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In A Rat Model Of Stroke, Protecting Nerve Cells From Death
Friday, September 3, 2010
By: Medical News Today
MedicalNewsToday.com
A team of researchers, led by Yizheng Wang, at the Chinese
Academy of Sciences, China, has identified a way to preserve nerve cells in a
rat model of stroke.
Stroke is most commonly caused by impaired delivery of
oxygen to part of the brain as a result of disruption to the blood supply (a
condition known as ischemia). This leads to nerve cell death, although the
exact mechanisms underlying ischemic nerve cell death have not been clearly
determined. Yang and colleagues, set out to test in rats the idea that
disruption to pathways involved in protecting nerve cells from death
contributes to nerve cell death in stroke and generated data consistent with
this idea. Specifically, they found that degradation of the protein TRPC6
preceded nerve cell death in the rat model of stroke and that suppressing TRPC6
degradation prevented nerve cell death and subsequent brain damage. The authors
therefore suggest that preventing TRPC6 degradation could be a way to limit
nerve cell death after stroke.
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