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1.
Using primary neuronal cultures, we investigated the effects of GSH depletion on the cytotoxic effects of glutamate and NO in dopaminergic neurons. Intracellular GSH was depleted by 24-h exposure to L-buthionine-[S,R]-sulfoximine (BSO), an irreversible inhibitor of GSH synthase. BSO exposure caused concentration-dependent reduction of the viability of both dopaminergic and nondopaminergic neurons. In contrast, 24-h exposure of cultures to glutamate or NOC18, an NO-releasing agent, significantly reduced the viability of nondopaminergic neurons without affecting that of dopaminergic neurons. Pretreatment with N-acetyl-L-cysteine for 24 h ameliorated the NOC18-induced toxicity in nondopaminergic neurons. In dopaminergic neurons, sublethal concentrations of BSO reduced intracellular GSH content and markedly potentiated glutamate- and NOC18-induced toxicity. These results suggested that glutamate toxicity was enhanced in dopaminergic neurons by suppression of defense mechanisms against NO toxicity under conditions of GSH depletion. Under such conditions, free iron plays an important role because BSO-enhanced NO toxicity was ameliorated by the iron-chelating agent, deferoxamine. These results suggest that GSH plays an important role in the expression of NO-mediated glutamate cytotoxicity in dopaminergic neurons. Free iron may be related to enhanced NO cytotoxicity under GSH depletion.  相似文献   

2.
In the present work, we focused on mechanisms of methylmercury (MeHg) toxicity in primary astrocytes and neurons of rats. Cortical astrocytes and neurons exposed to 0.5–5 μM MeHg present a link among morphological alterations, glutathione (GSH) depletion, glutamate dyshomeostasis, and cell death. Disrupted neuronal cytoskeleton was assessed by decreased neurite length and neurite/neuron ratio. Astrocytes presented reorganization of actin and glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) networks and reduced cytoplasmic area. Glutamate uptake and Na+K+ATPase activity in MeHg-treated astrocytes were preserved; however, downregulated EAAC1-mediated glutamate uptake was associated with impaired Na+K+ATPase activity in neurons. Oxidative imbalance was found in astrocytes and neurons through increased 2′7′-dichlorofluorescein (DCF) production and misregulated superoxide dismutase (SOD), catalase (CAT), and glutathione reductase (GPX) activities. Glutathione (GSH) levels were downregulated in both astrocytes and neurons. MeHg reduced neuronal viability and induced caspase 3-dependent apoptosis together with downregulated PI3K/Akt pathway. In astrocytes, necrotic death was associated with increased TNF-α and JNK/MAPK activities. Cytoskeletal remodeling and cell death were fully prevented in astrocytes and neurons by GSH, but not melatonin or Trolox supplementation. These findings support a role for depleted GSH in the cytotoxicity of MeHg leading to disruption of the cytoskeleton and cell death. Moreover, in neurons, glutamate antagonists also prevented cytoskeletal disruption and neuronal death. We propose that cytoskeleton is an end point in MeHg cytotoxicity. Oxidative imbalance and glutamate mechanisms mediate MeHg cytoskeletal disruption and apoptosis in neurons. Otherwise, redox imbalance and glutamate-independent mechanisms disrupted the cytoskeleton and induced necrosis in MeHg-exposed astrocyte.  相似文献   

3.
The occurrence, nature and prevention of ammonia-induced cell death were assayed in cultured primary cortical neurons from newborn rats. Treatment with 1-10 mM ammonium chloride for 24 or 48 h, dose-dependently decreased neuronal survival (MTT assay) and GSH/GSSG ratio in the cultures, whereas total GSH content was significantly reduced only with 10mM ammonia. Treatment with a glutathione synthesis inhibitor, buthionyl sulfoximine (BSO) (10 microM), decreased the GSH content and GSH/GSSG ratio to a degree similar to that of 10 mM ammonia, but it did not decrease cell survival in control cells. This indicates that glutathione depletion per se is not a cause of ammonia-induced neuronal death. However, ammonia-induced decrease of cell viability was attenuated by incubation with glutathione diethyl ester (GEE), which transiently increased the intracellular GSH level in both control and ammonia-treated cells. Neuronal survival in the presence of ammonia was partly improved by the NMDA receptor antagonists MK-801 and APV. Morphological analysis revealed that ammonia treatment causes both apoptotic and non-apoptotic neuronal death, the former not being inhibited by MK-801. Apoptosis was the dominant type of cell death at 10mM ammonia, as concluded both from morphologic examination and the absence of survival improvement in the presence of GABA+nipecotic acid or taurine, model anti-excitotoxic treatments of cortical neurons. The mechanism underlying apoptosis may include inhibition of a survival kinase, Akt, whose activatory phosphorylation at Ser473 is reduced in neurons treated with 10 mM, but not 1 mM ammonia.  相似文献   

4.
Altered glial function in the substantia nigra in Parkinson's disease may lead to the release of toxic substances that cause dopaminergic cell death or increase neuronal vulnerability to neurotoxins. To investigate this concept, we examined the effects of subjecting astrocytes to lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced activation alone or combined with L-buthionine-[S,R]-sulfoximine-induced glutathione depletion or inhibition of complex I activity by 1-methyl-4-phenylpyridinium (MPP+) on the viability of primary ventral mesencephalic neurones or susceptibility to MPP+ and 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA) in co-cultures. LPS-activated astrocytes caused neuronal death in a time-dependent manner, but glutathione-depleted or complex I-inhibited astrocytes had no effect on neuronal viability. The neurotoxicity of LPS-activated astrocytes was inhibited by the inducible nitric oxide synthase inhibitor aminoguanidine, by the nitric oxide scavenger 2-(4-carboxyphenyl)-4,4,5,5-tetramethylimidazoline-1-oxyl-3-oxide, and by reduced glutathione (GSH). MPP+-induced neuronal death was greater in ventral mesencephalic cultures previously cultured with LPS-activated, glutathione-depleted, or complex I-inhibited astrocytes compared with co-cultures containing normal astrocytes. The increased neuronal susceptibility to MPP+ caused by LPS-activated or complex I-inhibited astrocytes and glutathione-depleted astrocytes was inhibited by the NMDA/glutamate antagonist MK-801 and by GSH, respectively. Neuronal death caused by 6-OHDA was increased in ventral mesencephalic cultures previously cultured with LPS-activated and glutathione-depleted, but not complex I-inhibited astrocytes, compared with co-cultures containing normal astrocytes. Treatment of co-cultures with GSH prevented the increased neuronal susceptibility to 6-OHDA. These findings suggest that glial dysfunction may cause neuronal death or render neurones susceptible to toxic insults via a mechanism involving the release of free radicals and glutamate. Such a mechanism may play a role in the development or progression of nigrostriatal degeneration in Parkinson's disease.  相似文献   

5.
To date, glutathione (GSH) depletion is the earliest biochemical alteration shown in brains of Parkinson's disease patients, but the role of GSH in dopamine cell survival is debated. In this study we show that GSH depletion, produced with GSH synthesis inhibitor, L-buthionine-(S,R)-sulfoximine (BSO), induces selectively neuronal cell death in neuron/glia, but not in neuronal-enriched midbrain cultures and that cell death occurs with characteristics of necrosis and apoptosis. BSO produces a dose- and time-dependent generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in neurons. BSO activates extracellular signal-regulated kinases (ERK-1/2), 4 and 6 h after treatment. MEK-1/2 and lipoxygenase (LOX) inhibitors, as well as ascorbic acid, prevent ERK-1/2 activation and neuronal loss, but the inhibition of nitric oxide sintase (NOS), cyclo-oxygenase (COX), c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) and p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (p38 MAPK) does not have protective effects. Co-localization studies show that p-ERK-1/2 expression after BSO treatment increased in astrocytes and microglial cells, but not in neurons. Selective metabolic impairment of glial cells with fluoroacetate decreased ERK activation. However, blockade of microglial activation with minocycline did not. Our results indicate that neuronal death induced by GSH depletion is due to ROS-dependent activation of the ERK-1/2 signalling pathway in glial cells. These data may be of relevance in Parkinson's disease, where GSH depletion and glial dysfunction have been documented.  相似文献   

6.
Given that neurons are post-mitotic cells, their life span is generally long enough to reach that of humans. However, sometimes neurons die without recognizable causes, as a result of a process called neurodegeneration. Apart from when gene mutations can be correlated with disease, it is difficult to pinpoint molecules that are responsible for neuronal death. Therefore, neurons living in a 'sick state' for many years might reveal important information about neuronal death. Systematic and extensive single-neuron analysis of 'sick' neurons is expected to provide clues to the mechanisms of neurodegeneration. Moreover, the elimination of putative triggering and promoting factors involved in neurodegenerative disease might prevent disease progression.  相似文献   

7.
The acute secretion of glucocorticoids is critical for responding to physiological stress. Under normal circumstances these hormones do not cause acute neuronal injury, but they have been shown to enhance ischemic and seizure-induced neuronal injury in the rat brain. Using fetal rat hippocampal cultures, we asked whether hypoxic and hypoglycemic cell damage in vitro could be exacerbated by direct exposure to corticosterone (CORT). Each of these insults alone damaged neuronal cells, whereas 4-6 h of hypoxic treatment could damage age-matched astrocytes if glucose was reduced or omitted. Ischemic-like injury to both cell types could be attenuated by pretreatment with high (30 mM) glucose. Exposure to 100 nM CORT did not affect cell viability under control conditions but enhanced both hypoxic and hypoglycemic neuronal injury. In both cases, pretreatment with high glucose abolished this CORT-mediated synergy. In astrocyte cultures, CORT exacerbated both hypoxic and hypoglycemic injury and this effect was also attenuated by high-glucose pretreatment. Identical 24-h CORT treatment caused a 13% reduction in glucose uptake in astrocytes and a 38% reduction in glycogen content, without affecting the level of intracellular glucose. Thus, CORT could endanger both neurons and astrocytes in mixed hippocampal cultures and this effect emerged only under conditions of substrate depletion. The metabolic disruption in astrocytes by CORT further suggests that the ability of CORT to exacerbate neuronal injury may be due in part to impaired glial cell function.  相似文献   

8.
Glial Cells Mediate Toxicity in Glutathione-Depleted Mesencephalic Cultures   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
We have examined the role of glial cells in the toxicity that results from inhibition of reduced glutathione (GSH) synthesis by L-buthionine sulfoximine (BSO) in mesencephalic cell cultures. We show that GSH depletion, to levels that cause total cell loss in cultures containing neurons and glial cells, has no effect on cell viability in enriched neuronal cultures. An increase in the plating cell density sensitizes glia-containing cultures to GSH depletion-induced toxicity. This suggests that cell death in this model is the consequence of events that are induced by GSH depletion and are mediated by glial cells. The antioxidant ascorbic acid and the lipoxygenase (LOX) inhibitor nordihydroguaiaretic acid (1-10 microM) provide full protection from BSO toxicity, indicating that arachidonic acid metabolism through the LOX pathway and the generation of reactive oxygen species play a role in the loss of cell viability. In contrast, inhibition of nitric oxide (NO) synthase affords only partial protection from BSO toxicity, suggesting that increased NO production cannot entirely account for cell death in this model. Our data provide evidence that GSH depletion in the presence of glial cells leads to neuronal degeneration that can be prevented by inhibition of LOX. This may have relevance to the pathogenesis of Parkinson's disease, where glial activation and depletion of GSH have been found in the substantia nigra pars compacta.  相似文献   

9.
Extracellular glutamate should be maintained at low levels to conserve optimal neurotransmission and prevent glutamate neurotoxicity in the brain. Excitatory amino acid transporters (EAATs) play a pivotal role in removing extracellular glutamate in the central nervous system (CNS). Excitatory amino acid carrier 1 (EAAC1) is a high-affinity Na+-dependent neuronal EAAT that is ubiquitously expressed in the brain. However, most glutamate released in the synapses is cleared by glial EAATs, but not by EAAC1 in vivo. In the CNS, EAAC1 is widely distributed in somata and dendrites but not in synaptic terminals. The contribution of EAAC1 to the control of extracellular glutamate levels seems to be negligible in the brain. However, EAAC1 can transport not only extracellular glutamate but also cysteine into the neurons. Cysteine is an important substrate for glutathione (GSH) synthesis in the brain. GSH has a variety of neuroprotective functions, while its depletion induces neurodegeneration. Therefore, EAAC1 might exert a critical role for neuroprotection in neuronal GSH metabolism rather than glutamatergic neurotransmission, while EAAC1 dysfunction would cause neurodegeneration. Despite the potential importance of EAAC1 in the brain, previous studies have mainly focused on the glutamate neurotoxicity induced by glial EAAT dysfunction. In recent years, however, several studies have revealed regulatory mechanisms of EAAC1 functions in the brain. This review will summarize the latest information on the EAAC1-regulated neuroprotective functions in the CNS.  相似文献   

10.
Abnormalities in oxidative processes, region-selective neuron loss, inflammation and diminished activity of thiamine-dependent enzymes characterize age-related neurodegenerative diseases. Thiamine deficiency (TD) models the selective neurodegeneration that accompanies mild impairment of oxidative metabolism. As in human neurodegenerative diseases, alterations in multiple cell types accompany the TD-induced neurodegeneration. The current studies demonstrate that CD40 and CD40 ligand (CD40L), two co-stimulatory immune molecules, are involved in TD-induced selective neuronal death. TD induced CD40 immunoreactivity in microglia and CD40L immunoreactivity in astrocytes. Both CD40-positive microglia and CD40L-positive astrocytes increased during the progressive TD-induced neuronal death. In early stages of TD, targeted deletion of CD40 diminished the number of CD40L-positive astrocytes and reduced neuronal death by 35%. The number of CD40L-positive astrocytes increased whenever the number of NeuN-positive neurons decreased. In early stages of TD, deletion of CD40L diminished CD40-positive microglia and reduced the neuronal death by 64%. In advanced phases of TD, neither CD40 nor CD40L deletion protected against neuronal death. The data show for the first time that TD induces expression of CD40 by the microglia and CD40L by astrocytes. The results indicate that CD40-CD40L interactions promote neuronal death in early stages of TD, but that at later phases the protective effects of the diminished CD40 or CD40L are over-ridden by other mechanisms.  相似文献   

11.
Cao Q  Wei LR  Lu LL  Zhao CL  Zhao HY  Yang H 《生理学报》2007,59(3):253-259
星形胶质细胞维持神经元微环境,给予营养和代谢支持,并调节其对损伤的反应。鱼藤酮特异阻断线粒体复合物Ⅰ,长期暴露于鱼藤酮可能增加患帕金森病的几率,并引起帕金森综合征。然而,星形胶质细胞在鱼藤酮所致多巴胺能神经元损伤过程中的作用尚无报道。本研究采用多巴胺能神经元细胞系MN9D细胞模型,将经过或未经过星形胶质细胞条件培养基处理的MN9D细胞暴露于不同浓度的鱼藤酮中,用计数法测生长曲线,MTT法测细胞活性,DCFH染色流式细胞仪测氧化应激水平,比色法测还原型谷胱甘肽含量。结果显示,MN9D细胞在条件和普通培养基培养条件下生长曲线无明显差别;鱼藤酮浓度依赖性地降低细胞活性;不同浓度鱼藤酮作用24、48h后,经条件培养基处理的细胞其活性显著高于普通培养基培养的细胞:不同浓度的条件培养基都有保护作用,纯的条件培养基保护作用稍弱:预先24h条件培养基处理或同时给予鱼藤酮和条件培养基处理都有保护作用,鱼藤酮作用12h后再给予条件培养基则无保护作用;经条件培养基处理的细胞氧化应激水平降低:另外,条件培养基提高了细胞内还原型谷胱甘肽含量,缓解了鱼藤酮所致的谷胱甘肽耗竭。结果提示,星形胶质细胞可保护MN9D细胞抵抗鱼藤酮所致的氧化应激,还原型谷胱甘肽可能参与了该保护过程。  相似文献   

12.
Perturbations to glutathione (GSH) metabolism may play an important role in neurodegenerative disorders such as Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, and prion diseases. A primary function of GSH is to prevent the toxic interaction between free radicals and reactive transition metals such as copper (Cu). Due to the potential role of Cu in neurodegeneration, we examined the effect of GSH depletion on Cu toxicity in murine primary neuronal cultures. Depletion of cellular GSH with L-buthionine-[S,R]-sulfoximine resulted in a dramatic potentiation of Cu toxicity in neurons without effect on iron (Fe) toxicity. Similarly, inhibition of glutathione reductase (GR) activity with 1,3-bis(2-chloroethyl)-1-nitrosurea also increased Cu toxicity in neurons. To determine if the Alzheimer's amyloid-beta (Abeta) peptide can affect neuronal resistance to transition metal toxicity, we exposed cultures to nontoxic concentrations of Abeta25-35 in the presence or absence of Cu or Fe. Abeta25-35 pretreatment was found to deplete neuronal GSH and increase GR activity, confirming the ability of Abeta to perturb neuronal GSH homeostasis. Abeta25-35 pretreatment potently increased Cu toxicity but had no effect on Fe toxicity. These studies demonstrate an important role for neuronal GSH homeostasis in selective protection against Cu toxicity, a finding with widespread implications for neurodegenerative disorders.  相似文献   

13.
Hippocalcin is a neuronal calcium sensor protein previously implicated in regulating neuronal viability and plasticity. Hippocalcin is the most highly expressed neuronal calcium sensor in the medium spiny striatal output neurons that degenerate selectively in Huntington's disease (HD). We have previously shown that decreased hippocalcin expression occurs in parallel with the onset of disease phenotype in mouse models of HD. Here we show by in situ hybridization histochemistry that hippocalcin RNA is also diminished by 63% in human HD brain. These findings lead us to hypothesize that diminished hippocalcin expression might contribute to striatal neurodegeneration in HD. We tested this hypothesis by assessing whether restoration of hippocalcin expression would decrease striatal neurodegeneration in cellular models of HD comprising primary striatal neurons exposed to mutant huntingtin, the mitochondrial toxin 3-nitropropionic acid or an excitotoxic concentration of glutamate. Counter to our hypothesis, hippocalcin expression did not improve the survival of striatal neurons under these conditions. Likewise, expression of hippocalcin together with interactor proteins including the neuronal apoptosis inhibitory protein did not increase the survival of striatal cells in cellular models of HD. These results indicate that diminished hippocalcin expression does not contribute to HD-related neurodegeneration.  相似文献   

14.
Neurons rely on glutathione (GSH) and its degradation product cysteinylglycine released by astrocytes to maintain their antioxidant defences. This is particularly important under conditions of inflammation and oxidative stress, as observed in many neurodegenerative diseases including Alzheimer’s disease (AD). The effects of inflammatory activation on intracellular GSH content and the extracellular thiol profile (including cysteinylglycine and homocysteine) of astrocytes were investigated. U373 astroglial cells exposed to IL-1β and TNF-α for up to 96 h showed a dose-dependent increase in IL-6 release, indicative of increasing pro-inflammatory cellular activation. With increasing concentrations of IL-1β and TNF-α (0.01–1 ng/ml), an increase in both intracellular and extracellular GSH levels was observed, followed by a return to control levels in response to higher concentrations of IL-1β and TNF-α. Extracellular levels of cysteinylglycine decreased in response to all concentrations of IL-1β and TNF-α. In contrast, levels of the neurotoxic thiol homocysteine increased in a dose-dependent manner to IL-1β and TNF-α-induced activation. Our results suggest that chronically activated astrocytes in the brain might fail to adequately maintain GSH substrate delivery to neurons, thus promoting neuronal vulnerability. They might also explain the elevated levels of homocysteine found in the brains and serum of patients with AD.  相似文献   

15.
Preferential striatal neurodegeneration is a hallmark of Huntington’s disease (HD) pathogenesis, which has been associated with mitochondrial dysfunction. Evidence from genetic HD models suggest that mutant huntingtin (mHtt) compromises mitochondrial bioenergetics and dynamics, preventing efficient calcium handling and ATP generation in neuronal networks. Striatal neurons receive abundant glutamatergic input from the cortex, forming tripartite synapses with astrocytic partners. These are involved in bidirectional communication, play neuroprotective roles, and emerging evidence suggests that astrocyte dysfunction supports non-cell autonomous neurodegeneration. In addition to mHtt effects, inherent mitochondria vulnerability within striatal neurons and astrocytes may contribute for preferential neurodegeneration in HD. Dysfunctional astrocytic mitochondria in cortico-striatal tripartite synapses might be particularly relevant in the pathogenesis of juvenile/infantile HD, frequently associated with seizures and abnormally large mHtt polyglutamine expansions. This review discusses our work, primarily addressing in situ mitochondrial function in neurons and astrocytes, in the context of related work within the HD-mitochondria field.  相似文献   

16.
Abstract: The glial-derived neurotrophic protein S100β has been implicated in the development and maintenance of the nervous system. S100β has also been postulated to play a role in mechanisms of neuropathology because of its specific localization and selective overexpression in Alzheimer's disease. However, the exact relationship between S100β overexpression and neurodegeneration is unclear. Recent data have demonstrated that treatment of cultured rat astrocytes with high concentrations of S100β results in a potent activation of inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) and a subsequent generation of nitric oxide (NO), which can lead to astrocytic cell death. To investigate whether S100β-induced NO release from astrocytes might influence neurons, we studied S100β effects on neuroblastoma B104 cells or primary hippocampal neurons co-cultured with astrocytes. We found that S100β treatment of astrocyte-neuron co-cultures resulted in neuronal cell death by both necrosis and apoptosis. Neuronal cell death induced by S100β required the presence of astrocytes and depended on activation of iNOS. Cell death correlated with the levels of NO and was blocked by a specific NOS inhibitor. Our data support the idea that overexpression of S100β may be an exacerbating factor in the neurodegeneration of Alzheimer's disease.  相似文献   

17.
Inflammation contributes to neurodegeneration in post-ischemic brain, diabetes, and Alzheimer's disease. Participants in this inflammatory response include activation of microglia and astrocytes. We studied the role of microglia treated with amyloid-β peptide (Aβ) on hemichannel activity of astrocytes subjected to hypoxia in high glucose. Reoxygenation after 3?h hypoxia in high glucose induced transient astroglial permeabilization via Cx43 hemichannels and reduction in intercellular communication via Cx43 cell-cell channels. Both responses were greater and longer lasting in astrocytes previously exposed for 24 h to conditioned medium from Aβ-treated microglia (CM-Aβ). The effects of CM-Aβ were mimicked by TNF-α and IL-1β and were abrogated by neutralizing TNF-α with soluble receptor and IL-1β with a receptor antagonist. Astrocytes under basal conditions protected neurons against hypoxia, but exposure to CM-Aβ made them toxic to neurons subjected to a sub-lethal hypoxia/reoxygenation episode, revealing the additive nature of the insults. Astrocytes exposed to CM-Aβ induced permeabilization of cortical neurons through activation of neuronal pannexin 1 (Panx1) hemichannels by ATP and glutamate released through astroglial Cx43 hemichannels. In agreement, inhibition of NMDA or P2X receptors only partially reduced the activation of neuronal Panx1 hemichannels and neuronal mortality, but simultaneous inhibition of both receptors completely prevented the neurotoxic response. Therefore, we suggest that responses to ATP and glutamate converge in activation of neuronal Panx1 hemichannels. Thus, we propose that blocking hemichannels expressed by astrocytes and/or neurons in the inflamed nervous system could represent a novel and alternative strategy to reduce neuronal loss in various pathological states including Alzheimer's disease, diabetes and ischemia.  相似文献   

18.
Recent evidence has been provided for astrocyte degeneration in experimental models of neurodegenerative insults associated with glutamate transport alteration. To determine whether astrocyte death can directly result from altered glutamate transport, we here investigated the effects of L-trans-pyrrolidine-2,4-dicarboxylate (PDC) on undifferentiated or differentiated cultured rat striatal astrocytes. PDC induced death of differentiated astrocytes without affecting undifferentiated astrocyte viability. Death of differentiated astrocytes was also triggered by another substrate inhibitor but not by blockers of glutamate transporters. The PDC-induced death was delayed and apoptotic, and death rate was dose and treatment duration-dependent. Although preceded by extracellular glutamate increase, this death was not mediated through glutamate receptor stimulation, as antagonists did not provide protection. It involves oxidative stress, as a decrease in glutathione contents and a dramatic raise in reactive oxygen species preceded cell loss, and as protection was provided by antioxidants. PDC induced a similar percentage of GSH depletion in the undifferentiated astrocytes, but only a slight increase in reactive oxygen species. Interestingly, undifferentiated astrocytes exhibited twofold higher basal GSH content compared with the differentiated ones, and depleting their GSH content was found to render them susceptible to PDC. Altogether, these data demonstrate that basal GSH content is a critical factor of astrocyte vulnerability to glutamate transport alteration with possible insights onto concurrent death of astrocytes and gliosis in neurodegenerative insults.  相似文献   

19.
Methylmercury (MeHg) is well known as a neurotoxic chemical. However, little is mentioned about its neurotoxic mechanism or molecular target in human neuronal cells in particular. We show in this study that exposure of human neuronal cell line, SH-SY5Y, to MeHg dose- and time-dependently impairs viability and mRNA expression of selenoprotein W (SeW) with a significant difference, unlike other selenoenzymes such as, SeP, GPX4, 5DI, and 5'DI. Using real-time RT PCR, the influence of selenium (Se) and glutathione (GSH) on SeW expression was also investigated. While Se depletion caused a weakly reduced SeW mRNA levels, additional Se caused an increase of SeW mRNA levels. Although 2 mM GSH had induced a weak shift on SeW level, the expression of SeW mRNA was down-regulated in SH-SY5Y cells treated with 25 microM BSO, an inhibitor of GSH synthesis. To understand the relationship between a decrease of SeW expression and intracellular GSH and ROS, we measured the concentration of intracellular GSH and ROS in cells treated to 1.4 microM MeHg using fluorescence based assays. A positive correlation was found between SeW mRNA level and intracellular GSH but no significant correlation was observed between intracellular ROS and SeW mRNA level or intracellular GSH contents. Therefore, we suggest that SeW is the novel molecular target of MeHg in human neuronal cells and down-regulation of this selenoenzyme by MeHg is dependent not on generation of ROS but on depletion of GSH.  相似文献   

20.
Oxidative stress is implicated in mitochondrial dysfunction associated with neurodegeneration in Parkinson’s disease (PD). Depletion of the cellular antioxidant glutathione (GSH) resulting in oxidative stress is considered as an early event in neurodegeneration. We previously showed that curcumin, a dietary polyphenol from turmeric induced GSH synthesis in experimental models and protected against oxidative stress. Here we tested the effect of three bioconjugates of curcumin (involving diesters of demethylenated piperic acid, valine and glutamic acid) against GSH depletion mediated oxidative stress in dopaminergic neuronal cells and found that the glutamic acid derivative displayed improved neuroprotection compared to curcumin.  相似文献   

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