11 results on '"Grinberg YY"'
Search Results
2. Arrayed CRISPR reveals genetic regulators of tau aggregation, autophagy and mitochondria in Alzheimer's disease model.
- Author
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Duan L, Hu M, Tamm JA, Grinberg YY, Shen F, Chai Y, Xi H, Gibilisco L, Ravikumar B, Gautam V, Karran E, Townsend M, and Talanian RV
- Subjects
- Alzheimer Disease pathology, Brain pathology, CRISPR-Cas Systems genetics, Cell Line, Tumor, Gene Expression Regulation, Genetic Engineering, Humans, Machine Learning, Mitochondria genetics, Mitochondria pathology, Neurons, Protein Aggregation, Pathological pathology, Signal Transduction genetics, Alzheimer Disease genetics, Autophagy genetics, Models, Genetic, Protein Aggregation, Pathological genetics, tau Proteins metabolism
- Abstract
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a common neurodegenerative disease with poor prognosis. New options for drug discovery targets are needed. We developed an imaging based arrayed CRISPR method to interrogate the human genome for modulation of in vitro correlates of AD features, and used this to assess 1525 human genes related to tau aggregation, autophagy and mitochondria. This work revealed (I) a network of tau aggregation modulators including the NF-κB pathway and inflammatory signaling, (II) a correlation between mitochondrial morphology, respiratory function and transcriptomics, (III) machine learning predicted novel roles of genes and pathways in autophagic processes and (IV) individual gene function inferences and interactions among biological processes via multi-feature clustering. These studies provide a platform to interrogate underexplored aspects of AD biology and offer several specific hypotheses for future drug discovery efforts.
- Published
- 2021
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3. MEK1/2 activity modulates TREM2 cell surface recruitment.
- Author
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Schapansky J, Grinberg YY, Osiecki DM, Freeman EA, Walker SG, Karran E, Gopalakrishnan SM, and Talanian RV
- Subjects
- Benzimidazoles pharmacology, Benzothiazoles pharmacology, Cell Membrane drug effects, Colchicine pharmacology, Gene Expression Regulation, High-Throughput Screening Assays, Humans, Interferon-gamma pharmacology, Interleukins pharmacology, MAP Kinase Kinase 1 antagonists & inhibitors, MAP Kinase Kinase 1 metabolism, MAP Kinase Kinase 2 antagonists & inhibitors, MAP Kinase Kinase 2 metabolism, Membrane Glycoproteins metabolism, Microglia cytology, Microglia drug effects, Nitriles pharmacology, Primary Cell Culture, Pyridones pharmacology, Pyrimidinones pharmacology, Quinazolines pharmacology, RNA, Small Interfering genetics, RNA, Small Interfering metabolism, Receptors, Immunologic metabolism, Signal Transduction, THP-1 Cells, Transforming Growth Factor beta pharmacology, Zearalenone analogs & derivatives, Zearalenone pharmacology, Cell Membrane metabolism, MAP Kinase Kinase 1 genetics, MAP Kinase Kinase 2 genetics, Membrane Glycoproteins genetics, Microglia metabolism, Receptors, Immunologic genetics, Small Molecule Libraries pharmacology
- Abstract
Rare sequence variants in the microglial cell surface receptor TREM2 have been shown to increase the risk for Alzheimer's disease (AD). Disease-linked TREM2 mutations seem to confer a partial loss of function, and increasing TREM2 cell surface expression and thereby its function(s) might have therapeutic benefit in AD. However, druggable targets that could modulate microglial TREM2 surface expression are not known. To identify such targets, we conducted a screen of small molecule compounds with known pharmacology using human myeloid cells, searching for those that enhance TREM2 protein at the cell surface. Inhibitors of the kinases MEK1/2 displayed the strongest and most consistent increases in cell surface TREM2 protein, identifying a previously unreported pathway for TREM2 regulation. Unexpectedly, inhibitors of the downstream effector ERK kinases did not have the same effect, suggesting that noncanonical MEK signaling regulates TREM2 trafficking. In addition, siRNA knockdown experiments confirmed that decreased MEK1 and MEK2 were required for this recruitment. In iPSC-derived microglia, MEK inhibition increased cell surface TREM2 only modestly, so various cytokines were used to alter iPSC microglia phenotype, making cells more sensitive to MEK inhibitor-induced TREM2 recruitment. Of those tested, only IFN-gamma priming prior to MEK inhibitor treatment resulted in greater TREM2 recruitment. These data identify the first known mechanisms for increasing surface TREM2 protein and TREM2-regulated function in human myeloid cells and are the first to show a role for MEK1/MEK2 signaling in TREM2 activity., Competing Interests: Conflict of interest The authors declare that they have no conflict of interests with the contents of this article. All authors are employees of AbbVie. The design, study conduct, and financial support for this research were provided by AbbVie. AbbVie participated in the interpretation of data, review, and approval of the publication., (Copyright © 2020 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
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4. Continuous Inhalation Exposure to Fungal Allergen Particulates Induces Lung Inflammation While Reducing Innate Immune Molecule Expression in the Brainstem.
- Author
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Peng X, Madany AM, Jang JC, Valdez JM, Rivas Z, Burr AC, Grinberg YY, Nordgren TM, Nair MG, Cocker D, Carson MJ, and Lo DD
- Subjects
- Animals, Antigens, CD metabolism, Arginase metabolism, Disease Models, Animal, Inhalation Exposure, Interleukin-6 metabolism, Male, Mice, Mice, Inbred C57BL, NADPH Oxidase 2 metabolism, Nitric Oxide Synthase Type II metabolism, RNA, Messenger metabolism, Allergens toxicity, Brain Stem metabolism, Fungi chemistry, Immunity, Innate physiology, Pneumonia etiology, Pneumonia pathology
- Abstract
Continuous exposure to aerosolized fine (particle size ≤2.5 µm) and ultrafine (particle size ≤0.1 µm) particulates can trigger innate inflammatory responses in the lung and brain depending on particle composition. Most studies of manmade toxicants use inhalation exposure routes, whereas most studies of allergens use soluble solutions administered via intranasal or injection routes. Here, we tested whether continuous inhalation exposure to aerosolized Alternaria alternata particulates (a common fungal allergen associated with asthma) would induce innate inflammatory responses in the lung and brain. By designing a new environmental chamber able to control particle size distribution and mass concentration, we continuously exposed adult mice to aerosolized ultrafine Alternaria particulates for 96 hr. Despite induction of innate immune responses in the lung, induction of innate immune responses in whole brain samples was not detected by quantitative polymerase chain reaction or flow cytometry. However, exposure did trigger decreases in Arginase 1, inducible nitric oxide synthase, and tumor necrosis factor alpha mRNA in the brainstem samples containing the central nervous system respiratory circuit (the dorsal respiratory group, ventral respiratory group, and the pre-Bötzinger and Bötzinger complexes). In addition, a significant decrease in the percentage of Toll-like receptor 2-expressing brainstem microglia was detected by flow cytometry. Histologic analysis revealed a significant decrease in Iba1 but not glial fibrillary acidic protein immunoreactivity in both the brainstem and the hippocampus. Together these data indicate that inhalation exposure to a natural fungal allergen under conditions sufficient to induce lung inflammation surprisingly causes reductions in baseline expression of select innate immune molecules (similar to that observed during endotoxin tolerance) in the region of the central nervous system controlling respiration.
- Published
- 2018
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5. Intranasally administered IGF-1 inhibits spreading depression in vivo.
- Author
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Grinberg YY, Zitzow LA, and Kraig RP
- Subjects
- Administration, Intranasal, Animals, Cortical Spreading Depression physiology, Humans, Male, Nasal Mucosa cytology, Nasal Mucosa drug effects, Neocortex cytology, Neocortex physiology, Neuroglia cytology, Neuroglia drug effects, Potassium Chloride, Random Allocation, Rats, Wistar, Cortical Spreading Depression drug effects, Insulin-Like Growth Factor I administration & dosage, Neocortex drug effects, Neuroprotective Agents administration & dosage
- Abstract
Spreading depression (SD) is a wave of cellular depolarization that travels slowly through susceptible gray matter brain areas. SD is the most likely cause of migraine aura and perhaps migraine pain, and is a well-accepted animal model of migraine. Identification of therapeutics that can prevent SD may have clinical relevance toward migraine treatment. Here we show that insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) significantly inhibited neocortical SD in vivo after intranasal delivery to rats. A single dose of IGF-1 inhibited SD within an hour, and continued to protect for at least seven days thereafter. A two-week course of IGF-1, administered every third day, further decreased SD susceptibility and showed no aberrant effects on glial activation, nasal mucosa, or serum markers of toxicity. SD begets SD in vitro by mechanisms that involve microglial activation. We add to this relationship by showing that recurrent SD in vivo increased susceptibility to subsequent SD, and that intervention with IGF-1 significantly interrupted this pathology. These findings support nasal administration of IGF-1 as a novel intervention capable of mitigating SD susceptibility, and as a result, potentially migraine., (Copyright © 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2017
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6. Differential detection of impact site versus rotational site injury by magnetic resonance imaging and microglial morphology in an unrestrained mild closed head injury model.
- Author
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Hernandez A, Donovan V, Grinberg YY, Obenaus A, and Carson MJ
- Subjects
- Animals, Head Injuries, Closed metabolism, Male, Mice, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Mice, Transgenic, Microglia metabolism, Microscopy, Confocal methods, Disease Models, Animal, Head Injuries, Closed pathology, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Microglia pathology
- Abstract
Seventy-five percent of all traumatic brain injuries are mild and do not cause readily visible abnormalities on routine medical imaging making it difficult to predict which individuals will develop unwanted clinical sequelae. Microglia are brain-resident macrophages and early responders to brain insults. Their activation is associated with changes in morphology or expression of phenotypic markers including P2Y12 and major histocompatibility complex class II. Using a murine model of unrestrained mild closed head injury (mCHI), we used microglia as reporters of acute brain injury at sites of impact versus sites experiencing rotational stress 24 h post-mCHI. Consistent with mild injury, a modest 20% reduction in P2Y12 expression was detected by quantitative real-time PCR (qPCR) analysis but only in the impacted region of the cortex. Furthermore, neither an influx of blood-derived immune cells nor changes in microglial expression of CD45, TREM1, TREM2, major histocompatibility complex class II or CD40 were detected. Using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), small reductions in T2 weighted values were observed but only near the area of impact and without overt tissue damage (blood deposition, edema). Microglial morphology was quantified without cryosectioning artifacts using ScaleA(2) clarified brains from CX3CR1-green fluorescence protein (GFP) mice. The cortex rostral to the mCHI impact site receives greater rotational stress but neither MRI nor molecular markers of microglial activation showed significant changes from shams in this region. However, microglia in this rostral region did display signs of morphologic activation equivalent to that observed in severe CHI. Thus, mCHI-triggered rotational stress is sufficient to cause injuries undetectable by routine MRI that could result in altered microglial surveillance of brain homeostasis. Acute changes in microglial morphology reveal brain responses to unrestrained mild traumatic brain injury In areas subjected to rotational stress distant from impact site In the absence of detectable changes in standard molecular indicators of brain damage, inflammation or microglial activation. That might result in decreased surveillance of brain function and increased susceptibility to subsequent brain insults., (© 2016 The Authors. Journal of Neurochemistry published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of International Society for Neurochemistry.)
- Published
- 2016
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7. Insulin-like growth factor-1 abrogates microglial oxidative stress and TNF-α responses to spreading depression.
- Author
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Grinberg YY, Dibbern ME, Levasseur VA, and Kraig RP
- Subjects
- Animals, Electrophysiological Phenomena, Female, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted, Immunohistochemistry, Microscopy, Confocal, Neurons drug effects, Oligodendroglia drug effects, Organ Culture Techniques, Pregnancy, Rats, Rats, Wistar, Reactive Oxygen Species, Receptors, Tumor Necrosis Factor, Type I genetics, Receptors, Tumor Necrosis Factor, Type I metabolism, Tissue Fixation, Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha physiology, Cortical Spreading Depression drug effects, Insulin-Like Growth Factor I pharmacology, Microglia drug effects, Oxidative Stress drug effects, Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha metabolism
- Abstract
Spreading depression (SD), the most likely cause of migraine aura and perhaps migraine, occurs with increased oxidative stress (OS). SD increases reactive oxygen species (ROS), and ROS, in turn, can signal to increase neuronal excitability,which includes increased SD susceptibility. SD also elevates tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α), which increases neuronal excitability. Accordingly, we probed for the cellular origin of OS from SD and its relationship to TNF-α, which might promote SD, using rat hippocampal slice cultures. We observed significantly increased OS from SD in astrocytes and microglia but not in neurons or oligodendrocytes. Since insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) mitigates OS from SD, we determined the cell types responsible for this effect. We found that IGF-1 significantly decreased microglial but not astrocytic OS from SD. We also show that IGF-1 abrogated the SD-induced TNF-α increase. Furthermore, TNF-α application increased microglial but not astrocytic OS, an effect abrogated by IGF-1. Next,we showed that SD increased SD susceptibility, and does so via TNF-α. This work suggests that microglia promote SD via increased and interrelated ROS and TNF-α signaling. Thus, IGF-1 mitigation of microglial ROS and TNF-α responses maybe targets for novel therapeutics development to prevent SD, and perhaps migraine., (2013 International Society for Neurochemistry)
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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8. Insulin-like growth factor-1 lowers spreading depression susceptibility and reduces oxidative stress.
- Author
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Grinberg YY, van Drongelen W, and Kraig RP
- Subjects
- Action Potentials drug effects, Analysis of Variance, Animals, Animals, Newborn, Biophysics, CA3 Region, Hippocampal drug effects, CA3 Region, Hippocampal physiology, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Electric Stimulation, Female, Fluorescent Dyes metabolism, Hydrogen Peroxide pharmacology, Insulin pharmacology, Male, Organ Culture Techniques, Oxidants pharmacology, Phosphopyruvate Hydratase metabolism, Rats, Rats, Wistar, Time Factors, Biophysical Phenomena drug effects, Evoked Potentials drug effects, Insulin-Like Growth Factor I pharmacology, Oxidative Stress drug effects
- Abstract
Spreading depression (SD), the likely cause of migraine aura and perhaps migraine, is triggered by widespread and unfettered neuronal hyperexcitability. Migraine and the initiating hyperexcitability of seizure, which involve oxidative stress (OS), are likely interrelated. Environmental enrichment (EE) decreases seizure and can reduce migraine. EE's well-characterized neuroprotective effect involves insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1). Accordingly, we asked if IGF-1 could mitigate the hyperexcitability that initiates SD using rat hippocampal slice cultures. We demonstrate that IGF-1 significantly decreased SD susceptibility and related OS. We mimicked OS of SD and observed that IGF-1 abolished hyperexcitability from OS. Application of an antioxidant significantly decreased SD susceptibility and co-administration of an antioxidant with IGF-1 produced no additive effect, whereas an oxidizer significantly increased SD, and this effect was abrogated by IGF-1. Moreover, IGF-1 significantly decreased baseline OS, despite seemingly paradoxically increasing CA3 bursting. These results suggest that IGF-1 increased endogenous antioxidants to levels sufficient to buffer against the OS of SD. Insulin similarly mitigated SD susceptibility, but required a far greater dose. Since brain IGF-1 increases with EE, and, like insulin, independently functions as an EE mimetic, we suggest that EE mimetics are a novel source of therapeutics for SD, and by extension, migraine., (© 2012 The Authors. Journal of Neurochemistry © 2012 International Society for Neurochemistry.)
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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9. Pregnant serum induces neuroinflammation and seizure activity via TNFα.
- Author
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Cipolla MJ, Pusic AD, Grinberg YY, Chapman AC, Poynter ME, and Kraig RP
- Subjects
- Animals, Blood-Brain Barrier drug effects, Blood-Brain Barrier metabolism, Female, Inflammation Mediators metabolism, Microglia physiology, Pregnancy, Rats, Rats, Wistar, Serum, Signal Transduction physiology, Evoked Potentials physiology, Hippocampus physiopathology, Neurons physiology, Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha metabolism
- Abstract
Preeclampsia is a hypertensive disorder of pregnancy that affects many organs including the brain. Neurological complications occur during preeclampsia, the most serious of which is seizure known as eclampsia. Although preeclampsia can precede the eclamptic seizure, it often occurs during normal pregnancy, suggesting that processes associated with normal pregnancy can promote neuronal excitability. Here we investigated whether circulating inflammatory mediators that are elevated late in gestation when seizure also occurs are hyperexcitable to neuronal tissue. Evoked field potentials were measured in hippocampal slices in which control horse serum that slices are normally grown in, was replaced with serum from nonpregnant or late-pregnant Wistar rats for 48 h. We found that serum from pregnant, but not nonpregnant rats, caused hyperexcitability to hippocampal neurons and seizure activity that was abrogated by inhibition of tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFα) signaling. Additionally, application of TNFα mimicked this increased excitability. Pregnant serum also caused morphological changes in microglia characteristic of activation, and increased TNFα mRNA expression that was not seen with exposure to nonpregnant serum. However, TNFα protein was not found to be elevated in pregnant serum itself, suggesting that other circulating factors during pregnancy caused activation of hippocampal slice cells to produce a TNFα-mediated increase in neuronal excitability. Lastly, although pregnant serum caused neuroinflammation and hyperexcitability of hippocampal slices, it did not increase blood-brain barrier permeability, nor were pregnant rats from which the serum was taken undergoing seizure. Thus, the BBB has an important role in protecting the brain from circulating neuroinflammatory mediators that are hyperexcitable to the brain during pregnancy. These studies provide novel insight into the underlying cause of eclampsia without elevated blood pressure and the protective role of the BBB that prevents exposure of the brain to hyperexcitable factors., (Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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10. Modeling neural immune signaling of episodic and chronic migraine using spreading depression in vitro.
- Author
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Pusic AD, Grinberg YY, Mitchell HM, and Kraig RP
- Subjects
- Animals, Chronic Disease, Hippocampus cytology, Hippocampus immunology, Signal Transduction immunology, Migraine Disorders immunology, Migraine Disorders pathology, Models, Immunological, Models, Neurological, Neurons immunology, Neurons pathology
- Abstract
Migraine and its transformation to chronic migraine are healthcare burdens in need of improved treatment options. We seek to define how neural immune signaling modulates the susceptibility to migraine, modeled in vitro using spreading depression (SD), as a means to develop novel therapeutic targets for episodic and chronic migraine. SD is the likely cause of migraine aura and migraine pain. It is a paroxysmal loss of neuronal function triggered by initially increased neuronal activity, which slowly propagates within susceptible brain regions. Normal brain function is exquisitely sensitive to, and relies on, coincident low-level immune signaling. Thus, neural immune signaling likely affects electrical activity of SD, and therefore migraine. Pain perception studies of SD in whole animals are fraught with difficulties, but whole animals are well suited to examine systems biology aspects of migraine since SD activates trigeminal nociceptive pathways. However, whole animal studies alone cannot be used to decipher the cellular and neural circuit mechanisms of SD. Instead, in vitro preparations where environmental conditions can be controlled are necessary. Here, it is important to recognize limitations of acute slices and distinct advantages of hippocampal slice cultures. Acute brain slices cannot reveal subtle changes in immune signaling since preparing the slices alone triggers: pro-inflammatory changes that last days, epileptiform behavior due to high levels of oxygen tension needed to vitalize the slices, and irreversible cell injury at anoxic slice centers. In contrast, we examine immune signaling in mature hippocampal slice cultures since the cultures closely parallel their in vivo counterpart with mature trisynaptic function; show quiescent astrocytes, microglia, and cytokine levels; and SD is easily induced in an unanesthetized preparation. Furthermore, the slices are long-lived and SD can be induced on consecutive days without injury, making this preparation the sole means to-date capable of modeling the neuroimmune consequences of chronic SD, and thus perhaps chronic migraine. We use electrophysiological techniques and non-invasive imaging to measure neuronal cell and circuit functions coincident with SD. Neural immune gene expression variables are measured with qPCR screening, qPCR arrays, and, importantly, use of cDNA preamplification for detection of ultra-low level targets such as interferon-gamma using whole, regional, or specific cell enhanced (via laser dissection microscopy) sampling. Cytokine cascade signaling is further assessed with multiplexed phosphoprotein related targets with gene expression and phosphoprotein changes confirmed via cell-specific immunostaining. Pharmacological and siRNA strategies are used to mimic and modulate SD immune signaling.
- Published
- 2011
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11. Spreading depression sends microglia on Lévy flights.
- Author
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Grinberg YY, Milton JG, and Kraig RP
- Subjects
- Animals, Cell Death drug effects, Cell Shape drug effects, Hippocampus pathology, Microglia drug effects, Neurons drug effects, Neurons pathology, Paracrine Communication drug effects, Plant Lectins pharmacology, Rats, Synapses drug effects, Synapses pathology, Cell Movement drug effects, Microglia pathology, Migraine Disorders pathology
- Abstract
Spreading depression (SD) is thought to cause migraine aura, and perhaps migraine, and includes a transient loss of synaptic activity preceded and followed by increased neuronal excitability. Activated microglia influence neuronal activity and play an important role in homeostatic synaptic scaling via release of cytokines. Furthermore, enhanced neuronal function activates microglia to not only secrete cytokines but also to increase the motility of their branches, with somata remaining stationary. While SD also increases the release of cytokines from microglia, the effects on microglial movement from its synaptic activity fluctuations are unknown. Accordingly, we used time-lapse imaging of rat hippocampal slice cultures to probe for microglial movement associated with SD. We observed that in uninjured brain whole microglial cells moved. The movements were well described by the type of Lévy flight known to be associated with an optimal search pattern. Hours after SD, when synaptic activity rose, microglial cell movement was significantly increased. To test how synaptic activity influenced microglial movement, we enhanced neuronal activity with chemical long-term potentiation or LPS and abolished it with TTX. We found that microglial movement was significantly decreased by enhanced neuronal activity and significantly increased by activity blockade. Finally, application of glutamate and ATP to mimic restoration of synaptic activity in the presence of TTX stopped microglial movement that was otherwise seen with TTX. Thus, synaptic activity retains microglial cells in place and an absence of synaptic activity sends them off to influence wider expanses of brain. Perhaps increased microglial movements after SD are a long-lasting, and thus maladaptive, response in which these cells increase neuronal activity via contact or paracrine signaling, which results in increased susceptibility of larger brain areas to SD. If true, then targeting mechanisms that retard activity-dependent microglial Lévy flights may be a novel means to reduce susceptibility to migraine.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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