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Stellate cell

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Stellate cell
Identifiers
NeuroLex IDsao2046525601
Anatomical terms of neuroanatomy

Stellate cells are any cells that have a star-like shape formed by dendritic processes radiating from the cell body. They appear in a number of different parts of the body.

In neuroscience, stellate cells are neurons. The three most common stellate cells are the inhibitory interneurons found within the molecular layer of the cerebellum, excitatory spiny stellate cells and inhibitory aspiny stellate interneurons. Cerebellar stellate cells synapse onto the dendritic arbors of Purkinje cells.[citation needed] Cortical spiny stellate cells are found in layer IVC of the V1 region in the visual cortex. They receive excitatory synaptic fibres from the thalamus and process feed forward excitation to 2/3 layer of V1 visual cortex to pyramidal cells. Cortical spiny stellate cells have a 'regular' firing pattern. Stellate cells are chromophobes.[clarification needed]

Golgi stained cortical neurons A) Layer II/IIIpyramidal cell B) layer IV spiny stellate cell

In the skeleton, the osteocyte is a stellate cell, embedded within the bone matrix itself. These cells have multiple interconnecting processes that form an extensive interconnected network throughout the skeleton.[1][2]

Other stellate cells in the body include the Hepatic stellate cell, Pancreatic stellate cell, and the podocyte in the kidney.

See also

References

  1. ^ https://theconversation.com/brainy-bones-the-hidden-complexity-inside-your-skeleton-38713
  2. ^ "Quantifying the osteocyte network in the human skeleton". Bone. 75: 144–150. Jun 2015. doi:10.1016/j.bone.2015.02.016. PMID 25708054.