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Astrocyte morphology

Astrocytes are morphologically complex.Light microscopy reveals the structure of astrocytes at the cellular level.Volume electron microscopy is revealing the nanostructure of astrocytes.The molecular basis of astrocyte morphogenesis and complexity is emerging.Astrocytes undergo changes in morphology...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Trends in cell biology 2024-07, Vol.34 (7), p.547-565
Main Authors: Baldwin, Katherine T., Murai, Keith K., Khakh, Baljit S.
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Astrocytes are morphologically complex.Light microscopy reveals the structure of astrocytes at the cellular level.Volume electron microscopy is revealing the nanostructure of astrocytes.The molecular basis of astrocyte morphogenesis and complexity is emerging.Astrocytes undergo changes in morphology in diverse disease-related states. Astrocytes are predominant glial cells that tile the central nervous system (CNS). A cardinal feature of astrocytes is their complex and visually enchanting morphology, referred to as bushy, spongy, and star-like. A central precept of this review is that such complex morphological shapes evolved to allow astrocytes to contact and signal with diverse cells at a range of distances in order to sample, regulate, and contribute to the extracellular milieu, and thus participate widely in cell–cell signaling during physiology and disease. The recent use of improved imaging methods and cell-specific molecular evaluations has revealed new information on the structural organization and molecular underpinnings of astrocyte morphology, the mechanisms of astrocyte morphogenesis, and the contributions to disease states of reduced morphology. These insights have reignited interest in astrocyte morphological complexity as a cornerstone of fundamental glial biology and as a critical substrate for multicellular spatial and physiological interactions in the CNS. Astrocytes are predominant glial cells that tile the central nervous system (CNS). A cardinal feature of astrocytes is their complex and visually enchanting morphology, referred to as bushy, spongy, and star-like. A central precept of this review is that such complex morphological shapes evolved to allow astrocytes to contact and signal with diverse cells at a range of distances in order to sample, regulate, and contribute to the extracellular milieu, and thus participate widely in cell–cell signaling during physiology and disease. The recent use of improved imaging methods and cell-specific molecular evaluations has revealed new information on the structural organization and molecular underpinnings of astrocyte morphology, the mechanisms of astrocyte morphogenesis, and the contributions to disease states of reduced morphology. These insights have reignited interest in astrocyte morphological complexity as a cornerstone of fundamental glial biology and as a critical substrate for multicellular spatial and physiological interactions in the CNS.
ISSN:0962-8924
1879-3088
1879-3088
DOI:10.1016/j.tcb.2023.09.006