In some cases, hydrocephalus can develop when the choroid plexus produces too much CSF. This can happen when there is a tumor on the choroid plexus, for example.
CSF flows from the lateral ventricles through two narrow passageways into the third ventricle. From the third ventricle, it flows down another long passageway known as the aqueduct of Sylvius into the fourth ventricle. From the fourth ventricle, it passes through three small openings called foramina and into the subarachnoid space surrounding the brain and the spinal cord. If the flow of CSF at any of these points is blocked, hydrocephalus can develop.
This is often referred to as non-communicating hydrocephalus. It has traditionally been thought that CSF is absorbed through tiny, specialized cell clusters called arachnoid villi near the top and midline of the brain. The CSF then passes through the arachnoid villi into the superior sagittal sinus, a large vein, and is absorbed into the bloodstream. Once in the bloodstream, it is carried away and filtered by the kidneys and liver in the same way as other bodily fluids.
However, more recent research has shown that CSF is also absorbed through other pathways as well. The formation of cerebrospinal fluid: Nearly a hundred years of interpretations and misinterpretations. Brain Res Rev. Choroid plexectomy for the treatment of chronic infected hydrocephalus. Childs Nerv Syst.
Transventricular and transpial absorption of cerebrospinal fluid into cerebral microvessels. Coll Antropol. The sink action of cerebrospinal fluid volume flow. Effect on brain water content. Arch Neurol. A balanced view of the cerebrospinal fluid composition and functions: Focus on adult humans.
Exp Neurol. Bulat M, Klarica M. Recent insights into a new hydrodynamics of the cerebrospinal fluid. Physical properties of cerebrospinal fluid of relevance to shunt function 2: The effect of protein upon CSF surface tension and contact angle. Br J Neurosurg. Does the cerebrospinal fluid protein concentration increase the risk of shunt complications? Anatomy and physiology of cerebrospinal fluid. Mobasheri A, Marples D. Expression of the AQP-1 water channel in normal human tissues: A semiquantitative study using tissue microarray technology.
Am J Physiol Cell Physiol. Johanson C, Johanson N. Merging transport data for choroid plexus with blood-brain barrier to model CNS homeostasis and disease more effectively. Astrocytes acquire morphological and functional characteristics of ependymal cells following disruption of ependyma in hydrocephalus. Acta Neuropathol. Clinical testing of CSF circulation. Eur J Anaesthesiol Suppl.
McComb JG. Recent research into the nature of cerebrospinal fluid formation and absorption. J Neurosurg. Exploring the virchow-robin spaces function: A unified theory of brain diseases. Surg Neurol Int. On the pacchionian bodies. J Anat. Anatomy and development of the meninges: Implications for subdural collections and CSF circulation.
Pediatr Radiol. Anatomic details of intradural channels in the parasagittal dura: A possible pathway for flow of cerebrospinal fluid. The dural entrance of cerebral bridging veins into the superior sagittal sinus: An anatomical comparison between cadavers and digital subtraction angiography. Reassessment of the pathways responsible for cerebrospinal fluid absorption in the neonate. Cell junction pathology of neural stem cells is associated with ventricular zone disruption, hydrocephalus, and abnormal neurogenesis.
J Neuropathol Exp Neurol. Adult outcome of pediatric hydrocephalus. Post-traumatic hydrocephalus: Influence of craniectomy on the CSF circulation. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry. Effect of the skull and dura on neural axis pressure-volume relationships and CSF hydrodynamics. Post-traumatic hydrocephalus. Neurol Res. Support Center Support Center. External link. This finding led to the conclusion that only a small fraction of CSF drains via the lymphatic channels.
Interestingly much RISA was drained via the cerebral perivascular spaces as well as by the passage from the subarachnoid space of olfactory lobes into the submucosal spaces of the nose and thus to the lymphatics [ 43 ]. Intravital microscopy of the exposed cervical lymph nodes during the cisternal infusion of ink revealed that particle movement was dependent on the respiratory cycle: during inspiration the speed of particle movement was 10—20 mm s -1 , while no movement was observed during the expiration phase[ 44 ].
It is important to note that the CSF and ISF spaces communicate with the cervical lymphatics via two anatomically different routes, i. Extracranial organs feature fluid exchange across the capillary bed that is driven by hydrodynamic and osmotic pressure gradients.
However, absorption of CSF into cerebral capillaries has been disputed because it was thought that the absorption of CSF is not dependent on osmotic forces. This notion was based on experiments in which dextran solutions of different osmolality were infused into the ventricles of cats at a constant pressure of 27 mmHg. The measured infusion rate, which should equal the CSF absorption rate, decreased by the same extent.
The decrease of the absorption rate was explained by the increased CSF viscosity[ 33 ]. Interestingly, a more recent animal study failed to reproduce these earlier experiments, since it was shown that 3 H 2 O from the bloodstream enters osmotically loaded cerebrospinal fluid significantly faster[ 46 ].
Since, historically, osmolality was assumed to not be relevant for CSF absorption, hydrodynamic pressure gradients would be the only driving forces for CSF drainage into the brain capillaries and post-capillary venules.
It was also assumed that any absorption would require a CSF pressure higher than the intravascular pressure and that this would cause the collapse of the vessels and prevent absorption of CSF[ 2 , 47 ]. These statements from the s and s were actually defining the understanding of CSF physiology for decades until BBB and aquaporin AQP studies clearly indicated the involvement of osmotic forces in brain water homeostasis for discussion see below.
In , Masserman calculated the rate of CSF formation in patients by measuring the time needed for the CSF pressure to return to its initial level following drainage of a standard volume of CSF by lumbar puncture[ 48 ]. After drainage of 20 to 35 mL of CSF, pressure was restored at a rate of about 0. The validity of results obtained in this way was criticized because the Masserman technique assumes that neither formation nor absorption rates are changed by alterations in pressure.
However, the absorption of CSF varies greatly with changes in intracranial pressure[ 49 , 50 ]. Modifications of the Masserman technique applied sophisticated infusion and drainage protocols, which recorded and controlled the CSF pressure during the measurement period see for example[ 51 ].
Despite numerous research efforts, more sophisticated experimental protocols did not yield CSF formation rates that differed from earlier work. The ventriculo-cisternal perfusion "Pappenheimer" technique represents a more quantitative approach for the assessment of CSF formation rate.
Inulin or other macromolecules, which pass through the ventricular space without being absorbed, are infused at a constant rate into the cerebral ventricles. CSF formation is calculated from the measurement of the extraventricular cisternal or spinal CSF concentration of inulin. It is assumed that any dilution of inulin between the inflow cannula and outflow cannula results from the admixture of freshly formed CSF.
In addition, the test procedure allows for the calculation of the CSF absorption rate from the clearance of inulin at the extraventricular site in animals the cisterna magna, in man the lumbar space [ 49 ].
An important disadvantage was that the procedure was difficult to apply in clinical settings because of its invasiveness: The hour long infusion required both a ventricular and extraventricular CSF catheter. Also, both infusion rate and infused volume exceeded the physiological range of CSF flow by far. Despite these obstacles, clinical measurements were performed in brain tumor patients who received ventricular catheters for chemotherapy purposes: In patients 9—61 years old the average flow rate was 0.
These results were confirmed in children with brain tumors[ 53 ]. Furthermore, similar data are available from hydrocephalus patients[ 54 ]. Though more precise, the ventriculocisternal or ventriculolumbar perfusion techniques yielded results remarkably close to those assessed by the Masserman technique[ 2 ].
Findings from both the Masserman and the Pappenheimer techniques were supported by neuroradiological investigations applying serial CT scans to assess the ventricular washout of metrizamide, a water soluble contrast media.
The rate of right lateral ventricular CSF formation ranged from 0. Hence, the assessment of the CSF formation and absorption rates remains a matter of debate even today. It has been suggested that a method that is less invasive than the Pappenheimer method ventriculo-cisternal perfusion and more reliable than the Masserman method is sorely needed[ 50 ]. The concept of the "third circulation" suggesting that CSF flows through the ventricles, cisterns and subarachnoid space SAS and is reabsorbed into the blood at the arachnoid villi, was introduced by Cushing in [ 57 , 58 ].
This notion was a radical departure from the contemporary view that the CSF moved by ebb and flow[ 1 ]. Since Cushing, the circulatory, bulk flow character of the CSF system has remained unquestioned by the majority of researchers.
Even recent reviews assume a directed CSF circulation through the ventricles and the subarachnoid space toward the arachnoid villi[ 1 , 5 , 32 ]. Nevertheless, as will be discussed below, this understanding of CSF circulation appears to be a rough simplification of a much more complicated situation.
Anatomically the VRS refers to a histologically-defined space, which surrounds blood vessels arterioles and venules when penetrating from the subarachnoid space into the brain tissue. Originally, it was thought that the VRS is connected to the subarachnoid space, allowing for a free fluid communication.
It was suggested that interstitial fluid may be outwardly drained along these pathways into the SAS and eventually towards the arachnoid villi[ 35 ]. Later this concept was questioned on the basis of light microscopic examinations, which depicted perivascular spaces as cul-de-sacs, open to the subarachnoid space but closed towards the parenchyma and therefore not a channel for flow[ 59 ].
The first systematic electron microscopic study of blood vessels entering the cerebral cortex confirmed this view. In addition it was reported that small arterioles entering the cortex carry with them to the point at which they become capillaries an extension of the subarachnoid space[ 60 ].
Actually, these findings, showing the obliteration of the VRS at the capillary bed, led to the rejection of the earlier theories on the existence of a perivascular CSF circulation. As discussed by others[ 61 ], these morphological findings eventually supported the general belief that the interstitial fluid ISF is stagnant in the central nervous system. Morphology of Virchow Robin and perivascular spaces.
Delineated by basal membranes of glia, pia and endothelium, the Virchow Robin space VRS depicts the space surrounding vessels penetrating into the parenchyma. The VRS is obliterated at the capillaries where the basement membranes of glia and endothelium join. The complex pial architecture may be understood as an invagination of both cortical and vessel pia into the VRS.
The pial funnel is not a regular finding. The pial sheath around arteries extends into the VRS, but becomes more fenestrated and eventually disappears at the precapillary section of the vessel. Unlike arteries as shown in this figure , veins do not possess a pial sheath inside the VRS. ISF may drain by way of an intramural pathway along the basement membranes of capillaries and arterioles into the lymphatics at the base of the skull green arrows.
It should be noted that the figure does not depict the recently suggested periarterial flow from the SAS into the parenchyma and an outward flow into the cervical lymphatics along the veins for discussion see text "Current research". Also, it is still a matter of debate whether the Virchow Robin space, extending between the outer basement membrane of the vessel and the glia, represents a fluid-filled open space see text.
The current understanding of the microscopic anatomy of the VRS is more complex Figure 1. Actually, its fine structure is built upon endothelial, pial, and glial cell layers, each of them delineated by distinct basement membranes[ 62 — 64 ].
The glial membrane glia limitans covering the brain parenchyma forms the outer wall of the VRS[ 65 ]. At the capillary bed, the basement membrane of the glia fuses with the outer vascular membrane thereby occluding the Virchow-Robin space[ 66 , 67 ]. Arterial and venous vessels running within the cortical subarachnoid space are covered with a pial cell layer, which ensheaths the vessels.
The pial sheath creates a space next to the vessel wall, which is referred to as perivascular space PVS [ 68 ]. At the site of the entrance of the cortical vessels into the VRS, their pial sheath joins with the pial cell layer covering the brain surface forming a funnel like structure, which accompanies the vessels into the VRS though for a short distance only[ 69 , 70 ]. However, the pial sheath of the arterial, but not venous, vessels extends into the VRS.
Near the capillary bed, the pial sheath becomes more and more fenestrated and leaky[ 68 ]. It is important to note that the nomenclature is not used consistently. Some authors use the terms "Virchow Robin space" and "perivascular space" as synonyms[ 71 ], while others use the terms to name different spaces as discussed above[ 72 ]. Ultrastructural electron microscopic studies agree that pial membranes separate the VRS from the cortical subarachnoid space[ 65 , 68 , 70 ].
Since electron microscopy of human brain specimens shows that the VRS and the PVS are collapsed[ 68 ], it is a matter of debate whether these histologically-characterized compartments are actually open or just potential spaces. However, studies in rodents have demonstrated the VRS filled with fluid, electron microscopic dense material[ 70 ], macrophages and other blood born inflammatory cells[ 64 , 67 ].
Possibly, different fixation procedures may explain this discrepancy: rodent brains undergo intra-vital perfusion fixation, while the studies in man have to rely on specimens, which are fixed extra-corporally. Although pial cell layers obviously separate the VRS from the cortical subarachnoid space, physiologically there is strong evidence indicating that fluid circulates along the VRS Figure 2. Following the injection of horseradish peroxidase HRP into the lateral ventricles or subarachnoid space of anesthetized cats and dogs, light microscopic examination of serial brain sections has been performed utilizing a sensitive histochemical technique tetramethylbenzidine incubation [ 73 ].
The authors reported the distribution of tracer reaction product within the VRS and along the basal laminae around capillaries. The influx into these spaces was very rapid since the intraparenchymal microvasculature was clearly outlined 6 min after the infusion of HRP.
Electron microscopy of sections incubated after 10 or 20 min of HRP circulation confirmed the paravascular location of the reaction product, which was also dispersed throughout the extracellular spaces ECS of the adjacent parenchyma.
The rapid paravascular influx of HRP could be prevented by halting or diminishing the pulsations of the cerebral arteries by aortic occlusion or by partial ligation of the brachiocephalic artery. However, it should be noted that others were not able to reproduce these findings; Krisch et al. Also, another study reported that following microinjection into the VRS or the subarachnoid space of rats, tracers e.
India ink, albumin labeled with colloidal gold, Evans blue, rhodamine remained largely in the VRS, the cortical subpial space and the core of subarachnoid trabeculae. Nevertheless, bulk flow of fluid within the VRS, around both arteries and veins, was suggested from video-densitometric measurements of fluorescently labeled albumin.
However, the observed flow was slow and its direction varied in an unpredictable way[ 71 ]. Furthermore, it was shown that, following intracerebral injection, India ink particles concentrated in the VRS, but were then rapidly ingested by perivascular cells. Notably, very little movement of carbon-labeled perivascular cells and perivascular macrophages was seen after 2 years[ 74 ].
Diagram representing fluid movements at the Virchow Robin space. Glial blue lines and pial yellow lines cell membranes enclose the VRS and control fluid exchange. Note, that it is a matter of debate whether the VRS represents an open fluid fill space see text for discussion. Both experimental and clinical evidence indicate the existence of a pathway along the basement membranes of capillaries, arterioles, and arteries for the drainage of ISF and solutes into the lymphatic system red lines and green arrows.
It is unclear, whether the subpial perivascular spaces around arteries and veins light blue serve as additional drainage pathways. Also, the proposed glymphatic pathway connecting the arterial and venous VRS with the venous perivascular space black arrows is still a matter of debate. Since there is obviously at least some circulation of CSF into and out of the VRS, it raises the question how fluid and tracers could cross the pial membranes separating the VRS from the subarachnoid space.
Ultrastructure studies have depicted the pial barrier as a delicate, sometimes single-cell layered structure[ 75 ]. There are considerable species differences: in the mouse the pial layer was found to be extremely thin, while in man its structure was significantly thicker[ 76 ].
Notably, in man the pial barrier was still described as a delicate yet apparently continuous layer of cells, which were joined by desmosomes and gap junctions but had no obvious tight junctions[ 77 ]. According to such morphological studies, it was recognized that the pia is not impermeable to fluids[ 61 ]. Since, in a similar fashion, the ependymal cell layers covering the inner ventricular surfaces of the brain are not connected by tight junctions[ 78 ], it was suggested that "CSF communicates with the ISF across the inner ependymal and outer pial surfaces of the brain"[ 61 ].
If one assumes that the flow within the VRS depends on the pulsatility of the arteries[ 73 , 79 ], hydrostatic forces may drive fluids and solutes across the pial membranes. However, while the VRS basically allows for the bi-directional exchange between CSF and ISF, no quantitative data are available that describe the extent and kinetics of such fluid movements.
Although it has been shown that pial membranes between the PVS and the SAS could prevent the exchange of larger molecules, since tracer, following intraparenchymal injection, accumulated within the PVS but was not distributed into the cisternal CSF[ 80 ]. This observation is supported by clinical findings that following aneurysmal rupture in man, red blood cells are confined to the subarachnoid space, and do not enter the VRS[ 76 ].
It has also been shown both experimentally and clinically that the PVS and possibly more importantly intramural pathways between the basement membranes of the wall of arterioles and arteries provide drainage for the ISF and waste molecules of the brain. There is experimental evidence that the para-arterial drainage pathways are connected to the lymphatics of the exterior skull base[ 81 , 82 ]. Actually, solutes and fluid may be drained along the arteries from the brain interstitium via the VRS into the cervical lymphatics[ 81 , 83 ], reviewed by Weller[ 45 ].
Supporting this notion are the immunohistochemical and confocal microscopic observations that soluble fluorescent tracers 3 kD dextran or 40 kD ovalbumin move from the brain parenchyma along the basement membranes of capillaries and arteries following its injection of into the corpus striatum of mice. This pathway may not serve for the transport of particles or cells, since fluospheres diameter 0. Clearance of solutes along this pathway could be prevented by cardiac arrest[ 83 ].
These findings are clinically significant since based upon observations in patients with cerebral amyloid angiopathy, beta-amyloid is deposited in the vascular wall of arterioles and arteries. Interestingly, the extent of amyloid deposition is so prominent that it was suggested as a natural tracer for the peri-arterial drainage pathways[ 83 ]. The peri-arterial drainage of fluids and solutes has important implications not only in neurodegenerative diseases, but in addition in immunological CNS diseases, see for comprehensive reviews[ 45 , 85 , 86 ].
Similar to arteries, veins within the subarachnoid space possess a pial sheath forming a PVS[ 64 ]. As compared to arteries, it is less clear whether venous perivascular pathways serve as a drainage pathway for ISF and interstitial solutes. Notably, injections of tracers into the brain revealed no drainage along peri-venous channels unless there is disruption of flow in cerebral amyloid angiopathy when some tracer enter the peri-venous spaces[ 87 ]. However, recent findings[ 88 ] indicate a more significant contribution of the venous perivascular route for the drainage of ISF and solutes see discussion below.
Traditionally, movement of fluids through the brain interstitial space has been attributed to diffusional processes[ 89 — 91 ], which actually are slow because of the narrowness and tortuosity of the extracellular space of the brain reviewed by[ 92 ]. Today, it is commonly accepted that "the narrow spaces between cells within the neuropil are likely to be too small to permit significant bulk flow"[ 29 ].
A recent review discusses important clinical implications regarding CNS drug delivery[ 93 ]. As commented by others[ 45 , 94 ], our current understanding includes bulk flow mechanisms for the movement and drainage of ISF along white matter tracts and the perivascular spaces. Considering the cellular architecture of pia and ependyma, it also accepted that these cellular layers represent a diffusional barrier, which actually provides a communication between ISF and CSF[ 61 ].
Experimental evidence for the existence of bulk flow mechanisms was found after microinjection of tracer into the brain. Morphological studies revealed the VRS and the perivascular spaces as channels for fluid transport, but also revealed additional spaces between fiber tracts in white matter and the subependymal layer of the ventricle. Analysis of the kinetics of removal of three radiolabeled tracers from brain tissue e.
These three test compounds differ in their diffusion coefficient by up to a factor of five but were cleared from brain according to a single exponential rate constant. This is consistent with removal by convection from a well-mixed compartment. For different regions of the brains of rats and rabbits, the ISF flow rate was estimated between 0.
Very recently it has been shown that astrocyte water transporters, i. Interestingly, such extensive water movements were indicated by earlier radiotracer experiments. For example in , following the intravenous injection of deuterium oxide a rapid distribution throughout all brain compartments was reported[ 99 ].
As a result, the significance of this work was not fully appreciated. Recently the original data on the deuterium oxide half-life in different brain compartments has been used to calculate the respective CSF fluxes by applying MRI-based volume assessments of the ventricles, the subarachnoid space and the spinal CSF spaces. This is far greater than the traditional views of CSF physiology[ ].
CSF formation at the choroid plexus occurs in two stages: passive filtration of fluid across the highly permeable capillary endothelium and a regulated secretion across the single-layered choroidal epithelium. The choroidal epithelium forms a fluid barrier since tight junctions are expressed at the apical, CSF facing, cell membrane[ ].
The rate of choroidal CSF formation is rather insensitive to osmotic and hydrostatic pressure changes in the CSF and therefore relatively independent of changes in intracranial pressure and plasma osmolarity.
Hence, water transport across the choroid plexus epithelium cannot be explained simply by an osmotic mechanism discussed in detail in[ 96 ]. Today there is agreement that choroidal CSF production is controlled by membrane transporters within the epithelium. Different transporters are expressed at the basolateral plasma facing and apical CSF facing membranes. Due to its high AQP1 expression, the apical membrane has high water permeability.
In contrast to this, the basolateral membrane lacks significant AQP1 expression[ ]. Together, these transporters expel water from the cell into the CSF space.
Little is known about the water transport at the basolateral membrane. The molecular mechanisms of choroidal CSF production are comprehensively reviewed in[ 96 , , ].
Traditionally the properties of the blood—brain barrier BBB are considered to be those of the capillary endothelium in brain. This endothelium contrasts with that elsewhere in the body by being sealed with tight junctions, having a high electrical resistance and a low permeability to polar solutes[ 89 ].
The modern understanding of BBB physiology was further improved by the discovery that cells surrounding the capillaries can control and modulate BBB functions. The role of astrocytes is of utmost interest with respect to CSF physiology, since astrocyte end-feet have been shown to cover the entire capillary surface, leaving intercellular clefts of less than 20 nm[ ]. The astrocytes, therefore, form an additional barrier surrounding the cerebral capillaries[ 98 ].
The role of astrocytes in brain water homeostasis is strongly supported by the finding that water transporting pores i. It is also important to recognize that contrary to earlier assumptions, the endothelial barrier carries no AQP4 transporters[ ].
Instead, water may cross the endothelium by diffusion, vesicular transport and, even against osmotic gradients, by means of co-transport with ions and glucose reviewed in[ 96 ]. The physiology of aquaporins AQPs and transporters in the brain has been comprehensively reviewed[ 96 , 98 , — ].
Here those aspects are discussed, which are relevant for the understanding of CSF circulation. Basically, in response to both passive osmotic and hydraulic pressure gradients, AQPs can transport water, solutes, and ions bi-directionally across a cell membrane. In comparison to diffusional transport, AQPs have significant biophysical differences.
Diffusion is non-specific and low-capacity movement, whereas water channels like the AQPs provide rapid transport and have both a high capacity and a great selectivity for the molecules being transported[ ]. More recent data in rodents have demonstrated that the precise dynamics of the astroglia-mediated brain water regulation of the CNS is dependent on the interactions between water channels and ion channels. Their anchoring by other proteins allows for the formation of macromolecular complexes in specific cellular domains reviewed in[ ].
Currently, at least 14 different aquaporins have been identified[ 97 , ]. At least six have been reported in the brain[ , ]: AQP 1, 4, 5 specifically water permeable , AQP3 and 9 permeable for water and small solutes and AQP8 permeable for ions [ ]. Positron emission tomography techniques for imaging of AQP4 in the human brain are currently being developed[ ]. Structural and functional data suggests that the permeability of AQP channels can be regulated and that it might also be affected in brain pathologies reviewed by[ , ].
As a result of the dynamic regulation, AQP channel permeability or AQP channel subcellular localization may change within seconds or minutes leading to immediate changes in the membrane permeability. These changes will alter AQP expression within hours or days.
AQPs may be regulated under pathological conditions: For example AQP1 and AQP4 are strongly upregulated in brain tumors and in injured brain tissue[ ], AQP5 is down-regulated during ischemia but up-regulated following brain injury[ ].
Notably, AQP1 is expressed in vascular endothelial cells throughout the body but is absent in the cerebrovascular endothelium, except in the circumventricular organs[ ]. As already discussed AQP1 is found in the ventricular-facing cell plasma membrane of choroid plexus epithelial cells suggesting a role for this channel in CSF secretion.
Accordingly it was discussed that AQP1-facilitated transcellular water transport accounts for only part of the total choroidal CSF production. As a more controversial possibility, it was suggested that the choroid plexus may not be the principal site of CSF production and that extrachoroidal CSF production by the brain parenchyma may be more important[ , ]. The latter notion is supported by the observation that following its intravenous application, the penetration and steady concentration of H 2 17 O is significantly reduced in ventricular CSF in AQP4 but not in AQP1 knockout mice.
AQP4 is strongly expressed in astrocyte foot processes at the BBB, glia limitans of brain surface and VRS, as well as ventricular ependymal cells and subependymal astrocytes. Actually, it is expressed at all borders between brain parenchyma and major fluid compartments[ 97 , , ]. Therefore, the earlier view of exchange of ISF and CSF across ependymal and glial cell layers[ ] may be in fact aquaporin-mediated water transport across these membranes[ ].
AQP4 is also localized in astrocyte end feet at the perisynaptic spaces of neurons and is found in the olfactory epithelium[ 97 ]. The precise subcellular distribution of AQP4, i. In mice lacking alpha-syntrophin, astrocyte AQP4 is displaced, being markedly reduced in the end feet membranes adjacent to the blood vessels in cerebellum and cerebral cortex, but present at higher than normal levels in membranes directly facing the neuropil[ ].
A similar effect on AQP4 localization is observed in dystrophin-null mice[ ]. Since Kir4.
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