Astrocytes help form the physical structure of the brain, and are thought to play a number of active roles, including the secretion or absorption of neural transmitters and maintenance of the blood–brain barrier. The concept of a
tripartite synapse has been proposed, referring to the tight relationship occurring at synapses among a presynaptic element, a postsynaptic element, and a glial element. •
Structural: They are involved in the physical structuring of the brain. Astrocytes get their name because they are star-shaped. They are the most abundant glial cells in the brain that are closely associated with neuronal synapses. They regulate the transmission of electrical impulses within the brain. •
Glycogen fuel reserve buffer: Astrocytes contain
glycogen and are capable of
gluconeogenesis. The astrocytes next to neurons in the
frontal cortex and
hippocampus store and release glucose. Thus, astrocytes can fuel neurons with glucose during periods of high rate of glucose consumption and glucose shortage. A recent research on rats suggests there may be a connection between this activity and physical exercise. •
Metabolic support: They provide neurons with nutrients such as
lactate. •
Glucose sensing: normally associated with neurons, the detection of interstitial glucose levels within the brain is also controlled by astrocytes. Astrocytes
in vitro become activated by low glucose and are
in vivo this activation increases gastric emptying to increase digestion. •
Blood–brain barrier: The astrocyte endfeet processes encircling
endothelial cells were thought to aid in the maintenance of the
blood–brain barrier, and recent research indicates that they do play a substantial role, along with the
tight junctions and
basal lamina. However, it has recently been shown that astrocyte activity is linked to blood flow in the brain, and that this is what is actually being measured in fMRI. •
Transmitter uptake and release: Astrocytes express plasma membrane transporters for several neurotransmitters, including
glutamate, ATP, and
GABA. More recently, astrocytes were shown to release glutamate or
ATP in a vesicular, Ca2+-dependent manner. (This has been disputed for hippocampal astrocytes.) •
Regulation of ion concentration in the extracellular space: Astrocytes express
potassium channels at a high density. When neurons are active, they
release potassium, increasing the local extracellular concentration. Because astrocytes are highly permeable to potassium, they rapidly clear the excess accumulation in the extracellular space. If this function is interfered with, the extracellular concentration of potassium will rise, leading to neuronal depolarization by the
Goldman equation. Abnormal accumulation of extracellular potassium is well known to result in epileptic neuronal activity. •
Modulation of synaptic transmission: In the
supraoptic nucleus of the
hypothalamus, rapid changes in astrocyte morphology have been shown to affect heterosynaptic transmission between neurons. In the
hippocampus, astrocytes suppress synaptic transmission by releasing ATP, which is
hydrolyzed by
ectonucleotidases to yield
adenosine. Adenosine acts on neuronal
adenosine receptors to inhibit synaptic transmission, thereby increasing the
dynamic range available for
LTP. •
Vasomodulation: Astrocytes may serve as intermediaries in neuronal regulation of blood flow. •
Promotion of the myelinating activity of oligodendrocytes: Electrical activity in neurons causes them to release ATP, which serves as an important stimulus for myelin to form. However, the ATP does not act directly on
oligodendrocytes. Instead, it causes astrocytes to secrete cytokine leukemia inhibitory factor (LIF), a regulatory protein that promotes the myelinating activity of oligodendrocytes. This suggests that astrocytes have an executive-coordinating role in the brain. •
Nervous system repair: Upon injury to nerve cells within the central nervous system, astrocytes fill up the space to form a
glial scar, and may contribute to neural repair. The role of astrocytes in CNS regeneration following injury is not well understood though. The glial scar has traditionally been described as an impermeable barrier to regeneration, thus implicating a negative role in axon regeneration. However, recently, it was found through genetic ablation studies that astrocytes are actually required for regeneration to occur. More importantly, the authors found that the astrocyte scar is actually essential for stimulated axons (that axons that have been coaxed to grow via neurotrophic supplementation) to extend through the injured spinal cord. expression, a definition still under debate) may actually be toxic to neurons, releasing signals that can kill neurons. Much work, however, remains to elucidate their role in nervous system injury. •
Long-term potentiation: There is debate among scientists as to whether astrocytes integrate learning and memory in the hippocampus. Recently, it has been shown that engrafting human glial progenitor cell in nascent mice brains causes the cells to differentiate into astrocytes. After differentiation, these cells increase LTP and improve memory performance in the mice. •
Circadian clock: Astrocytes alone are sufficient to drive the molecular oscillations in the SCN and circadian behavior in mice, and thus can autonomously initiate and sustain complex mammalian behavior. •
The switch of the nervous system: Based on the evidence listed below, it has been recently conjectured in, that macro glia (and astrocytes in particular) act both as a lossy neurotransmitter capacitor and as the logical switch of the nervous system. I.e., macroglia either block or enable the propagation of the stimulus along the nervous system, depending on their membrane state and the level of the stimulus. Astrocytes are linked by
gap junctions, creating an electrically coupled (functional)
syncytium. Because of this ability of astrocytes to communicate with their neighbors, changes in the activity of one astrocyte can have repercussions on the activities of others that are quite distant from the original astrocyte. An influx of Ca2+ ions into astrocytes is the essential change that ultimately generates calcium waves. Because this influx is directly caused by an increase in blood flow to the brain, calcium waves are said to be a kind of
hemodynamic response function. An increase in intracellular calcium concentration can propagate outwards through this functional syncytium. Mechanisms of calcium wave propagation include diffusion of calcium ions and
IP3 through gap junctions and
extracellular ATP signalling. Calcium elevations are the primary known axis of activation in astrocytes, and are necessary and sufficient for some types of astrocytic glutamate release. Given the importance of calcium signaling in astrocytes, tight regulatory mechanisms for the progression of the spatio-temporal calcium signaling have been developed. Via mathematical analysis it has been shown that localized inflow of Ca2+ ions yields a localized raise in the cytosolic concentration of Ca2+ ions. Moreover, cytosolic Ca2+ accumulation is independent of every intracellular calcium flux and depends on the Ca2+ exchange across the membrane, cytosolic calcium diffusion, geometry of the cell, extracellular calcium perturbation, and initial concentrations. and, upon activation, release a multitude of neuroactive molecules such as
glutamate,
ATP,
nitric oxide (NO), and
prostaglandins (PG), which in turn influences neuronal excitability. The close association between astrocytes and
presynaptic and
postsynaptic terminals as well as their ability to integrate synaptic activity and release neuromodulators has been termed the
tripartite synapse.
Glutamatergic gliotransmission Some specialized astrocytes mediate
glutamatergic gliotransmission in the
central nervous system. Such cells have been called
hybrid brain cells because they exhibit both neuron-like and
glial-like properties. Unlike traditional
neurons, these
cells not only transmit electrical signals but also provide supportive roles typically associated with
glial cells, such as regulating the brain's extracellular environment and maintaining overall homeostasis. ==Clinical significance==