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Structure and function of the ependymal barrier and diseases associated with ependyma disruption
- Source :
- Tissue Barriers
- Publication Year :
- 2013
-
Abstract
- The neuroepithelium is a germinal epithelium containing progenitor cells that produce almost all of the central nervous system cells, including the ependyma. The neuroepithelium and ependyma constitute barriers containing polarized cells covering the embryonic or mature brain ventricles, respectively; therefore, they separate the cerebrospinal fluid that fills cavities from the developing or mature brain parenchyma. As barriers, the neuroepithelium and ependyma play key roles in the central nervous system development processes and physiology. These roles depend on mechanisms related to cell polarity, sensory primary cilia, motile cilia, tight junctions, adherens junctions and gap junctions, machinery for endocytosis and molecule secretion, and water channels. Here, the role of both barriers related to the development of diseases, such as neural tube defects, ciliary dyskinesia, and hydrocephalus, is reviewed.
- Subjects :
- Pathology
medicine.medical_specialty
Histology
Ciliary dyskinesia
Review
Biology
Biochemistry
Adherens junction
Ependyma
Cell polarity
medicine
aquaporin 4
development
Tight junction
Neural tube
cilia
Cell Biology
Cell biology
Neuroepithelial cell
medicine.anatomical_structure
astrocyte reaction
neural tube defects
Motile cilium
hydrocephalus
cell junctions
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 21688362
- Volume :
- 2
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Tissue barriers
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....362ca6ee506eda276048571567293e59