Role of the Outward Delayed Rectifier K+ Current in Ceramide-Induced Caspase Activation and Apoptosis in Cultured Cortical Neurons |
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Authors: | Shan Ping Yu,Chen-Hsiung Yeh,Frank Gottron,Xin Wang,Margaret C. Grabb,& Dennis W. Choi |
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Affiliation: | Center for the Study of Nervous System Injury and Department of Neurology, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri, USA. |
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Abstract: | We studied the novel hypothesis that an up-modulation of channels for outward delayed rectifier K+ current (I(K)) plays a key role in ceramide-induced neuronal apoptosis. Exposure for 6-10 h to the membrane-permeable C2-ceramide (25 microM) or to sphingomyelinase (0.2 unit/ml), but not to the inactive ceramide analogue C2-dihydroceramide (25 microM), enhanced the whole-cell I(K) current without affecting the transient A-type K+ current and increased caspase activity, followed by neuronal apoptosis 24 h after exposure onset. Tetraethylammonium (TEA) or 4-chloro-N,N-diethyl-N-heptylbenzenebutanaminium tosylate (clofilium), at concentrations inhibiting I(K), attenuated the C2-ceramide-induced caspase-3-like activation as well as neuronal apoptosis. Raising extracellular K+ to 25 mM similarly blocked the C2-ceramide-induced cell death; the neuroprotection by 25 mM K+ or TEA was not eliminated by blocking voltage-gated Ca2+ channels. An inhibitor of tyrosine kinases, herbimycin A (10 nM) or lavendustin A (0.1-1 microM), suppressed I(K) enhancement and/or apoptosis induced by C2-ceramide. It is suggested that ceramide-induced I(K) current enhancement is mediated by tyrosine phosphorylation and plays a critical role in neuronal apoptosis. |
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Keywords: | Outward delayed rectifier Iκ channel Ceramide Neuronal apoptosis Tyrosine phosphorylation |
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