH activation
162 s in the cerebellum and cerebral cortex, and gliosis caused by CysB deficiency, are rescued by CysC o
166 s, we propose that trauma-triggered reactive gliosis could exert both beneficial and deleterious effe
167 n loss, loss of poly(PR)-positive cells, and gliosis, culminating in motor and memory impairments.
169 nje cell loss, axonal spheroids and reactive gliosis, demonstrating that there is not a significant d
170 anolide as a potential treatment for diverse gliosis-dependent central nervous system traumatic injur
171 PPA in modulating hNSC patterning leading to gliosis, disturbed neuro-circuitry, and inflammatory res
173 contrast, the microdialysis probes produced gliosis extending 200-300 microm from the track, which w
175 NS cellular infiltration, demyelination, and gliosis for 12 days with CYM-5442, vehicle, or fingolimo
179 -associated protein-2 staining) and reactive gliosis (glial fibrillary acidic protein and CD11b stain
180 demyelinating lesion causes upregulation of gliosis, glial scar formation, and heightened expression
181 Although neuropathological hallmarks such as gliosis, globoid cells and psychosine accumulation are p
182 a cortical freeze injury to induce reactive gliosis in a Gli-luciferase reporter mouse, we show that
183 expression exacerbated Abeta deposition and gliosis in AD mouse models and impaired hippocampal neur
184 hh signaling and astrocyte-mediated reactive gliosis in adults, raising the possibility that this pat
185 PO), a biomarker of microglial and astrocyte gliosis in brain degeneration, in the context of retinal
186 diseases characterized by neuronal loss and gliosis in cardinal brain regions, as well as the abnorm
187 the role of endothelin-1 (ET-1) in reactive gliosis in corpus callosum after lysolecithin (LPC)-indu
188 e severe neuronal loss and marked astrocytic gliosis in every case, whereas the entorhinal cortex is
189 , eyedrops, P = 0.03, Student's t test), and gliosis in Muller cells (at 6 mo, using SPION-glial fibr
193 ubacute necrotizing encephalomyelopathy with gliosis in several brain regions that usually results in
199 revealed massive loss of Purkinje cells and gliosis in the cerebellum, and secondary accumulation of
200 s of brain tissue and dura revealed reactive gliosis in the cortex underlying the electrodes and exte
204 of 85 years) characterized by cell loss and gliosis in the hippocampus that is not explained by Alzh
208 a in rodents, we found evidence of increased gliosis in the mediobasal hypothalamus of obese humans,
212 al, reduced oxidative stress, and attenuated gliosis in the spinal cord, as well as a dramatic decrea
213 ted uneven, focally severe neuronal loss and gliosis in the substantia nigra pars compacta, without L
214 e develop neuronal loss and intense reactive gliosis in the thalamus, as seen in humans with FFI.
217 d excitotoxin-induced neuronal cell loss and gliosis in wild-type mice when administered systemically
221 expected attenuated morphological markers of gliosis, increased mRNA levels for proinflammatory cytok
222 ce results directly or indirectly in midline gliosis, increased Slit2, and complete CC agenesis.
223 mals demonstrated that constitutive reactive gliosis induced by deletion of Lhx2 reduced rates of ong
224 Elimination of TRPC1 facilitated Muller gliosis induced by the elevation of intraocular pressure
226 stablished commonalities, astrocyte reactive gliosis is a highly heterogeneous state in which astrocy
233 nt negative result, it can be concluded that gliosis is not a feature of BD; neither is there neuropa
235 Celecoxib administration in the presence of gliosis labeled by TSPO V(T) is associated with greater
240 esults indicate that mIL-6-mediated reactive gliosis may be beneficial early in the disease process b
241 sease in humanized mice was characterized by gliosis, meningitis, and meningoencephalitis, and glial
242 xhibit white matter abnormalities, extensive gliosis, microglia-mediated neuroinflammation, and an ex
243 , and formation of new synapses; Muller cell gliosis, migration, and scarring; blood vessel loss; and
245 8%), lacrimal gland choristoma (n = 2; 5%), gliosis (n = 1; 3%), nevus (n = 1; 3%), hemorrhage (n =
246 tumours (n=33, 50%), followed by dysplasia, gliosis (n=11, each) and hippocampus sclerosis (n=9).
247 and markers for cell proliferation, reactive gliosis, neuronal maturation, and synaptogenesis in the
248 isoform expression patterns in glioblastoma, gliosis, non-tumor brain and neural progenitor cells by
249 We studied the anatomical remodeling and gliosis of retinal Muller cells in the rd/rd mouse model
251 in Grn(+/-) mice occurred in the absence of gliosis or increased expression of tumor necrosis factor
255 ment; (3) evidence of hypoxia; (4) brainstem gliosis (particularly the nTS and DMNV); and (5) 5-HT ab
256 aused further neurodegeneration, Muller cell gliosis, progenitor proliferation, and microglia reactiv
257 requirement for TLR2 signaling in regulating gliosis, proinflammatory mediators, and oxidative stress
258 IL-1Ra demonstrated any observable effect on gliosis, protease-resistant prion protein (PrPres) forma
259 ng IL-1Ra, there was no observable effect on gliosis, PrPres formation, disease tempo, pathology, or
260 els with reduced neuronal-axonal density and gliosis (r = 0.72, P < 0.002 in the multivariate model);
261 poglycemia during brain development, such as gliosis, reactive neurogenesis, or disruption of normal
262 ular phenomena including attenuated reactive gliosis, reduced microglial activation, and decreased ox
263 etinal injuries with calcification and focal gliosis, renal parenchymal damage and liver lobular infl
264 n of DNA damage in the cortex accompanied by gliosis, resulting in increased mortality of aging mutan
266 eport that the mouse mutant ingls (infantile gliosis) results from a missense mutation in Vac14 that
267 ss of photoreceptor outer segments, reactive gliosis, retinal detachment, and reduced retinal functio
268 with continued HFD feeding, inflammation and gliosis returned permanently to the mediobasal hypothala
269 f gliosis to medication targeting effects of gliosis should be applied in early development of novel
271 to retinal stress, acute-phase response, and gliosis, suggesting that IGF-I altered normal retinal ho
272 h rapamycin showed reduced signs of reactive gliosis, suggesting that rapamycin could be used to harn
274 erized by accumulation of misfolded protein, gliosis, synaptic dysfunction, and ultimately neuronal l
275 eration in the formation of amyloid plaques, gliosis, synaptic loss, or cognitive behavioral deficits
276 ce exhibited photoresponsive dysfunction and gliosis that correlated with decreased levels of retinal
277 ue causes a penetration injury that triggers gliosis (the activation and proliferation of glial cells
278 ed medicine approach of matching a marker of gliosis to medication targeting effects of gliosis shoul
281 ne levels were independently associated with gliosis, vasculopathy, and edema (r = 0.75, P < 0.004 in
282 cell pathologies can manifest as ventricular gliosis, ventricle enlargement, or ventricle stenosis.
289 neurobehavioral performance, myelination and gliosis were assessed in noggin-treated pups compared wi
290 eurobehavioural performance, myelination and gliosis were assessed in pups treated with cyclooxygenas
291 alpha; and cell-infiltration, cell-death and gliosis were compared between treated-pups and vehicle-t
294 odel of acute neurodegeneration and reactive gliosis, which was induced by intrahippocampal injection
295 beta amyloidosis progressed with exacerbated gliosis, while genes commonly altered in the 3xTg-AD-H a
296 mmatory environment and a potent mediator of gliosis with a range of nonimmune functions in the CNS,
297 y identification of microscopic necrosis and gliosis with preOL maturation arrest, a common form of W
298 oss showed 3-10-fold stimulation of reactive gliosis, with an increased astrocyte cell population and