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Connexins and Pannexins in cerebral ischemia.

A common cause of mortality and long-term adult disability, cerebral ischemia or brain ischemia imposes a significant health and financial burden on communities worldwide. Cerebral ischemia is a condition that arises from a sudden loss of blood flow and consequent failure to meet the high metabolic demands of the brain. The lack of blood flow initiates a sequelae of cell death mechanisms, including the activation of the inflammatory pathway, which can ultimately result in irreversible brain tissue damage. In particular, Connexins and Pannexins are non-selective channels with a large pore that have shown to play time-dependent roles in the perpetuation of ischaemic injury. This review highlights the roles of Connexin and Pannexin channels in cell death mechanisms as a promising therapeutic target in cerebral ischemia, and in particular connexin hemichannels which may contribute most of the ATP release as a result of ischemia as well as during reperfusion. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Gap Junction Proteins edited by Jean Claude Herve.

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