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1.
Glutamate receptor-mediated excitatory neurotransmission plays a key role in neural development, differentiation and synaptic plasticity. However, excessive stimulation of glutamate receptors induces neurotoxicity, a process that has been defined as excitotoxicity. Excitotoxicity is considered to be a major mechanism of cell death in a number of central nervous system diseases including stroke, brain trauma, epilepsy and chronic neurodegenerative disorders. Unfortunately clinical trials with glutamate receptor antagonists, that would logically prevent the effects of excessive receptor activation, have been associated with untoward side effects or little clinical benefit. Therefore, uncovering molecular pathways involved in excitotoxic neuronal death is of critical importance to future development of clinical treatment of many neurodegenerative disorders where excitotoxicity has been implicated. This review discusses the current understanding of the molecular and cellular mechanisms of excitotoxicity and their roles in the pathogenesis of diseases of the central nervous system.  相似文献   

2.
Neuronal excitation involving the excitatory glutamate receptors is recognized as an important underlying mechanism in neurodegenerative disorders. Excitation resulting from stimulation of the ionotropic glutamate receptors is known to cause the increase in intracellular calcium and trigger calcium-dependent pathways that lead to neuronal apoptosis. Kainic acid (KA) is an agonist for a subtype of ionotropic glutamate receptor, and administration of KA has been shown to increase production of reactive oxygen species, mitochondrial dysfunction, and apoptosis in neurons in many regions of the brain, particularly in the hippocampal subregions of CA1 and CA3, and in the hilus of dentate gyrus (DG). Systemic injection of KA to rats also results in activation of glial cells and inflammatory responses typically found in neurodegenerative diseases. KA-induced selective vulnerability in the hippocampal neurons is related to the distribution and selective susceptibility of the AMPA/kainate receptors in the brain. Recent studies have demonstrated ability of KA to alter a number of intracellular activities, including accumulation of lipofuscin-like substances, induction of complement proteins, processing of amyloid precursor protein, and alteration of tau protein expression. These studies suggest that KA-induced excitotoxicity can be used as a model for elucidating mechanisms underlying oxidative stress and inflammation in neurodegenerative diseases. The focus of this review is to summarize studies demonstrating KA-induced excitotoxicity in the central nervous system and possible intervention by anti-oxidants.  相似文献   

3.
The glutamate-induced excitotoxicity pathway has been reported in several neurodegenerative diseases. Molecules that inhibit the release of glutamate or cause the overactivation of glutamate receptors can minimize neuronal cell death in these diseases. Osmotin, a homolog of mammalian adiponectin, is a plant protein from Nicotiana tabacum that was examined for the first time in the present study to determine its protective effects against glutamate-induced synaptic dysfunction and neurodegeneration in the rat brain at postnatal day 7. The results indicated that glutamate treatment induced excitotoxicity by overactivating glutamate receptors, causing synaptic dysfunction and neuronal apoptosis after 4 h in the cortex and hippocampus of the postnatal brain. In contrast, post-treatment with osmotin significantly reversed glutamate receptor activation, synaptic deficit and neuronal apoptosis by stimulating the JNK/PI3K/Akt intracellular signaling pathway. Moreover, osmotin treatment abrogated glutamate-induced DNA damage and apoptotic cell death and restored the localization and distribution of p53, p-Akt and caspase-3 in the hippocampus of the postnatal brain. Finally, osmotin inhibited glutamate-induced PI3K-dependent ROS production in vitro and reversed the cell viability decrease, cytotoxicity and caspase-3/7 activation induced by glutamate. Taken together, these results suggest that osmotin might be a novel neuroprotective agent in excitotoxic diseases.  相似文献   

4.
Epigallocatechin-3-gallate (EGCG) is a major component of green tea polyphenols which displays potential properties of anticancer and neuroprotection. Here we show that protection of motor neuron by EGCG is associated with regulating glutamate level in organotypic culture of rat spinal cord. In this model, EGCG blocked glutamate excitotoxicity caused by threohydroxyaspartate, an inhibitor of glutamate transporter. This property of EGCG may be not due to its intrinsic antioxidative activity, because another antioxidant could not regulate glutamate level under the same condition. These results show that EGCG may be a potential therapeutic candidate for neurodegenerative diseases involving glutamate excitotoxicity such as ALS.  相似文献   

5.
Glutamate slows axonal transport of neurofilaments in transfected neurons   总被引:14,自引:0,他引:14  
Neurofilaments are transported through axons by slow axonal transport. Abnormal accumulations of neurofilaments are seen in several neurodegenerative diseases, and this suggests that neurofilament transport is defective. Excitotoxic mechanisms involving glutamate are believed to be part of the pathogenic process in some neurodegenerative diseases, but there is currently little evidence to link glutamate with neurofilament transport. We have used a novel technique involving transfection of the green fluorescent protein-tagged neurofilament middle chain to measure neurofilament transport in cultured neurons. Treatment of the cells with glutamate induces a slowing of neurofilament transport. Phosphorylation of the side-arm domains of neurofilaments has been associated with a slowing of neurofilament transport, and we show that glutamate causes increased phosphorylation of these domains in cell bodies. We also show that glutamate activates members of the mitogen-activated protein kinase family, and that these kinases will phosphorylate neurofilament side-arm domains. These results provide a molecular framework to link glutamate excitotoxicity with neurofilament accumulation seen in some neurodegenerative diseases.  相似文献   

6.
Metabolites in the kynurenine pathway, generated by tryptophan degradation, are thought to play an important role in neurodegenerative disorders, including Alzheimer's and Huntington's diseases. In these disorders, glutamate receptor-mediated excitotoxicity and free radical formation have been correlated with decreased levels of the neuroprotective metabolite kynurenic acid. Here, we describe the synthesis and characterization of JM6, a small-molecule prodrug inhibitor of kynurenine 3-monooxygenase (KMO). Chronic oral administration of JM6 inhibits KMO in the blood, increasing kynurenic acid levels and reducing extracellular glutamate in the brain. In a transgenic mouse model of Alzheimer's disease, JM6 prevents spatial memory deficits, anxiety-related behavior, and synaptic loss. JM6 also extends life span, prevents synaptic loss, and decreases microglial activation in a mouse model of Huntington's disease. These findings support a critical link between tryptophan metabolism in the blood and neurodegeneration, and they provide a foundation for treatment of neurodegenerative diseases.  相似文献   

7.
Glutamate excitotoxicity is responsible for neuronal death in acute neurological disorders including stroke, trauma and neurodegenerative disease. Loss of calcium homeostasis is a key mediator of glutamate-induced cell death. The neurotransmitter dopamine (DA) is known to modulate calcium signalling, and here we show that it can do so in response to physiological concentrations of glutamate. Furthermore, DA is able to protect neurons from glutamate-induced cell death at pathological concentrations of glutamate. We demonstrate that DA has a novel role in preventing delayed calcium deregulation in cortical, hippocampal and midbrain neurons. The effect of DA in abolishing glutamate excitotoxicity can be induced by DA receptor agonists, and is abolished by DA receptor antagonists. Our data indicate that the modulation of glutamate excitotoxicity by DA is receptor-mediated. We postulate that DA has a major physiological function as a safety catch to restrict the glutamate-induced calcium signal, and thereby prevent glutamate-induced cell death in the brain.  相似文献   

8.
Glutamate excitotoxicity is a major pathogenic process implicated in many neurodegenerative conditions, including AD (Alzheimer''s disease) and following traumatic brain injury. Occurring predominantly from over-stimulation of ionotropic glutamate receptors located along dendrites, excitotoxic axonal degeneration may also occur in white matter tracts. Recent identification of axonal glutamate receptor subunits within axonal nanocomplexes raises the possibility of direct excitotoxic effects on axons. Individual neuronal responses to excitotoxicity are highly dependent on the complement of glutamate receptors expressed by the cell, and the localization of the functional receptors. To enable isolation of distal axons and targeted excitotoxicity, murine cortical neuron cultures were prepared in compartmented microfluidic devices, such that distal axons were isolated from neuronal cell bodies. Within the compartmented culture system, cortical neurons developed to relative maturity at 11 DIV (days in vitro) as demonstrated by the formation of dendritic spines and clustering of the presynaptic protein synaptophysin. The isolated distal axons retained growth cone structures in the absence of synaptic targets, and expressed glutamate receptor subunits. Glutamate treatment (100 μM) to the cell body chamber resulted in widespread degeneration within this chamber and degeneration of distal axons in the other chamber. Glutamate application to the distal axon chamber triggered a lesser degree of axonal degeneration without degenerative changes in the untreated somal chamber. These data indicate that in addition to current mechanisms of indirect axonal excitotoxicity, the distal axon may be a primary target for excitotoxicity in neurodegenerative conditions.  相似文献   

9.
L-glutamate is both the major brain excitatory neurotransmitter and a potent neurotoxin in mammals. Glutamate excitotoxicity is partly responsible for cerebral traumas evoked by ischemia and has been implicated in several neurodegenerative diseases including amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). In contrast, very little is known about the function or potential toxicity of glutamate in the insect brain. Here, we show that decreasing glutamate buffering capacity is neurotoxic in Drosophila. We found that the only Drosophila high-affinity glutamate transporter, dEAAT1, is selectively addressed to glial extensions that project ubiquitously through the neuropil close to synaptic areas. Inactivation of dEAAT1 by RNA interference led to characteristic behavior deficits that were significantly rescued by expression of the human glutamate transporter hEAAT2 or the administration in food of riluzole, an anti-excitotoxic agent used in the clinic for human ALS patients. Signs of oxidative stress included hypersensitivity to the free radical generator paraquat and rescue by the antioxidant melatonin. Inactivation of dEAAT1 also resulted in shortened lifespan and marked brain neuropil degeneration characterized by widespread microvacuolization and swollen mitochondria. This suggests that the dEAAT1-deficient fly provides a powerful genetic model system for molecular analysis of glutamate-mediated neurodegeneration.  相似文献   

10.
In this review, we discuss examples that show how glial-cell pathology is increasingly recognized in several neurodegenerative diseases. We also discuss the more provocative idea that some of the disorders that are currently considered to be neurodegenerative diseases might, in fact, be due to primary abnormalities in glia. Although the mechanism of glial pathology (i.e. modulating glutamate excitotoxicity) might be better established for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), a role for neuronal-glial interactions in the pathogenesis of most neurodegenerative diseases is plausible. This burgeoning area of neuroscience will receive much attention in the future and it is expected that further understanding of basic neuronal-glial interactions will have a significant impact on the understanding of the fundamental nature of human neurodegenerative disorders.  相似文献   

11.
Mechanisms of excitotoxicity in neurologic diseases.   总被引:22,自引:0,他引:22  
M F Beal 《FASEB journal》1992,6(15):3338-3344
Excitotoxicity refers to neuronal cell death caused by activation of excitatory amino acid receptors. A substantial body of evidence has implicated excitotoxicity as a mechanism of cell death in both acute and chronic neurologic diseases. A major recent advance has been the successful cloning and expression of the N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA), non-NMDA, and metabotropic glutamate receptors. The cellular mechanisms responsible for cell death after activation of these receptors are still being clarified. In acute neurologic diseases such as stroke and head trauma, excitotoxicity may be related to excessive glutamate release. In chronic neurodegenerative diseases, however, a slow excitotoxic process is more likely to occur as a consequence of either a receptor abnormality or an impairment of energy metabolism. Recent therapeutic studies have demonstrated the efficacy of non-NMDA receptor antagonists in experimental studies of global ischemia.  相似文献   

12.
Excitotoxicity describes a pathogenic process whereby death of neurons releases large amounts of the excitatory neurotransmitter glutamate, which then proceeds to activate a set of glutamatergic receptors on neighboring neurons (glutamate, N‐methyl‐D‐aspartate (NMDA), and kainate), opening ion channels leading to an influx of calcium ions producing mitochondrial dysfunction and cell death. Excitotoxicity contributes to brain damage after stroke, traumatic brain injury, and neurodegenerative diseases, and is also involved in spinal cord injury. We tested whether low level laser (light) therapy (LLLT) at 810 nm could protect primary murine cultured cortical neurons against excitotoxicity in vitro produced by addition of glutamate, NMDA or kainate. Although the prevention of cell death was modest but significant, LLLT (3 J/cm2 delivered at 25 mW/cm2 over 2 min) gave highly significant benefits in increasing ATP, raising mitochondrial membrane potential, reducing intracellular calcium concentrations, reducing oxidative stress and reducing nitric oxide. The action of LLLT in abrogating excitotoxicity may play a role in explaining its beneficial effects in diverse central nervous system pathologies. (© 2014 WILEY‐VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim)  相似文献   

13.
Impaired regulation of mitochondrial dynamics, which shifts the balance towards fission, is associated with neuronal death in age-related neurodegenerative diseases, such as Alzheimer's disease or Parkinson's disease. A role for mitochondrial dynamics in acute brain injury, however, has not been elucidated to date. Here, we investigated the role of dynamin-related protein 1 (Drp1), one of the key regulators of mitochondrial fission, in neuronal cell death induced by glutamate toxicity or oxygen-glucose deprivation (OGD) in vitro, and after ischemic brain damage in vivo. Drp1 siRNA and small molecule inhibitors of Drp1 prevented mitochondrial fission, loss of mitochondrial membrane potential (MMP), and cell death induced by glutamate or tBid overexpression in immortalized hippocampal HT-22 neuronal cells. Further, Drp1 inhibitors protected primary neurons against glutamate excitotoxicity and OGD, and reduced the infarct volume in a mouse model of transient focal ischemia. Our data indicate that Drp1 translocation and associated mitochondrial fission are key features preceding the loss of MMP and neuronal cell death. Thus, inhibition of Drp1 is proposed as an efficient strategy of neuroprotection against glutamate toxicity and OGD in vitro and ischemic brain damage in vivo.  相似文献   

14.
The excessive activation of N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptors by glutamate results in neuronal excitotoxicity. cAMP is a key second messenger and contributes to NMDA receptor-dependent synaptic plasticity. Adenylyl cyclases 1 (AC1) and 8 (AC8) are the two major calcium-stimulated ACs in the central nervous system. Previous studies demonstrate AC1 and AC8 play important roles in synaptic plasticity, memory, and persistent pain. However, little is known about the possible roles of these two ACs in glutamate-induced neuronal excitotoxicity. Here, we report that genetic deletion of AC1 significantly attenuated neuronal death induced by glutamate in primary cultures of cortical neurons, whereas AC8 deletion did not produce a significant effect. AC1, but not AC8, contributes to intracellular cAMP production following NMDA receptor activation by glutamate in cultured cortical neurons. AC1 is involved in the dynamic modulation of cAMP-response element-binding protein activity in neuronal excitotoxicity. To explore the possible roles of AC1 in cell death in vivo, we studied neuronal excitotoxicity induced by an intracortical injection of NMDA. Cortical lesions induced by NMDA were significantly reduced in AC1 but not in AC8 knock-out mice. Our findings provide direct evidence that AC1 plays an important role in neuronal excitotoxicity and may serve as a therapeutic target for preventing excitotoxicity in stroke and neurodegenerative diseases.  相似文献   

15.
Blockade of glutamate excitotoxicity and its clinical applications   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Glutamate has long been known to play a vital role in the normal functioning of neurons, serving as the main excitatory neurotransmitter in the central nervous system. The normal function of glutamate, as a means of communication from one neuron to the next, breaks down in certain disease states. Under particular scrutiny has been the etiology of neuronal damage caused by ischemic disease, seen most commonly in cerebrovascular embolic disease, commonly known as a stroke. It has been shown that damage associated with ischemic disease in the brain is not a direct result of hypoxia or deprivation of metabolic intermediates. In fact, the crucial role is played by an excessive efflux of glutamate by ischemic neurons, which then in turn activates pathways in post-synaptic neurons leading to acute cell swelling and later, cell death. An extremely hopeful development in the field of glutamate excitotoxicity has been the application of therapeutic methods aimed at attenuating the damaging action of glutamate, in an effort to decrease morbidity associated with such common diseases as stroke and other neurodegenerative disorders.Special issue dedicated to Dr. Claude Baxter.  相似文献   

16.
Xu W  Wong TP  Chery N  Gaertner T  Wang YT  Baudry M 《Neuron》2007,53(3):399-412
Excitotoxicity mediated by glutamate receptors plays crucial roles in ischemia and other neurodegenerative diseases. Whereas overactivation of ionotropic glutamate receptors is neurotoxic, the role of metabotropic glutamate receptors (mGluRs), and especially mGluR1, remains equivocal. Here we report that activation of NMDA receptors results in calpain-mediated truncation of the C-terminal domain of mGluR1alpha at Ser(936). The truncated mGluR1alpha maintains its ability to increase cytosolic calcium while it no longer activates the neuroprotective PI(3)K-Akt signaling pathways. Full-length and truncated forms of mGluR1alpha play distinct roles in excitotoxic neuronal degeneration in cultured neurons. A fusion peptide derived from the calpain cleavage site of mGluR1alpha efficiently blocks NMDA-induced truncation of mGluR1alpha in primary neuronal cultures and exhibits neuroprotection against excitotoxicity both in vitro and in vivo. These findings shed light on the relationship between NMDA and mGluR1alpha and indicate the existence of a positive feedback regulation in excitotoxicity involving calpain and mGluR1alpha.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Haemostatic proteinases may appear in brain tissue after injury and under inflammation as a result of the blood-brain barrier disruption. Serine proteinases regulate cell functions through G-protein-coupled transmembrane protease-activated receptors (PARs). Proteinases cleave only one peptide bond of receptor exodomain, which results in the formation of a new N-terminus (“tethered ligand”) that can specifically interact with the second extracellular loop of the receptor and activate it. Two types of receptors (EPCR and PAR1) are necessary for the cytoprotective effect of activated protein C (APC) on endothelial cells and neurons. APC activates PAR-1 and controls gene expression of proinflammatory and proapoptotic factors. APC exerts a protective effect in stressed neurons and hypoxic brain endothelium, modulates the activity of endothelial cell genes involved in apoptosis, and stabilizes the endothelial barrier. We suppose that the peptides analogous to the PAR1 tethered ligand released by APC may have a neuroprotective effect similar to that of APC. We have simulated ischemic brain damage using a model of glutamate excitotoxicity on the primary culture of neonatal rat hippocampal neurons. It was shown that NPNDKYEPF-amide (peptide 9) and NPNDKYEPFWE (peptide 11) more effectively reduced the level of apoptosis during neuronal excitotoxicity in comparison with APC, while the influence of these peptides on the number of living and necrotic cells was analogous to that of APC. The findings suggest that the protective effect of the peptides analogous to the PAR1 tethered ligand is comparable to the protective effect of APC under glutamate excitotoxicity. Investigation of the mechanisms of PAR1 agonist peptides action and development of their shortened versions with high neuroprotective activity may be a relevant approach to the search of novel neuroprotective drugs for treating neurodegenerative diseases and strokes.  相似文献   

19.
Glutamate-mediated excitotoxicity is involved in many acute and chronic brain diseases. Dynamin related protein 1 (Drp-1), one of the GTPase family of proteins that regulate mitochondrial fission and fusion balance, is associated with apoptotic cell death in cancer and neurodegenerative diseases. Here we investigated the effect of downregulating Drp-1 on glutamate excitotoxicity-induced neuronal injury in HT22 cells. We found that downregulation of Drp-1 with specific small interfering RNA (siRNA) increased cell viability and inhibited lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) release after glutamate treatment. Downregulation of Drp-1 also inhibited an increase in the Bax/Bcl-2 ratio and cleavage of caspase-9 and caspase-3. Drp-1 siRNA transfection preserved the mitochondrial membrane potential (MMP), reduced cytochrome c release, enhanced ATP production, and partly prevented mitochondrial swelling. In addition, Drp-1 knockdown attenuated glutamate-induced increases of cytoplasmic and mitochondrial Ca2+, and preserved the mitochondrial Ca2+ buffering capacity after excitotoxicity. Taken together, these results suggest that downregulation of Drp-1 protects HT22 cells against glutamate-induced excitatory damage, and this neuroprotection may be dependent at least in part on the preservation of mitochondrial function through regulating intracellular calcium homeostasis.  相似文献   

20.
D-Amino acids have been known to be present in bacteria for more than 50 years, but only recently they were identified in mammals. The occurrence of D-amino acids in mammals challenge classic concepts in biology in which only L-amino acids would be present or thought to play important roles. Recent discoveries uncovered a role of endogenous D-serine as a putative glial-derived transmitter that regulates glutamatergic neurotransmission in mammalian brain. Free D-serine levels in the brain are about one third of L-serine values and its extracellular concentration is higher than many common L-amino acids. D-Serine occurs in protoplasmic astrocytes, a class of glial cells that ensheath the synapses and modulate neuronal activity. Biochemical and electrophysiological studies suggest that endogenous D-serine is a physiological modulator at the co-agonist site of NMDA-type of glutamate receptors. We previously showed that D-serine is synthesized by a glial serine racemase, a novel enzyme converting L- to D-serine in mammalian brain. The enzyme requires pyridoxal 5'-phosphate and it was the first racemase to be cloned from eucaryotes. Inhibitors of serine racemase have therapeutic implications for pathological processes in which over-stimulation of NMDA receptors takes place, such as stroke and neurodegenerative diseases. Here, we review the role of endogenous D-serine in modulating NMDA neurotransmission, its biosynthetic apparatus and the potential usefulness of serine racemase inhibitors as a novel neuroprotective strategy to decrease glutamate/NMDA excitotoxicity.  相似文献   

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