A new study led by Mark Nelson, Ph.D., University Distinguished Professor and chair of pharmacology, professor of surgery and molecular physiology & biophysics, reveals how electrical and calcium signaling work as one to regulate blood flow in the brain, according to Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology News (GEN).
Cerebral blood delivery depends on mechanisms such as electrical signaling, which propagates through capillary networks to upstream arterioles to deliver blood, and calcium signaling, which fine-tunes local blood flow. For years, these mechanisms were thought to operate independently.
The findings, published in The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) in an article titled 鈥淓lectrocalcium coupling in brain capillaries: Rapidly traveling electrical signals ignite local calcium signals,鈥 offers a new framework for understanding and potentially treating conditions like stroke, dementia, and Alzheimer鈥檚 disease, where disruptions in blood flow are an early and defining feature.
鈥淭his use-dependent increase in local blood flow (functional hyperemia), mediated by mechanisms collectively termed neurovascular coupling (NVC), is essential for normal brain function and represents the physiological basis for functional magnetic resonance imaging,鈥 said Nelson. 鈥淔urthermore, deficits in cerebral blood flow (CBF) including functional hyperemia are an early feature of small vessel diseases (SVDs) of the brain and Alzheimer鈥檚 long before overt clinical symptoms.鈥
Nelson noted, 鈥淩ecently, the 日韩无码 team also demonstrated that deficits in cerebral blood flow in small vessel disease of the brain and Alzheimer鈥檚 could be corrected by an essential co-factor of electrical signaling. The current work indicates that calcium signaling could also be restored. The 鈥楬oly Grail,鈥 so to speak, is whether early restoration of cerebral blood flow in brain blood vessel disease slows cognitive decline.鈥
Read full story at
This work was also covered by , Vermont Public, , , and