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Home - Neurology - How Bad Cholesterol Rewires the Brain’s Support Cells

Neurology

How Bad Cholesterol Rewires the Brain’s Support Cells

Last updated: March 24, 2026 1:49 am
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How Bad Cholesterol Rewires the Brain’s Support Cells

A new study published in the Journal of Neurochemistry reveals a direct link between elevated LDL cholesterol and significant alterations in astrocyte biology, the brain’s primary support and antioxidant cells. Using in vitro models with C6 astroglial cells and in vivo studies on LDL receptor knockout mice, researchers found that LDL cholesterol exposure leads to intracellular lipid accumulation, downregulation of key cholesterol metabolism genes (LDLR, HMGCR, SREBF1), and a shift in astrocyte function. This lipid imbalance increased expression of the reactive marker GFAP and the antioxidant regulator NRF2, while impairing fatty acid uptake and reducing superoxide dismutase activity. In aging mice modeling familial hypercholesterolemia, hippocampal astrocytes displayed increased process complexity and altered gene expression, including reduced aquaporin-4 levels. These findings provide crucial evidence that hypercholesterolemia induces morphological, metabolic, and molecular changes in astrocytes, potentially linking lipid disorders to neuroinflammation and the pathophysiology of neurodegenerative diseases.

Study Significance: This research establishes astrocytes as a critical cellular interface between systemic cholesterol imbalance and central nervous system health, offering a new mechanistic perspective for the well-documented epidemiological link between hypercholesterolemia and cognitive decline. For neurologists and researchers focused on Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease, and stroke, these findings highlight the potential of targeting astrocyte lipid metabolism and neuroinflammatory pathways as a therapeutic strategy. It underscores the importance of managing vascular risk factors not just for cerebrovascular health, but for maintaining fundamental glial cell function and preventing the metabolic dysregulation that underpins neurodegeneration.

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