“…Neuroinflammation is a hallmark of various CNS pathologies such as trauma, bacterial meningitis, brain abscess, Alzheimer's disease, and multiple sclerosis, which share a general feature of reactive gliosis characterized, to varying degrees, by the proliferation and hypertrophy of activated astrocytes (Eikelenboom et al, 2002;Griffin and Mrak, 2002;Kielian, 2004;Koedel et al, 2002;McGeer and McGeer, 2002;Nau and Bruck, 2002;Scheld et al, 2002). When activated by an appropriate stimulus, astrocytes have the capacity to produce robust amounts of proinflammatory mediators which may have profound effects on GJC (Dong and Benveniste, 2001;Esen et al, 2004;Kim et al, 2005;Smits et al, 2001). Indeed, the gram-negative bacterial cell wall component lipopolysaccharide (LPS) has been shown to attenuate GJC in primary rat astrocytes, which was attributed, in part, to the autocrine/paracrine action of nitric oxide (NO), since the iNOS inhibitor N G -monoethyl-L-arginine (NMMA) was capable of restoring gap junction coupling (Bolanos and Medina, 1996).…”