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1.
Previous studies have shown that pyramidal neurons in hippocampal regions CA1 and CA3 are selectively vulnerable in several neurodegenerative disorders and that a subpopulation of pyramidal neurons in cell cultures of embryonic hippocampus are sensitive to glutamate neurotoxicity. In order to determine whether the patterns of cell loss seen in situ correlate with intrinsic differences in neuronal sensitivities to glutamate-induced degeneration acquired during development, we characterized cultures established from different regions of postnatal rat hippocampus and then examined neuronal sensitivity to glutamate. Tissue corresponding to the dentate gyrus (DG) and regions CA1, CA2 and CA3 of Ammon's horn was removed by microdissection from transverse hippocampal slices and was used to establish cultures of dissociated cells. Cultures from all 4 regions contained 3 major morphological classes of neurons; pyramidal-like, bipolar and stellate. Pyramidal-like neurons comprised the majority of neurons in all cultures; these neurons extended one long and branching axon, and one or more short dendrites. Immunocytochemistry showed that all neurons possessed high levels of glutamate-like and gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA)-like immunoreactivity when grown in isolation. In contrast, when bipolar and pyramidal neurons were cultured in contact with glial cells, glutamate and GABA immunoreactivity were selectively reduced in the bipolar and pyramidal cells, respectively, suggesting that cell interactions influence neurotransmitter phenotype. Subpopulations of hippocampal neurons from each hippocampal region were vulnerable to glutamate-induced neurotoxicity. Bipolar and stellate cells were resistant to glutamate, while pyramidal-like neurons showed varying degrees of sensitivity to glutamate depending upon which region they were taken from. Experiments with specific glutamate receptor agonists and antagonists demonstrated that both non N-methyl-D-aspartic acid (NMDA) receptors and NMDA receptors mediated glutamate-induced degeneration. There were clear differences in the vulnerability of the pyramidal-like neuron populations in cultures from the different hippocampal regions. The rank order of the vulnerability of pyramidal-like neurons to glutamate-induced neurodegeneration between regions in culture was: DG less than CA2 less than CA3 less than CA1. This pattern of selective vulnerability in cell culture corresponds directly to the pattern of selective cell loss seen in situ in Alzheimer's disease, epilepsy, and stroke suggesting that intrinsic neuronal differences in glutamate sensitivity may be involved in these disorders.  相似文献   

2.
The influence of transient forebrain ischemia on the temporal alteration of glutamate receptors in the hippocampal formation was analyzed by means of in vitro quantitative receptor autoradiography. We compared the binding of N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptors using [3H]3-[+/-)2-carboxypiperazin-4-yl)-propyl-1-phosphonic acid (CPP), noncompetitive NMDA antagonist binding sites using [3H]N-(1-(2-thienyl)-cyclohexyl)-3,4-piperidine (TCP), and kainate (KA) receptors. In the CA1 subfield of the hippocampus, the number of NMDA receptors and noncompetitive NMDA antagonist binding sites remained constant during the early stage of recirculation when the CA1 pyramidal cells remained histologically intact. A significant reduction of these receptor densities was observed 7 days following ischemia, when NMDA receptors and noncompetitive NMDA antagonist binding sites lost 64 and 29% of their binding sites in the stratum radiatum of the CA1, respectively. The KA receptor density in the CA1 subfield decreased by 44% 7 days after ischemia. Marked loss of the above-mentioned receptors in the CA1 after selective depletion of the CA1 pyramidal cells indicated that NMDA receptors, noncompetitive NMDA antagonist binding sites, and KA receptors in the CA1 are predominantly localized on the CA1 pyramidal cells. NMDA receptor density in the CA3 gradually decreased during the recirculation period. The stratum moleculare of the dentate gyrus, whose structure was histologically intact after ischemic insult, also showed a reduction of NMDA receptors 7 days following ischemia. [3H]KA receptor density in the stratum lucidum of the CA3 and in the hilus also decreased during recirculation. These  相似文献   

3.
We investigated progression and recovery of neuronal damage during and after global cerebral ischemia in gerbils after bilateral occlusion of the common carotid arteries, using the immunohistochemical method (reaction for tubulin and creatine kinase BB-isoenzyme). The earliest, but reversible, ischemic lesions occurred after 3 minutes' ischemia in the subiculum-CA1 and CA2 regions of the hippocampus. The lesions became irreversible after 4 minutes' ischemia. The ischemic and postischemic lesions in the cerebral cortex, thalamus, and caudoputamen were partially or completely reversible if the ischemic period was 5 minutes, whereas delayed degeneration occurred in the pyramidal cells of the medial CA1 region after reperfusion for 48 hours (delayed neuronal death). After 10 minutes' ischemia and subsequent reperfusion, delayed neuronal death extended from the medial to the lateral CA1 region; the ischemic and postischemic lesions in the cerebral cortex, thalamus, and caudoputamen also expanded during reperfusion. Our investigation demonstrates that selective vulnerability existed in global cerebral ischemia as in incomplete or regional ischemia and suggests that neurons in many areas of the brain possessed the potential for recovery, progressive deterioration, and even delayed neuronal death depending on the severity and duration of cerebral ischemia.  相似文献   

4.
Cerebral ischemia is caused by a reduced blood supply to neurons, and vulnerability to neurodegeneration varies considerably among neuronal types. In hippocampus, neurons in the CA1 region are more susceptible to ischemia-induced neuronal death than neurons in the CA3 region, and in response to transient forebrain ischemia a family of calcium-dependent receptors for alpha-latrotoxin is differentially expressed in the two regions. Here, we report that an ischemic insult up-regulated a family of calcium-independent receptors for alpha-latrotoxin (CIRL) mRNAs in CA1 neurons and down-regulated their mRNAs in CA3 neurons. Furthermore, antisense oligonucleotides complementary to CIRL-1 mRNA or CIRL-3 mRNA suppressed neuronal death associated with hypoxia in hippocampal and cortical cell cultures. The observed region-specific CIRL mRNA expression in hippocampus and an in vitro rescue experiment by antisense oligonucleotides against CIRL mRNAs suggest a functional importance of CIRL in neurodegeneration.  相似文献   

5.
Transient cerebral ischemia causes an inhomogeneous pattern of cell death in the brain. We investigated mechanisms, which may underlie the greater susceptibility of hippocampal CA1 vs. CA3 pyramidal cells to ischemic insult. Using an in vitro oxygen-glucose deprivation (OGD) model of ischemia, we found that N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) responses were enhanced in the more susceptible CA1 pyramidal cells and transiently depressed in the resistant CA3 pyramidal cells. The long-lasting potentiation of NMDA responses in CA1 cells was associated with delayed cell death and was prevented by blocking tyrosine kinase-dependent up-regulation of NMDA receptor function. In CA3 cells, the energy deprivation-induced transient depression of NMDA responses was converted to potentiation by blocking protein phosphatase signalling. These results suggest that energy deprivation differentially shifts the intracellular equilibrium between the tyrosine kinase and phosphatase activities that modulate NMDA responses in CA1 and CA3 pyramidal cells. Therapeutic modulation of tyrosine phosphorylation may thus prove beneficial in mitigating ischemia-induced neuronal death in vulnerable brain areas.  相似文献   

6.
Pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide (PACAP), a neurotrophic and neuromodulatory peptide, was recently shown to enhance NMDA receptor-mediated currents in the hippocampus (Macdonald, et al. 2005. J Neurosci 25:11374-11384). To check if PACAP might also modulate AMPA receptor function, we tested its effects on AMPA receptor-mediated synaptic currents on CA1 pyramidal neurons, using the patch clamp technique on hippocampal slices. In the presence of the NMDA antagonist D-AP5, PACAP (10 nM) reduced the amplitude of excitatory postsynaptic currents (EPSCs) evoked in CA1 pyramidal neurons by stimulation of Schaffer collaterals. Following a paired-pulse stimulation protocol, the paired-pulse ratio was unaffected in most neurons, suggesting that the AMPA-mediated EPSC was modulated by PACAP mainly at a postsynaptic level. PACAP also modulated the currents induced on CA1 pyramidal neurons by applications of either glutamate or AMPA. The effects of PACAP were dose-dependent: at a 0.5 nM dose, PACAP increased AMPA-mediated current; such effect was blocked by PACAP 6-38, a selective antagonist of PAC1 receptors. The enhancement of AMPA-mediated current by PACAP 0.5 nM was abolished when cAMPS-Rp, a PKA inhibitor, was added to the intracellular solution. At a 10 nM concentration, PACAP reduced AMPA-mediated current; such effect was not blocked by PACAP 6-38. The inhibitory effect of 10 nM PACAP was mimicked by Bay 55-9837 (a selective agonist of VPAC2 receptors), persisted in the presence of intracellular BAPTA and was abolished by intracellular cAMPS-Rp. Stimulation-evoked EPSCs in CA1 neurons were significantly reduced following application of the PAC1 antagonist PACAP 6-38; this result indicates that PAC1 receptors in the CA1 region are tonically activated by endogenous PACAP and enhance CA3-CA1 synaptic transmission. Our results show that PACAP differentially modulates AMPA receptor-mediated current in CA1 pyramidal neurons by activation of PAC1 and VPAC2 receptors, both involving the cAMP/PKA pathway; the functional significance will be discussed in light of the multiple effects exerted by PACAP on the CA3-CA1 synapse at different levels.  相似文献   

7.
The neuroprotective effects of MK-801, a noncompetitive antagonist of N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptors, were evaluated in models of cerebral ischemia using Mongolian gerbils. Bilateral occlusion of the carotid arteries for a period of 5 min resulted in a consistent pattern of degeneration of hippocampal CA1 and CA2 pyramidal neurons, which was quantified using an image analyzer. Systemic administration of MK-801 (0.01-10 mg/kg, i.p.) 1 hr prior to the occlusion caused a dose-dependent protection of the CA1 and CA2 neurons. The ED50 value for neuroprotection by MK-801 was calculated to be 0.3 mg/kg, and at doses greater than or equal to 3 mg/kg the majority of animals were completely protected against the ischemic insult. Systemic administration of MK-801 (1 or 10 mg/kg, i.p.) 1 hr prior to unilateral occlusion of the right carotid artery resulted in significant protection against hippocampal neurodegeneration following 10 min of occlusion, and increased the survival rate after 30 min of occlusion. The potent neuroprotective effects of MK-801 in these cerebral ischemia models add further weight to the evidence that NMDA receptors are involved in the mechanism of ischemia-induced neuronal degeneration.  相似文献   

8.
The extracellular concentrations of glutamate and its co-agonist for the N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) receptor, glycine, may be under the control of amino acid transporters in the ischemic brain. However, there is little information on changes in glycine and glutamate transporters in the hippocampal CA1 field of gerbils with transient forebrain ischemia. This study investigated the spatial and temporal expressions of glycine transporter 1 (GLYT1) and three glutamate transporter (excitatory amino acid carrier 1, EAAC1; glutamate/aspartate transporter, GLAST; glutamate transporter 1, GLT1) mRNA in the gerbil hippocampus after 3 minutes of ischemia. The GLYT1 mRNA was transiently upregulated by the second day after ischemia in astrocytelike cells in close vicinity to hippocampal CA1 pyramidal neurons, possibly to reduce glycine concentration in the local extracellular spaces. The EAAC1 mRNA was abundantly expressed in almost all pyramidal neurons and dentate granule cells in the control gerbil hippocampus, whereas the expression level in CA1 pyramidal neurons started to decrease by the fourth day after ischemia in synchrony with degeneration of the CA1 neurons. The GLAST and GLT1 mRNA were rather intensely expressed in the dentate gyrus and CA3 field of the control hippocampus, respectively, but they were weakly expressed in the CA1 field before and after ischemia. As GLAST and GLT1 play a major role in the control of extracellular glutamate concentration, the paucity of these transporters in the CA1 field may account for the vulnerability of CA1 neurons to ischemia, provided that the functional GLAST and GLT1 proteins are also less in the CA1 field than in the CA3 field. This study suggests that the amino acid transporters play pivotal roles in the process of delayed neuronal death in the hippocampal CA1 field.  相似文献   

9.
The heavy metal bismuth induces a new type of selective neuronal degeneration that shares some common aspects with that seen following hypoxia and ischemia. Continuous application of 3 μm bismuth to organotypic cultures of rat hippocampus resulted after 2–3 weeks in selective degeneration of CA1 pyramidal cells, while CA3 pyramidal cells, dentate granule cells, and subicular neurons were resistant. With 10 μm MK-801, a noncompetitive NMDA-antagonist, during the entire culturing period failed to prevent neuronal degeneration induced by 3 μm bismuth. GABA-immunoreactive interneurons were also affected by bismuth, but were generally less sensitive than CA1 pyramidal cells. Acute application of up to 100 μm bismuth did not change the electrophysiological properties of CA1 pyramidal cells. © 1994 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

10.
To analyze the role of specific genes and proteins in neuronal signaling cascades following global cerebral ischemia, it would be useful to have a reproducible model of global cerebral ischemia in mice that potentially allows the investigation of mice with specific genomic mutations. We first report on the development of a model of reversible cardiocirculatory arrest in mice and the consequences of such an insult to neuronal degeneration and expression of immediate early genes (IEG) in the hippocampus. Cardiocirculatory arrest of 5 min duration was induced via ventricular fibrillation in mechanically ventilated NMRI mice. After successful cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR), animals were allowed to reperfuse spontaneously for 3 h (n=7) and 7 days (n=7). TUNEL staining revealed a selective degeneration of a subset of neurons in the hippocampal CA1 sector at 7 days. About 30% of all TUNEL-positive nuclei showed condensed chromatin and apoptotic bodies. Immunohistochemical studies of IEG expression performed at 3 h exhibited a marked induction of c-Fos, c-Jun, and Krox-24 protein in all sectors of the hippocampus, peaking in vulnerable CA1 pyramidal neurons and in dentate gyrus. In contrast, sham-operated animals (n=3) did not reveal neuronal degeneration or increased IEG expression in the hippocampus when compared with untreated control animals (n=3). In conclusion, we present a new model of global cerebral ischemia and reperfusion in mice with the use of complete cardiocirculatory arrest and subsequent CPR. Following 5 min of ischemia, a subset of CA1 pyramidal neurons was TUNEL-positive at 7 days. The expression of IEG was observed in all sectors of the hippocampus, including selectively vulnerable CA1 pyramidal neurons. This appears to be a good model which should be useful in evaluating the role of various genes in transgenic and knockout mice following global ischemia.  相似文献   

11.
Hippocampal CA1 pyramidal neurons are selectively vulnerable to ischemia, while adjacent CA3 neurons are relatively resistant. Although glutamate receptor-mediated mitochondrial Ca2+ overload and dysfunction is a major component of ischemia-induced neuronal death, no direct relationship between selective neuronal vulnerability and mitochondrial dysfunction has been demonstrated in intact brain preparations. Here, we show that in organotypic slice cultures NMDA induces much larger Ca2+ elevations in vulnerable CA1 neurons than in resistant CA3. Consequently, CA1 mitochondria exhibit stronger calcium accumulation, more extensive swelling and damage, stronger depolarization of their membrane potential, and a significant increase in ROS generation. NMDA-induced Ca2+ and ROS elevations were abolished in Ca2+-free medium or by NMDAR antagonists, but not by zinc chelation. We conclude that Ca2+ overload-dependent mitochondrial dysfunction is a determining factor in the selective vulnerability of CA1 neurons.  相似文献   

12.
Within the hippocampus, electrophysiological and immunohistochemical studies showed that metabotropic glutamate receptor subtype 5 (mGluR5) is the major postsynaptic mGluR expressed in CA1 pyramidal neurons. To better understand the role of mGluR5 in ischemia-induced neuronal death, whole-cell patch-clamp recordings using hippocampal slices were performed to investigate the functional change of mGluR5 in CA1 pyramidal neurons following transient global ischemia. Our results indicated that 6 to 24 h after global ischemia, mGluR5-induced cationic currents and mGluR5-mediated enhancement of NMDA-evoked currents in CA1 pyramidal neurons were significantly reduced. Further TaqMan real-time quantitative RT-PCR assay showed that mGluR5 mRNA expression in hippocampal CA1 region or single CA1 pyramidal neurons was significantly downregulated following ischemic insults. The present study suggests that transient global ischemia downregulates mGluR5 function of CA1 pyramidal neurons by decreasing mGluR5 mRNA and that the resulting reduced mGluR5-mediated excitotoxicity could contribute to the survival of CA1 pyramidal neurons after ischemic insult.  相似文献   

13.
Neurofibrillary degeneration, one of the pathological hallmarks of Alzheimer's disease, is not ubiquitous to all brain regions or neurons. While a high degree of vulnerability has been documented for entorhinal cortex, hippocampal and neocortical pyramidal neurons other brain structures are largely spared. Even within highly vulnerable regions such as hippocampus neurons are affected to a variable extent. The molecular basis for this selective susceptibility remains unknown. Neurofibrillary degeneration involves hyperphosphorylation of tau which critically impairs its binding capacity to microtubule and, therefore, is believed to disrupt the axonal cytoskeleton. Recently, Lu et al. [Nature (1999) 399:784] described the ability of the peptidyl-prolyl cis-trans isomerase Pin1 to recover microtubule-binding affinity and microtubule stabilisation of phosphorylated tau. In the present study, we analysed the potential involvement of Pin1 in selective vulnerability of hippocampal neurons to neurofibrillary degeneration in Alzheimer's disease. Pin1 immunoreactivity appeared as cytoplasmic granules affecting hippocampal subfields to a different extent (CA2>subiculum>CA1>CA3/CA4). Since the main markers of granulovacuolar degeneration do not co-label Pin1-immunoreactive granules, we propose that these granules may represent a new lesion in Alzheimer's disease. Neurons containing Pin1 granules were devoid of neurofibrillary tangles. Granular accumulation of Pin1 may correspond to an absence of neurofibrillary lesions in these cells and might be associated with other mechanisms of neuronal degeneration.  相似文献   

14.
This study compared the ability of three N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor antagonists to prevent neuronal degeneration in an animal model of global cerebral ischemia. The model employed is characterized by damage to the striatum, hippocampus, and neocortex. Antagonists were administered to gerbils either before or after a 5-min bilateral carotid occlusion. The intraischemic rectal temperature was either maintained at 36-37 degrees C or allowed to fall passively to 28-32 degrees C. Antagonists and doses tested were 1 and 10 mg/kg of MK-801 (pre- or postischemia), 30 mg/kg of CGS 19755 preischemia, four 25 mg/kg doses of CGS 19755 administered between 0.5 and 6.5 h postischemia, and 40 mg/kg of MDL 27,266 (pre- or postischemia). All three NMDA receptor antagonists exhibited some degree of neuroprotective activity when the carotid occlusion was performed under normothermic conditions. Most of the treatments with antagonist markedly reduced striatal damage. CA1 hippocampal and neocortical pyramidal cells were spared by only three of the treatments, however, and the extent of neuroprotection varied widely from case to case. Toxic doses of antagonist were required to protect CA1 pyramidal cells from ischemic damage. Ischemic damage to hippocampal areas CA2-CA3a and CA4 appeared to be resistant to all of these treatments. Most CA1 pyramidal cells that were protected from degeneration by an NMDA receptor antagonist were histologically abnormal. The neuroprotective effects of MK-801 and intraischemic hypothermia appeared to be additive. MK-801 (10 mg/kg) consistently reduced the postischemic brain temperature, but only the magnitude of hypothermia produced soon after reperfusion correlated with its neuroprotective action. These results suggest that NMDA receptor antagonists are relatively poor neuroprotective agents against a moderately severe ischemic insult.  相似文献   

15.
Two types of quantal spontaneous neurotransmitter release are present in the nervous system, namely action potential (AP)-dependent release and AP-independent release. Previous studies have identified and characterized AP-independent release during hypoxia and ischemia. However, the relative contribution of AP-dependent spontaneous release to the overall glutamate released during transient ischemia has not been quantified. Furthermore, the neuronal activity that mediates such release has not been identified. Using acute brain slices, we show that AP-dependent release constitutes approximately one-third of the overall glutamate-mediated excitatory postsynaptic potentials/currents (EPSPs/EPSCs) measured onto hippocampal CA1 pyramidal neurons. However, during transient (2 mins) in vitro hypoxia–hypoglycemia, large-amplitude, AP-dependent spontaneous release is significantly enhanced and contributes to 74% of the overall glutamatergic responses. This increased AP-dependent release is due to hyper-excitability in the presynaptic CA3 neurons, which is mediated by the activity of NMDA receptors. Spontaneous glutamate release during ischemia can lead to excitotoxicity and perturbation of neural network functions.  相似文献   

16.
Selective vulnerability in the gerbil hippocampus following transient ischemia   总被引:23,自引:0,他引:23  
Summary Following brief ischemia, the Mongolian gerbil is reported to develop unusual hippocampal cell injury (Brain Res 239:57–69, 1982). To further clarify this hippocampal vulnerability, gerbils were subjected to ischemia for 3, 5, 10, 20, and 30 min by bilateral occlusion of the common carotid arteries. They were perfusion-fixed after varying intervals of survival time ranging from 3 h up to 7 days. Following brief ischemia (5–10min), about 90% of the animals developed typical hippocampal damage. The lesion was present throughout the extent of the dorsal hippocampus, whereas damage outside the hippocampus was not observed. Each sector of the hippocampus showed different types of cell reaction to ischemia. Ischemic cell change was seen in scattered CA4 neurons, and reactive change was found in CA2, whereas CA1 pyramidal cells developed a strikingly slow cell death process. Ischemia for 3 min did not produce hippocampal lesion in most cases. Following prolonged ischemia (20–30min), brain injury had a wide variety in its extent and distribution. These results revealed that the gerbil brief ischemia model can serve as an excellent, reliable model to study the long-known hippocampal selective vulnerability to ischemia. Delayed neuronal death in CA1 pyramidal cells was confirmed after varying degrees of ischemic insult. These findings demonstrated that the pathology of neuronal injury following brief ischemia was by no means uniform nor simple.  相似文献   

17.
Excitotoxicity is believed to underlie the selective loss of vulnerable neurons after transient ischemia, while lactic acidosis seems to be the principal feature and probable cause of tissue infarcts. Primary hippocampal cultures containing both neurons and astrocytes derived from fetal rats were used to examine the relative contributions of and interactions between excitotoxic and acidotic cell injury. Hypoxia-induced damage was energy dependent and involved the N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor. Glucose above 1 mM could completely protect against hypoxia-induced injury in a pH range of 7.4-6.5, while the NMDA receptor antagonist D,L-2-amino-5-phosphonovaleric acid (500 microM) during the posthypoxic period provided only partial protection in the absence of glucose. Astrocyte cultures were undamaged by ischemic-like treatment in this pH range, suggesting that hypoxia-induced cell death in mixed cultures was restricted to neurons. Lowering the extracellular pH to 7.0 and 6.5 caused no neuronal damage in normoxic controls, but in each case provided significant protection against hypoxic neuronal injury. In contrast, a second type of neurotoxicity was observed after a 6-h exposure to pH 6.0, while exposure to pH 5.5 was required to kill astrocytes. This acidotic damage appeared to be energy independent and did not involve the NMDA receptor. These results suggest that excitotoxic neuron death has an energetic component and that acidosis may produce both protective and damaging effects in the hippocampus during ischemic insults.  相似文献   

18.
Finley M  Fairman D  Liu D  Li P  Wood A  Cho S 《Brain research》2004,1001(1-2):125-132
To determine whether hippocampal pyramidal neurons retain authentic functional properties in mature organotypic culture, hippocampal slice cultures were established from young adult rats (P20-21). Cultures maintained 7 days in vitro retained tight organization of neuronal layers, as opposed to the widening restructure of pyramidal neurons often observed in perinatal slices. CA3 and CA1 pyramidal neurons fired action potentials in response to current injection and exhibited spontaneous and evoked synaptic currents, indicating intact neuronal function and normal hippocampal neural circuitry. We also tested neuronal sensitivity of slice cultures to ischemic injury. Acute ischemic paradigm resulted in selective death of pyramidal neurons in the CA1 region, which was prevented by treatment with an NMDA-antagonist, MK-801. Robust efflux of excitatory and inhibitory amino acid neurotransmitters was detected during ischemia, consistent with changes shown in acute slices. In summary, hippocampal organotypic cultures prepared from young adult rats maintained neuronal architecture and synaptic activity in vitro and can be used in parallel with an acute slice system to model mature brain tissue to examine ischemic pathophysiology and neuroprotective treatment.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Excessive activation of excitatory amino acid receptors has been implicated in the neuronal degeneration caused by ischemia, hypoglycemia, and prolonged seizures. We have observed directly the time course and regional vulnerability of hippocampal neurons to glutamate receptor-mediated injury in organotypic hippocampal cultures, a preparation which combines accessibility and long-term survival with preservation of regional differentiation and neuroanatomic organization. Cultures were incubated with the fluorescent dye propidium iodide which selectively enters and stains cells only after membrane damage. After 5 to 10 min of a 30-min exposure to kainate (100 microM), large neurons in the hilus of the dentate were first to become brightly fluorescent. Propidium staining subsequently appeared in the other regions of the hippocampus and increased to a maximum over the first 6 h of recovery. NMDA (10 microM) caused propidium staining that was limited to CA1 and the dentate gyrus of the cultures, sparing CA3, consistent with the regions of highest NMDA receptor density in vivo. Glutamate (1 mM) caused a delayed, progressive pattern of staining that began in CA1 (2 to 4 h after exposure), then extended to include CA3 and finally the dentate gyrus over the next 24 h. Release of LDH activity into the media was slower and less sensitive than propidium staining. Histologic degeneration was limited to neurons 24 h after agonist exposure and was consistent with the propidium staining. NMDA, kainate, and glutamate each produced a unique pattern of neuronal injury. Most notably, glutamate had low potency as a toxin and its pattern of neuronal injury was not reproduced by NMDA.  相似文献   

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