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1.
To investigate biochemical events accounting for the outcome of central neurons following hypoxia/reoxygenation, cultured neurons from fetal rat forebrain were exposed to hypoxia (95% N2/5% CO2) for 6 h, and then reoxygenated for up to 96 h. Time-dependent changes in macromolecular biosynthesis were analysed by incorporation of [3H]uridine and [3H]leucine and were coupled to cell viability and lactate dehydrogenase leakage. Morphological features of necrosis and apoptosis were scored following nuclear incorporation of the fluorescent dye 4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole. Hypoxia led to a 36% reduction of cell viability at the end of the reoxygenation period, while 23% of the neurons exhibited apoptosis. A biphasic increase in the rates of protein synthesis was measured 1 h after the onset of hypoxia (77% above controls) and by 48-h postreoxygenation (72%). The presence of cycloheximide during hypoxia inhibited both peaks of synthesis and prevented the development of apoptosis. Protein electrophoresis outlined specific alterations in constitutive proteins, and immunohistochemistry revealed an overexpression of the pro-apoptotic gene products Bax and ICE. Therefore, hypoxia followed by reoxygenation would trigger sequential changes in synthesis of specific proteins, leading to delayed and mainly apoptotic neuronal death.  相似文献   

2.
Molecular effects of pre-conditioning by 1-h hypoxia were investigated in cultured neurons from fetal rat forebrain, submitted the following day to a 6-h hypoxia that induces apoptosis. While preventing from apoptosis, pre-conditioning led to increased number of living neurons, DNA synthesis, with persistent overexpression of Bcl-2 and proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA). Adaptative mechanisms would involve anti-apoptotic proteins and regulators of the cell cycle, to finally promote neuronal proliferation.  相似文献   

3.
In various animal models of cerebral hypoxia-ischemia, it is not clear whether neuronal apoptosis results from hypoxia alone or whether other factors mediate this process. We hypothesized that (1) hypoxia alone can induce neuronal apoptosis, (2) hypoxic severity alters the time course of neuronal apoptosis, (3) hypoxia increases neuronal p53, and this increase in p53 is critical for neuronal apoptosis. Embryonic neocortical neurons cultured for 7-10 days were placed in an incubator with levels set at 0.1%, 1%, and 3% O2 and were removed at 24-h intervals for study. Under all hypoxic conditions, observed changes in cellular morphology and DNA fragmentation, detected by the TUNEL method and gel electrophoresis, were consistent with apoptosis. These alterations were seen after a shorter period with increasing hypoxic severity. Immunoblot analysis revealed an increase in p53 protein in hypoxia-exposed neurons. Analysis of immunofluorescence-stained neurons revealed increases in p53 with increased duration and severity of hypoxia. Antisense oligonucleotides for p53 significantly increased the number of surviving neurons during hypoxic exposure. We conclude that hypoxia-induced neuronal apoptosis is, in part, a p53-dependent process whose time course is influenced by hypoxic severity and duration.  相似文献   

4.
The inhibitor of apoptosis (IAP) family of antiapoptotic genes, originally discovered in baculovirus, exists in animals ranging from insects to humans. Here, we investigated the ability of IAPs to suppress cell death in both a neuronal model of apoptosis and excitotoxicity. Cerebellar granule neurons undergo apoptosis when switched from 25 to 5 mM potassium, and excitotoxic cell death in response to glutamate. We examined the endogenous expression of four members of the IAP family, X chromosome-linked IAP (XIAP), rat IAP1 (RIAP1), RIAP2, and neuronal apoptosis inhibitory protein (NAIP), by semiquantitative reverse PCR and immunoblot analysis in cultured cerebellar granule neurons. Cerebellar granule neurons express significant levels of RIAP2 mRNA and protein, but expression of RIAP1, NAIP, and XIAP was not detected. RIAP2 mRNA content and protein levels did not change when cells were switched from 25 to 5 mM potassium. To determine whether ectopic expression of IAP influenced neuronal survival after potassium withdrawal or glutamate exposure, we used recombinant adenoviral vectors to target XIAP, human IAP1 (HIAP1), HIAP2, and NAIP into cerebellar granule neurons. We demonstrate that forced expression of IAPs efficiently blocked potassium withdrawal-induced N-acetyl-Asp-Glu-Val-Asp-specific caspase activity and reduced DNA fragmentation. However, neurons were only protected from apoptosis up to 24 h after potassium withdrawal, but not at later time points, suggesting that IAPs delay but do not block apoptosis in cerebellar granule neurons. In contrast, treatment with 100 microM or 1 mM glutamate did not induce caspase activity and adenoviral-mediated expression of IAPs had no influence on subsequent excitotoxic cell death.  相似文献   

5.
PURPOSE: Knowledge of the mechanisms by which retinal ganglion cells are damaged may provide information required to develop novel treatments for diseases that cause retinal ganglion cell death. The authors investigated whether the expression of the 72-kDa heat shock protein in cultured rat retinal ganglion cells increases tolerance to hypoxic and excitotoxic injury. METHODS: Hyperthermia (42 degrees C for 1 hour) and sublethal hypoxia (9% O2 for 6 hours) were used to induce synthesis of the 72-kDa heat shock protein in cultured rat retinal ganglion cells and cultured retinal Müller cells. Induction of the 72-kDa heat shock protein was detected with immunocytochemical and immunoblot techniques. Survival of cultured retinal ganglion cells after exposure to anoxia (< 1% O2 for 6 hours) and glutamate (200 microns for 6 hours) was measured and compared to control cultures stressed previously by hyperthermia or sublethal hypoxia. The effect of quercetin, a blocker of heat shock protein synthesis, was evaluated in parallel experiments. RESULTS: Heat shock protein immunoreactivity was expressed in cultured retinal ganglion cells and Müller cells after hyperthermia and sublethal hypoxia. The mean (+/- standard deviation) retinal ganglion cell survival rates after exposure to anoxia (expressed as a percentage of untreated control cultures) in cells pretreated with sublethal hypoxia (83% +/- 17%) and hyperthermia (82% +/- 19%) were significantly greater than for cells that had no pretreatment (50% +/- 18%, P < 0.001). The mean (+/-standard deviation) retinal ganglion cell survival rate after exposure to glutamate in cells pretreated with sublethal hypoxia (82% +/- 19%) and hyperthermia (86% +/- 17%) were significantly greater than for cells that had no pretreatment (56% +/- 17%, P < 0.001). Inhibition of heat shock protein synthesis with quercetin abolished the protective effects of sublethal hypoxia and hyperthermia on cell survival after anoxia and glutamate exposure. CONCLUSIONS: The neuroprotective effect of hyperthermia and sublethal hypoxia suggests that heat shock proteins confer protection against ischemic and excitotoxic retinal ganglion cell death.  相似文献   

6.
Amyloid beta-protein (Abeta), a putative pathogenic endotoxin involved in Alzheimer's disease, induces redistribution of glutamate transporters in astrocytes and promotes their pump activity. Because the transporters are assumed to protect neurons against excitotoxicity by removing extracellular glutamate, we hypothesized that Abeta alters the vulnerability of neurons to glutamate. Cerebrocortical neuron-astroglial co-cultures were exposed to glutamate, the concentration of which was selected so that only 20% of the neurons exhibited degeneration. When cultures were pre-treated with Abeta, exposure to the same "mild" glutamate concentration failed to damage neurons. The Abeta-induced protection was abolished by a glial glutamate transporter inhibitor. Thus, Abeta can alleviate excitotoxicity through glutamate transporter activity. The present results may challenge prevailing concepts that Abeta-induced neuron loss causes Alzheimer's dementia and also provide practical insights into neuro-glial interactions in glutamate toxicity.  相似文献   

7.
Twenty-four hour exposure to cycloheximide produced a concentration-dependent reduction in protein synthesis in mouse cortical cell cultures. Unexpectedly, a 24 h pretreatment with cycloheximide exposure also reduced neuronal vulnerability to subsequent oxygen-glucose deprivation-induced injury, measured both acutely (cell swelling) or after one day (cell lysis). This neuroprotective effect was attenuated if the period of cycloheximide pretreatment was shortened to 8 h, and lost if the pretreatment was shortened to 1 h. A comparable neuroprotective effect was also induced by 24 h pretreatment with another protein synthesis inhibitor, emetine. The neuroprotection induced by pretreatment with cycloheximide or emetine was probably not attributable to reduction of apoptosis: (i) neuronal death under these conditions occurs by N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor-mediated excitotoxic necrosis, not apoptosis; (ii) the same cycloheximide pretreatment did not block staurosporine-induced apoptosis. Also unlikely as an explanation is reduction in postsynaptic vulnerability to excitotoxicity, as death induced by exogenous addition of N-methyl-D-aspartate, kainate, or alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionate was little affected by cycloheximide pretreatment. Rather, the protective effect of cycloheximide pretreatment was probably explained, at least in part, by marked reduction in the glutamate release induced by oxygen-glucose deprivation.  相似文献   

8.
Riluzole is used clinically in patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. As oxidative stress, in addition to excitotoxicity, may be a major mechanism of motoneuron degeneration in patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, we examined whether riluzole protects against nonexcitotoxic oxidative injury. Probably reflecting its weak antiexcitotoxic effects, riluzole (1-30 microM) attenuated submaximal neuronal death induced by 24-h exposure to 30 microM kainate or NMDA, but not that by 100 microM NMDA, in cortical cultures. Riluzole also attenuated nonexcitotoxic oxidative injury induced by exposure to FeCl3 in the presence of MK-801 and CNQX. Consistent with its antioxidative effects, riluzole reduced Fe3+-induced lipid peroxidation, and inhibited cytosolic phospholipase A2. By contrast, riluzole did not attenuate neuronal apoptosis induced by staurosporine. Rather unexpectedly, 24-48-h exposure to 100-300 microM riluzole induced neuronal death accompanied by nuclear and DNA fragmentations, which was attenuated by caspase inhibitor carbobenzyloxy-Val-Ala-Asp-fluoromethyl ketone but not by protein synthesis inhibitor cycloheximide. The present study demonstrates that riluzole has direct antioxidative actions, perhaps in part by inhibiting phospholipase A2. However, in the same neurons, riluzole paradoxically induces neuronal apoptosis in a caspase-sensitive manner. Considering current clinical use of riluzole, further studies are warranted to investigate its potential cytolethal effects.  相似文献   

9.
Phosphatidylcholine-specific phospholipase C (PC-PLC) is a necessary intermediate in transducing apoptotic signals for tumor necrosis factor and Fas/Apo-1 ligands in nonneuronal cells. The data presented here show that PC-PLC also is required in oxidative glutamate-induced programmed cell death of both immature cortical neurons and a hippocampal nerve cell line, HT22. In oxidative glutamate toxicity, which is distinct from excitotoxicity, glutamate interferes with cystine uptake by blocking the cystine/glutamate antiporter, indirectly causing a depletion of intracellular glutathione. A PC-PLC inhibitor blocks oxidative glutamate toxicity, and exogenous PC-PLC potentiates glutamate toxicity. The inhibition of PC-PLC uncouples the cystine uptake from glutamate inhibition, allowing the maintenance of glutathione synthesis and cell viability. These data suggest that PC-PLC modulates neuronal cell death through a mechanism that is distinct from that involved in nonneuronal apoptosis.  相似文献   

10.
This study examined the possibility that the excitotoxin-induced death of cultured cortical neurons might occur by apoptosis, specifically focusing on the slowly triggered death induced by low concentrations of excitotoxin. Cultured murine cortical neurons (days in vitro 10-12) were exposed continuously to N-methyl-D-aspartate (10-15 microM), alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid (3-100 microM) or kainate (30-60 microM) over 24 h. Within 2 h of exposure onset, neuronal cell body swelling was visible under phase-contrast optics. At this point, transmission electron microscopy revealed disruption of cell membranes and organelles, mitochondrial swelling and scattered chromatin condensation at the periphery of nuclei. By 8 h after exposure onset, many neurons were devoid of cytoplasmic structures, but nuclear membranes remained relatively intact. This excitotoxic degeneration was not blocked by the protein synthesis inhibitor, cycloheximide, or the growth factors, brain-derived neurotrophic factor or insulin-like growth factor-1, agents that did block serum deprivation-induced apoptosis death in other cultures. DNA agarose gel electrophoresis, however, revealed the transient occurrence of internucleosomal DNA fragmentation, appearing 4-8 h after exposure onset, but absent 24 h after exposure onset. The present results suggest that even slowly triggered excitotoxicity occurs by necrosis, and raise a cautionary note in interpreting internucleosomal DNA fragmentation in isolation as evidence for apoptosis.  相似文献   

11.
In the human brain and spinal cord, neurons degenerate after acute insults (e.g., stroke, cardiac arrest, trauma) and during progressive, adult-onset diseases [e.g., amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, Alzheimer's disease]. Glutamate receptor-mediated excitotoxicity has been implicated in all of these neurological conditions. Nevertheless, effective approaches to prevent or limit neuronal damage in these disorders remain elusive, primarily because of an incomplete understanding of the mechanisms of neuronal death in in vivo settings. Therefore, animal models of neurodegeneration are crucial for improving our understanding of the mechanisms of neuronal death. In this review, we evaluate experimental data on the general characteristics of cell death and, in particular, neuronal death in the central nervous system (CNS) following injury. We focus on the ongoing controversy of the contributions of apoptosis and necrosis in neurodegeneration and summarize new data from this laboratory on the classification of neuronal death using a variety of animal models of neurodegeneration in the immature or adult brain following excitotoxic injury, global cerebral ischemia, and axotomy/target deprivation. In these different models of brain injury, we determined whether the process of neuronal death has uniformly similar morphological characteristics or whether the features of neurodegeneration induced by different insults are distinct. We classified neurodegeneration in each of these models with respect to whether it resembles apoptosis, necrosis, or an intermediate form of cell death falling along an apoptosis-necrosis continuum. We found that N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor- and non-NMDA receptor-mediated excitotoxic injury results in neurodegeneration along an apoptosis-necrosis continuum, in which neuronal death (appearing as apoptotic, necrotic, or intermediate between the two extremes) is influenced by the degree of brain maturity and the subtype of glutamate receptor that is stimulated. Global cerebral ischemia produces neuronal death that has commonalities with excitotoxicity and target deprivation. Degeneration of selectively vulnerable populations of neurons after ischemia is morphologically nonapoptotic and is indistinguishable from NMDA receptor-mediated excitotoxic death of mature neurons. However, prominent apoptotic cell death occurs following global ischemia in neuronal groups that are interconnected with selectively vulnerable populations of neurons and also in nonneuronal cells. This apoptotic neuronal death is similar to some forms of retrograde neuronal apoptosis that occur following target deprivation. We conclude that cell death in the CNS following injury can coexist as apoptosis, necrosis, and hybrid forms along an apoptosis-necrosis continuum. These different forms of cell death have varying contributions to the neuropathology resulting from excitotoxicity, cerebral ischemia, and target deprivation/axotomy. Degeneration of different populations of cells (neurons and nonneuronal cells) may be mediated by distinct or common causal mechanisms that can temporally overlap and perhaps differ mechanistically in the rate of progression of cell death.  相似文献   

12.
Extracellular pH modulates the function of the N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor, which may influence pathophysiological responses to glutamate. While damage due to oxygen and glucose deprivation or glutamate exposure is attenuated by acidification of the incubating medium of cultured neurons, neuron damage is enhanced in vivo following ischemia in hyperglycemic animals. A persistent inhibition of protein synthesis (to less than 5% of normoxic levels) is a reliable index of damage to neurons both in vivo and in the rat hippocampal slice. We explored the influence of extracellular pH and calcium manipulation on protein synthesis inhibition and energy failure due to anoxia/aglycemia or exposure to N-methyl-D-aspartate in the rat hippocampal slice. Moderate acidification of the medium during anoxia/aglycemia did not reduce the damage to protein synthesis in hippocampal neurons (9% of normoxic levels) and did not alter basal ATP levels or the rate of ATP depletion during anoxia/aglycemia. However, when calcium levels were lowered during the acidification and following the anoxia/aglycemia, protein synthesis was almost completely protected (84% of normoxic levels). Calcium reduction itself also attenuated the protein synthesis inhibition due to anoxia/aglycemia (to 55.6% of normoxic controls), but the protection was not as complete. In contrast, moderate acidification of the medium significantly reduced the damage to protein synthesis due to a brief exposure to NMDA (37% of control with NMDA, 78.9% of control with acidification during NMDA), even in the presence of extracellular calcium. Alkalinization of the medium exacerbated the protein synthesis inhibition following anoxia/aglycemia, and significantly reduced basal ATP levels (to 52% of normoxic control levels). Thus, pHo changes influence neuronal metabolism and response to anoxia/aglycemia. In addition, while acidification can reduce the excitotoxic damage caused by direct exposure to NMDA, it cannot reduce damage due to anoxia/aglycemia unless calcium is lowered concomitantly. Thus, both NMDA receptor activation and calcium are involved in the damage due to oxygen and glucose deprivation in the slice.  相似文献   

13.
This study was performed to elucidate the role of nitric oxide (NO) in N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor-mediated glutamate neurotoxicity in the retina. The experiments were done with primary retinal cultures obtained from 17- to 19-day-old rat fetuses. The NOS activity measured by monitoring the conversion of [3H]arginine to [3H]citrulline was approximately 5 pmol/min/mg protein. A 10-min exposure of the cultured cells to glutamate (1 mM) or NMDA (1 mM) followed by a 1-h incubation in a normal medium consistently resulted in 60% cell death. The concomitant addition of an inhibitor of NOS, Nomega-nitro-L-arginine (300 microM), with glutamate or NMDA reduced cell death by 70%. A brief exposure of the cells to sodium nitroprusside (SNP, 500 microM) or S-nitrosocysteine (SNOC, 500 microM), NO-generating agents, caused 60% cell death. Depletion of NO by reduced hemoglobin prevented the cell death induced by either glutamate, NMDA, or NO generating agents. Fifty microM SNOC alone had no effect on the cell viability. However, pretreatment with 50 microM SNOC as well as simultaneous application of 50 microM SNOC with NMDA inhibited cell death induced by NMDA. These findings indicate that a low concentration of NO plays a protective role in glutamate neurotoxicity via closing the NMDA receptor gated ion channel. However, elevated concentrations of NO, interacting with oxygen radicals, become toxic and mediate glutamate-induced neurotoxicity in the cultured retinal neurons.  相似文献   

14.
Bcl-2 family proteins are principal regulators of cell death during normal development as well as in many disease states. Differentiated cerebellar granule neurons are protected from apoptosis by depolarizing concentrations of potassium. Further, these cells acquire resistance to glutamate-mediated excitotoxicity when pre-exposed to subtoxic concentrations of the glutamate receptor agonist, N-methyl-D-aspartate. Here, we report that the expression of bcl-2, bcl-xL, bcl-xS, bax and bad mRNA as well as of Bcl-2, Bax, Bcl-XL, Bcl-XS and Bag-1 proteins is not modulated in these two paradigms of neuronal cell death. However, mitochondrial release of cytochrome c, which is thought to be controlled by Bcl-2 family proteins, is detected 5 h after switching the neurons to low potassium conditions. Thus, there appears to be regulation of Bcl-2 family protein bioactivity in the absence of altered protein expression during potassium deprivation-induced apoptosis of cerebellar granule neurons.  相似文献   

15.
Delayed neurological damage after CO hypoxia was studied in rats to determine whether programmed cell death (PCD), in addition to necrosis, is involved in neuronal death. In rats exposed to either air or CO (2500 ppm), microdialysis in brain cortex and hippocampus was performed to determine the extent of glutamate release and hydroxyl radical generation during the exposures. Groups of control and CO-exposed rats also were tested in a radial maze to assess the effects of the CO exposures on learning and memory. At 3, 7, and 21 days after CO exposure brains were perfusion-fixed and hematoxylin-eosin (H&E) was used to assess injury and to select regions for further examination. DNA fragmentation was sought by examining cryosections with the terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated dUTP-biotin nick-end labeling (TUNEL) reaction. We found significant increases in glutamate release and .OH generation during and immediately after CO hypoxia. CO-exposed rats showed learning and memory deficits after exposure associated with heterogeneous cell loss in cortex, globus pallidus, and cerebellum. The frontal cortex was affected most seriously; the damage was slight at Day 3, increased at Day 7, and persistent at Day 21 after CO exposure. TUNEL staining was positive at all three time points, and TUNEL-labeled cells were distributed similarly to eosinophilic cells. The number of cells stained by TUNEL was less than by H&E and amounted to 2 to 5% of all cell nuclei in regions of injury. Ultrastructural features of both neuronal necrosis and apoptosis also were observed readily by electron microscopy. These findings indicate that both necrosis and apoptosis (PCD) contribute to CO poisoning-induced brain cell death.  相似文献   

16.
Chronic activation of NMDA receptors by glutamate is toxic to cultured neurons. The extensive Ca2+ entry accompanying receptor activation is largely accumulated by the intracellular mitochondria, with resultant effects on mitochondrial membrane potential, ATP synthesis, glycolysis, reactive oxygen species generation and ultimately failure of cytoplasmic Ca2+ homeostasis and cell death. Each of these parameters is inter-related and in this review we describe attempts to separate out each factor to establish the sequence of events following NMDA-receptor activation. The conclusion is that mitochondrial Ca2+ accumulation is a key event in glutamate excitotoxicity, and that cells maintained by glycolysis in the absence of a mitochondrial membrane potential are highly resistant to glutamate excitotoxicity.  相似文献   

17.
The N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors have been implicated in neuronal plasticity and their overactivation leads to neurotoxicity. Molecular cloning and co-expression of various glutamate receptor zeta and epsilon complementary DNAs support a heteromeric structural organization for N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors. In this study, we show that cerebellar granular neurons in primary culture of mouse express glutamate receptor zeta1 and at least three glutamate receptor epsilon (epsilon1, epsilon2, and epsilon3) protein subunits. In vitro, the temporal patterns of glutamate receptor epsilon1, epsilon2, and epsilon3 subunit expression depend on culture stages. By day 9, a somatic and neuritic immunolocalization for all N-methyl-D-aspartate subunits was clearly identified in most neuronal, but not glial cells. The role of particular subunits in N-methyl-D-aspartate-mediated excitotoxicity was probed by exposing the cerebellar granule cells to antisense oligodeoxynucleotides generated against specific N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor subunits. Antisense oligodeoxynucleotide treatments significantly down-regulated the amounts of the corresponding N-methyl-D-aspartate subunits. The decrease in N-methyl-D-aspartate subunit protein correlated with a reduction in N-methyl-D-aspartate-induced calcium influx and N-methyl-D-aspartate-mediated excitotoxicity in cerebellar cultures. In contrast, antisense oligodeoxynucleotide treatment failed to protect neurons from 1-methyl-4-phenylpyridinium-induced metabolic cell toxicity. Antisense oligodeoxynucleotide treatment targeted at N-methyl-D-aspartate glutamate receptor epsilon subunits demonstrate that glutamate receptor epsilon1, epsilon2, and epsilon3 proteins form N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors responsible for neurotoxic effects on cerebellar neurons. This study provides direct evidence for the existence of distinct N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor subunit proteins in cerebellar granule cells developing in vitro that may trigger N-methyl-D-aspartate-dependent excitotoxicity.  相似文献   

18.
Dopamine (DA) and related catechols may contribute to selective degeneration of dopaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra in Parkinson's disease. To investigate whether DA induces apoptosis of dopaminergic neurons, we characterized the effects of various concentrations of exogenous DA on a substantia nigra/neuroblastoma hybrid cell line (MES 23.5 or MES). The hybrid MES cells were maintained in the presence of 50 microM glutamate in logarithmic growth on poly-D-lysine-precoated T-75 flasks and plated either onto petri dishes with glass coverslips for morphological studies or onto 6-well plates for quantification of apoptosis by flow cytometry. The results showed that DA exposure (0.5-20 microM) induced time- and dose-dependent apoptotic cell death of MES cells. To further analyze the mechanism responsible for DA-mediated apoptosis, we repeated the experiments at 20 microM DA in the presence or absence of 40 microM nomifensine, a DA re-uptake inhibitor, and 25 microM 2-amino-5-phosphonopentanoic acid (AP5), an N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor antagonist. The data indicate that both compounds significantly prevented DA-induced apoptosis of MES cells and that combination of AP5 and nomifensine provided greater protection against DA toxicity than AP5 alone. These results suggest for the first time that DA-induced apoptosis in dopaminergic neurons is partially attributable to increased vulnerability of these cells to non-toxic levels of excitatory amino acids, i.e., secondary excitotoxicity.  相似文献   

19.
Cigarette smoking during pregnancy exposes the fetus to both nicotine and hypoxia/ischemia; postnatal exposure to second-hand smoke also involves substances that cause hypoxia (CO, HCN). Although developing cardiac cells are more resistant to hypoxia-induced damage than are mature cells, we examined whether nicotine affects this resistance, either when exposure is concurrent with hypoxia, or when animals are exposed to nicotine prenatally and receive subsequent hypoxic exposure. One, 8-, or 15-day-old rats exposed to 7% O2 for 2 hr all showed inhibition of cardiac DNA synthesis. By contrast, administration of nicotine at either low (0.3 mg/kg) or high (3 mg/kg) doses failed to alter DNA synthesis. To examine effects on cells that were not undergoing mitosis, we examined ornithine decarboxylase (ODC), an enzymatic marker for cell damage. One day old rats showed inhibition of ODC by hypoxia, a response that represents preservation of cell integrity; by 8 days of age, ODC was increased by hypoxia, evidence of cell damage. The high dose of nicotine evoked an increase in ODC at all ages and the low dose exacerbated the effects of hypoxia at 8 days of age. Prenatal nicotine exposure caused a transient inhibition of cardiac DNA synthesis but did not produce evidence of cell damage (ODC, protein synthesis markers) by itself, nor did it alter the effect of a subsequent postnatal exposure to hypoxia. These results suggest that cardiac cell damage could emerge as a consequence of concurrent, repeated exposures to nicotine and hypoxia. Such effects could contribute to the elevated incidence of perinatal morbidity/mortality and Sudden Infant Death Syndrome associated with smoking.  相似文献   

20.
The participation of NMDA and non-NMDA receptors in domoic acid-induced neurotoxicity was investigated in cultured rat cerebellar granule cells (CGCs). Neurons were exposed to 300 microM L-glutamate or 10 microM domoate for 2 h in physiologic buffer at 22 degrees C followed by a 22-h incubation in 37 degrees C conditioned growth media. Excitotoxic injury was monitored as a function of time by measurement of lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) activity in both the exposure buffer and the conditioned media. Glutamate and domoate evoked, respectively, 50 and 65% of the total 24-h increment in LDH efflux after 2 h. Hyperosmolar conditions prevented this early response but did not significantly alter the extent of neuronal injury observed at 24 h. The competitive NMDA receptor antagonist D(-)-2-amino-5-phosphonopentanoic acid and the non-NMDA receptor antagonist 2,3-dihydroxy-6-nitro-7-sulfamoylbenzo(f)quinoxaline (NBQX) reduced glutamate-induced LDH efflux totals by 73 and 27%, respectively, whereas, together, these glutamate receptor antagonists completely prevented neuronal injury. Domoate toxicity was reduced 65-77% when CGCs were treated with competitive and noncompetitive NMDA receptor antagonists. Unlike the effect on glutamate toxicity, NBQX completely prevented domoate-mediated injury. HPLC analysis of the exposure buffer revealed that domoate stimulates the release of excitatory amino acids (EAAs) and adenosine from neurons. Domoate-stimulated EAA release occurred almost exclusively through mechanisms related to cell swelling and reversal of the glutamate transporter. Thus, whereas glutamate-induced injury is mediated primarily through NMDA receptors, the full extent of neurodegeneration is produced by the coactivation of both NMDA and non-NMDA receptors. Domoate-induced neuronal injury is also mediated primarily through NMDA receptors, which are activated secondarily as a consequence of alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methylisoxazole-4-propionate (AMPA)/kainate receptor-mediated stimulation of EAA efflux.  相似文献   

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