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Sustaining microglial reparative function enhances stroke recovery - Nature

1 oră în urmă
2 minute min
Elena Dumitrescu
Nature (2026) Cite this article Neurological symptoms after brain injury can remain as lifelong detrimental sequelae because most of the spontaneous recovery response disappears within a few months after the injury1,2. Microglia have an essential role in this process; however, the cellular and molecular mechanisms that diminish spontaneous functional recovery in the brain remain unclear. Here using cellular fate analysis, we show that reparative microglia persist in the brain after a stroke even after losing their beneficial functions. In these cells, ZFP384 is identified as a pivotal transcriptional regulator that diminishes the expression of genes associated with the recovery phase, turning them into dysfunctional microglia that lose their reparative functions. Mechanistically, ZFP384 diminishes the YY1-mediated chromatin interaction necessary to induce the expression of these genes in microglia. The use of antisense oligonucleotides that target Zfp384 can sustain the broad range of neural repair effects of microglia and enhance recovery after stroke, even in the chronic phase of ischaemic stroke. Thus, therapeutics that prevent the loss of reparative immunity—the beneficial restorative functions of immune cells—can prolong functional recovery in the brain. This is a preview of subscription content, access via your institution Access Nature and 54 other Nature Portfolio journals Get Nature+, our best-value online-access subscription Receive 51 print issues and online access Prices may be subject to local taxes which are calculated during checkout
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Even the unconscious brain can learn — and predict what you’ll say next - Nature

Search author on: PubMed Google Scholar Bluesky Facebook LinkedIn Reddit Whatsapp X The brains of people under general anaesthesia continue to process words and sounds, a study finds.Credit: BSIP/UIG Via Getty People given general anaesthesia fall into a coma-like state in which their memory and perception of pain are switched off. But new data reveal that the hippocampus — a deep brain structure crucial for memory — remains remarkably active, parsing the grammar and meaning of spoken words and even anticipating what will be said next.

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