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1.
Abstract: Excitatory amino acids are an important cause of cell death in the hypoxic and ischaemic brain. Neuronal glutamate stores are depleted rapidly in hypoxia, but alanine production rises under such conditions and has been suggested to be a potential precursor of glutamate. To test this hypothesis, we have investigated amino acid metabolism using 13C NMR with superfused guinea pig cortical slices subjected to varying degrees of hypoxia. During severe hypoxia, brain slices metabolising 5 m M [2-13C]pyruvate exported [2-13C]alanine into the superfusion fluid. The metabolic fate of alanine during normoxia and hypoxia was tested by superfusion of brain slices with 10 m M glucose and 2 m M [2-13C, 15N]alanine. Metabolism of exogenous alanine leads to the release of aspartate into the superfusion fluid. The pattern of labelling of aspartate indicated that it was synthesised via the glial-specific enzyme pyruvate carboxylase. 13C-labelled glutamate was produced with both normoxia and hypoxia, but concentrations were 30-fold lower than for labelled aspartate. Thus, although substantial amounts of glutamate are not synthesised from alanine in hypoxia, there is significant production of aspartate, which also may have deleterious effects as an excitatory amino acid.  相似文献   

2.
Energy metabolism impairment is a central event in the pathophysiology of ischemia. The limited availability of glucose and oxygen strongly affects mitochondrial activity, thus leading to ATP depletion. In this setting, the switch to alternative energy sources could ameliorate cells survival by enhancing ATP production, thus representing an attractive strategy for ischemic treatment. In this regard, some studies have recently re-evaluated the metabolic role of glutamate and its potential to promote cell survival under pathological conditions. In the present review, we discuss the ability of glutamate to exert an “energizing role” in cardiac and neuronal models of hypoxia/reoxygenation (H/R) injury, focusing on the Na+/Ca2+ exchanger (NCX) and the Na+-dependent excitatory amino acid transporters (EAATs) as key players in this metabolic pathway.  相似文献   

3.
Astrocytes are important in regulating the microencironment of neurons both by catabolic and synthetic pathways. The glutamine synthetase (GS) activity observed in astrocytes affects neurons by removing toxic substances, NH3 and glutamate; and by providing an important neuronal substrate, glutamine. This glutamate cycle might play a critical role during periods of hypoxia and ischemia, when an increase in extracellular excitatory amino acids is observed. It was previously shown in our laboratory that fructose-1,6-bisphosphate (FBP) protected cortical astrocyte cultures from hypoxic insult and reduced ATP loss following a prolonged (18–30 hrs) hypoxia. In the present study we established the effects of FBP on the level of glutamate uptake and GS activity under normoxic and hypoxic conditions. Under normoxic conditions, [U-14C]glutamate uptake and glutamine production were independent of FBP treatment; whereas under hypoxic conditions, the initial increase in glutamate uptake and an overall increase in glutamine production in astrocytes were FBP-dependent. Glutamine synthetase activity was dependent on FBP added during the 22 hours of either normoxic- or hypoxic-treatment, hence significant increases in activity were observed due to FBP regardless of the oxygen/ATP levels in situ. These studies suggest that activation of GS by FBP may provide astrocytic protection against hypoxic injury.  相似文献   

4.
Abstract: Cerebral glutamate was monitored in a superfused cerebral cortical preparation by 1H NMR spectroscopy using a semiselective spin-echo sequence N -acetyl aspartate (NAA) as an internal concentration reference. During controlled metabolic conditions, the cerebral 1H NMR-detected glutamate-to-NAA ratio was ∼ 20–30% lower than expected from the ratio of neutralized perchloric acid extracts of the preparations. Inhibition of respiration in the presence of glucose did not change the 1H NMR glutamate-to-NAA ratio in brain slice preparation. In contrast, either complete depletion of ATP during cyanide poisoning together with 0 m M glucose, anoxia in the absence of glucose, or treatment with nigericin or with a protonophore, carbonyl cyanide- m -fluorophenylhydrazone, increased 1H NMR-detected glutamate/NAA in the cerebral preparations without a change in the relative and absolute concentration ratios determined from the tissue acid extracts. Spin-spin relaxation times of glutamate and NAA peaks in anoxic slices were 749 ± 89 and 729 ± 94 ms, respectively, and thus, the portion of glutamate that could not be detected by 1H NMR was quantified in absolute terms. It was calculated that an increase in the glutamate-to-NAA ratio from 0.55 ± 0.02 to 0.67 ± 0.02 during aglycemic anoxia corresponded to some 6 mmol/kg of tissue dry weight of glutamate from the total concentration of 28 mmol/kg dry weight. It is suggested that this 22% of total glutamate pool is present in a noncytoplasmic compartment during controlled metabolic state.  相似文献   

5.
Relating Cerebral Ischemia and Hypoxia to Insult Intensity   总被引:2,自引:1,他引:1  
The contributions of five variables believed to influence the brain's metabolism of O2 during hypoxia [duration, PaO2, delta CMRO2 (the difference between normal and experimental oxygen uptake), O2 availability (blood O2 content.CBF), and O2 deficit (delta CMRO2.duration)] were assessed by stepwise and multiple linear regression. Levels of brain tissue carbohydrates (lactate, glucose, and glycogen) and energy metabolites [ATP, AMP, and creatine phosphate (CrP)] were significantly influenced by O2 deficit during hypoxia, as was final CMRO2. After 60 min of reoxygenation, levels of tissue lactate, glucose, ATP, and AMP were related statistically to the O2 deficit during hypoxia; however, CMRO2 changes were always associated more significantly with O2 availability during hypoxia. Creatine (Cr) and CrP levels in the brain following reoxygenation were correlated more to delta CMRO2 during hypoxia. Changes in some brain carbohydrate (lactate and glucose), energy metabolite (ATP and AMP) levels, and [H+]i induced by complete ischemia were also influenced by O2 deficit. After 60 min of postischemic reoxygenation, brain carbohydrate (lactate, glucose, and glycogen) and energy metabolite (ATP, AMP, CrP, and Cr) correlated with O2 deficit during ischemia. We conclude that "O2 deficit" is an excellent gauge of insult intensity which is related to observed changes in nearly two-thirds of the brain metabolites we studied during and following hypoxia and ischemia.  相似文献   

6.
The protective effects of fructose-1,6-biphosphate (FBP) during hypoxia/ischemia are thought to result from uptake and utilization of FBP as a substrate for glycolysis or from stimulation of glucose metabolism. To test these hypotheses, we measumed CO2 and lactate production from [6-14C]glucose, [1-14C]glucose, and [U-14C]FBP in normoxic and hypoxic cultured astrocytes with and without FBP present. FBP had little effect on CO2 production by glycolysis, but increased CO2 production by the pentose phosphate pathway. Labeled FBP produced very small amounts of CO2. Lactate production from [1-, and 6-14C]glucose increased similarly during hypoxic hypoxia; the increase was independent of added FBP. Labeled lactate from [U-14C]FBP was minimal. We conclude that exogenous FBP is not used by astrocytes as a substrate for glycolysis and that FBP alters glucose metabolism.  相似文献   

7.
Abstract: 3-Nitropropionic acid (3-NPA) inhibited synaptosomal respiration in a dose-dependent manner; the degree of inhibition by the same concentration of the compound was greater, however, when respiration was stimulated by concomitant increase in ATP usage. The most rapid event after addition of 3-NPA was a decrease in [creatine phosphate]/[creatine] ([CrP]/[Cr]) and an increase in [lactate]/[pyruvate]. A fall in [ATP]/[ADP] and [GTP]/[GDP] was initially less pronounced but closely followed that in [CrP]/[Cr]. In the absence of glutamine, 3-NPA caused a pronounced decrease in internal aspartate level and a small reduction in glutamate concentration, whereas [GABA] rose; the sum of these three amino acids inside synaptosomes fell, but there were no increases in their external levels. With glutamine in the medium, the reduction in intrasynaptosomal aspartate was accompanied by increases in intrasynaptosomal glutamate and GABA. The external concentration of glutamate rose substantially in the presence of the inhibitor. 3-NPA had no effect on basal release of either glutamate (and GABA) or biogenic amines but increased efflux occurring upon addition of nonsaturating concentrations of the depolarizing agents veratridine and KCI. The results allow the following predictions with respect to the behavior of brain metabolism in neurodegenerative diseases that involve restrictions of mitochondrial function: (1) The extent of inhibition of mitochondrial ATP generation is expected to be greater in cells with high energy demand. The earliest signs of impairment of the respiratory chain function are a fall in [PCr]/[Cr] (or a rise in [Pi]/[CrP]) and an increase in [lactate]/[pyruvate]. (2) A fall in [GTP]/[GDP] can limit protein synthesis. This may be one of the factors that contributes to cell death. (3) An increase in the concentration of inorganic phosphate stimulates neuronal glutaminase activity and leads to a release of glutamate into the external environment; the latter could activate excitatory amino acid receptors. (4) A lowered energy level limits the cell's ability to restore ion gradients. Stimulated release of transmitters from neurons may, therefore, be enhanced and their reuptake delayed.  相似文献   

8.
Nitric Oxide Causes Glutamate Release from Brain Synaptosomes   总被引:2,自引:1,他引:1  
Abstract: We determined the ability of pathological levels of nitric oxide (NO) to cause glutamate release from isolated rat brain nerve terminals using a fluorometric assay. It was found that NO (0.7 and 2 µ M ) produced (4 and 10 nmol/mg of synaptosomal protein) Ca2+-independent glutamate release from synaptosomes (after 1 min of exposure). Spermine/NO complex (spermine NONOate; a slow NO donor) and potassium cyanide (an inhibitor of cytochrome oxidase) also caused Ca2+-independent glutamate release. Preincubation of synaptosomes with 5 µ M 1 H -[1,2,4]oxadiazole[4,3- a ]quinoxalin-1-one (an inhibitor of soluble guanylyl cyclase) had no effect on NO-induced Ca2+-independent glutamate release. Ca2+-independent glutamate release produced by NO was greater in a low-oxygen medium. NO, spermine NONOate, and potassium cyanide inhibited synaptosomal respiration with a similar order of potency with respect to their ability to cause glutamate release. Because NO has been shown previously to inhibit reversibly cytochrome oxidase in competition with oxygen, our findings in this study suggest that NO (and cyanide) causes glutamate release following inhibition of mitochondrial respiration at the level of cytochrome oxidase. Thus, elevated NO production leading to mitochondrial dysfunction, glutamate release, and excitotoxicity may contribute to neuronal death in neurological diseases.  相似文献   

9.
Decreases in Amino Acid and Acetylcholine Metabolism During Hypoxia   总被引:5,自引:4,他引:1  
Abstract: Hypoxia impairs brain function by incompletely defined mechanisms. Mild hypoxia, which impairs memory and judgment, decreases acetylcholine (ACh) synthesis, but not the levels of ATP or the adenylate energy charge. However, the effects of mild hypoxia on the synthesis of the glucosederived amino acids [alanine, aspartate, γ-amino butyric acid (GABA), glutamate, glutamine, and serine] have not been characterized. Thus, we examined the incorporation of [U-14C]glucose into these amino acids and ACh during anemic hypoxia (injection of NaNO2), hypoxic hypoxia (15 or 10% O2), and hypoxic hypoxia plus hypercarbia (15 or 10% O2 with 5% CO2). In general, the synthesis of the amino acids and of ACh declined in parallel with each type of hypoxia we studied. For example, anemic hypoxia (75 mg/kg of NaNO2) decreased the incorporation of [U-14C]glucose into the amino acids and into ACh similarly. [Percent inhibition: ACh (57.4), alanine (34.4), aspartate (49.2), GABA (61.9). glutamine (59.2), glutamate (51.0), and serine (36.7)]. A comparison of several levels (37.5, 75, 150, 225 mg/kg of NaNO2) of anemic hypoxia showed a parallel decrease in the flux of glucose into ACh and into the amino acids whose synthesis depends on mitochondrial oxidation: GABA (r= 0.98), glutamate (r= 0.99), aspartate (r= 0.96), and glutamine (r= 0.97). The synthesis of the amino acids not dependent on mitochondrial oxidation did not correlate as well with changes in ACh metabolism: serine (r= 0.68) and alanine (r= 0.76). The decreases in glucose incorporation into ACh and into the amino acids with hypoxic hypoxia (15% or 10% O2) or hypoxic hypoxia with 5% CO2 were very similar to those with the two lowest levels of anemic hypoxia. Thus, any explanation of the brain's sensitivity to a decrease in oxygen availability must include the alterations in the metabolism of the amino acid neurotransmitters as well as ACh.  相似文献   

10.
Mouse cerebral cortical mini-slices were used in a superfusion system to monitor depolarization-induced (55 mM K+) release of preloaded [2,3-3H]GABA and to investigate the biosynthesis of glutamate, GABA and aspartate during physiological and depolarizing (55 mM K+) conditions from either [1,6-13C]glucose or [U-13C]glutamine. Depolarization-induced GABA release could be reduced (50%) by the GABA transport inhibitor tiagabine (25 μM) or by replacing Ca2+ with Co2+. In the presence of both tiagabine and Co2+ (1 mM), release was abolished completely. The release observed in the presence of 25 μM tiagabine thus represents vesicular release. Superfusion in the presence of [1,6-13C]glucose led to considerable labeling in the three amino acids, the labeling in glutamate and aspartate being increased after depolarization. This condition had no effect on GABA labeling. For all three amino acids, the distribution of label in the different carbon atoms revealed on increased tricarboxylic acid (TCA) activity during depolarization. When [U-13C]glutamine was used as substrate, labeling in glutamate was higher than that in GABA and aspartate and the fraction of glutamate and aspartate being synthesized by participation of the TCA cycle was increased by depolarization, an effect not seen for GABA. However, GABA synthesis reflected TCA cycle involvement to a much higher extent than for glutamate and aspartate. The results show that this preparation of brain tissue with intact cellular networks is well suited to study metabolism and release of neurotransmitter amino acids under conditions mimicking neural activity. Special issue article in honor of Dr. Ricardo Tapia.  相似文献   

11.
Endothelin Evokes Efflux of Glutamate in Cultures of Rat Astrocytes   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
Abstract: Excessive release of glutamate, from glial cells as well as neurons, is thought to be a major cause of neuronal death in ischemia. To investigate glutamate release from glial cells, we measured glutamate efflux from cultures of rat astrocytes preloaded with l -[3H]-glutamate. Glutamate efflux was induced by either 60 m M KCl or Na+-free medium, suggesting that the efflux is due to the reversed operation of a Na+- and K+-coupled glutamate uptake machinery. While investigating various neuropeptides and neurotransmitters, we found that endothelin (ET) specifically induced efflux of glutamate. Northern blot analysis and binding study showed that the ET type B receptor (ETB-R) subtype was expressed two to three times more densely than the ET type A receptor (ETA-R) in astrocytes. The ETB-R antagonist IRL 2500 partially inhibited efflux of glutamate induced by 1 n M ET-1 in a concentration-dependent manner, causing a maximal inhibition of 60% at 1 µ M . However, the ETA-R antagonist BQ-123 did not cause significant inhibition even at 10 µ M . Combination of both antagonists completely inhibited the ET-1-induced efflux. These results indicate that both receptor subtypes are involved in efflux of glutamate with a major contribution from the ETB-R. Our findings suggest that ET, which is known to be released in ischemia, may exacerbate neurodegeneration by stimulating efflux of glutamate.  相似文献   

12.
It has been known that the inhibition of mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase is one of the earliest events occurring under hypoxia and this inhibition can lead to neuronal damages. Thus, the cytochrome c oxidase inhibitor sodium cyanide (NaCN) is widely used to produce a model of chemical hypoxia by inhibiting this enzyme. However, the downstream signaling pathways of the inhibition of the cytochrome c oxidase remain to be studied. In the present paper, we used sodium cyanide to mimic the inhibition of the mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase and studied its effect on glutamate release in synaptosomes from the prefrontal cortex using on-line fluorimetry. We also further investigated the mechanisms underlying the enhancing effect of sodium cyanide on glutamate release using pharmacological approaches combined with other techniques. The results showed that sodium cyanide significantly increased glutamate release from synaptosomes of prefrontal cortex; the broad-spectrum free radical scavenger MnTBAP and melatonin completely abolished the effect of sodium cyanide on glutamate release; the H2O2-NMDA receptor pathway mediated one part, whereas the lipid peroxyl radicals-ATP synthase pathway mediated another part of the sodium cyanide-induced glutamate release; scavenging H2O2 and enhancing ATP synthase activity could completely abolish the sodium cyanide-induced glutamate release.  相似文献   

13.
Bioenergy homeostasis is crucial in maintaining normal cell function and survival and it is thus important to understand cellular mechanisms underlying its regulation. Neurons use a large amount of ATP to maintain membrane potential and synaptic communication, making the brain the most energy consuming organ in the body. Glutamate mediates a large majority of synaptic transmission which is responsible for the expression of neural plasticity and higher brain functions. Most of the energy cost is attributable to the glutamatergic system; under pathological conditions such as stroke and brain ischemia, neural energy depletion is accompanied by a massive release of glutamate. However, the specific cellular processes implicated in glutamate-dependent bioenergy dynamics are not well understood. We find that glutamate induces a rapid and dramatic reduction of ATP levels in neurons, through reduced ATP genesis and elevated consumption. ATP reduction depends on NMDA receptor activity, but is not a result of neuronal firing, gap junction-mediated leaking or intracellular signaling. Similar changes in ATP levels are also induced by synaptic glutamate accumulation following suppression of glutamate transporter activity. Furthermore, the glutamate-induced ATP down-regulation is blocked by the sodium pump inhibitor ouabain, suggesting the sodium pump as the primary energy consumer during glutamate stimulation. These data suggest the important role of glutamate in the control of cellular ATP homeostasis.  相似文献   

14.
Abstract: The exposure of cultured rat hippocampal neurons to 500 µ M glutamate for 20 min induced a 55% decrease in the total Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaM kinase II) activity. The Ca2+-independent activity and autophosphorylation of CaM kinase II decreased to the same extent as the changes observed in total CaM kinase II activity, and these decreases in activities were prevented by pretreatment with MK-801, an N -methyl- d -aspartate (NMDA)-type receptor antagonist, and the removal of extracellular calcium but not by antagonists against other types of glutamate receptors and protease inhibitors. Similarly, the decrease in the CaM kinase II activity was induced by a Ca2+ ionophore, ionomycin. Immunoblot analysis with the anti-CaM kinase II antibody revealed a significant decrease in the amount of the enzyme in the soluble fraction, in contrast with the inverse increase in the insoluble fraction; thus, the translocation was probably induced during treatment of the cells with glutamate. These results suggest that glutamate released during brain ischemia induces a loss of CaM kinase II activity in hippocampal neurons, by stimulation of the NMDA receptor, and that inactivation of the enzyme may possibly be involved in the cascade of the glutamate neurotoxicity following brain ischemia.  相似文献   

15.
Overactivation of NMDA receptors is linked to cell death during neuronal insults. However the precise role of synaptic and extrasynaptic NMDA receptors remains to be further determined. In this study, we used the acute brain slice to examine the contributions of synaptic and extrasynaptic NMDA receptors to neuronal death. By activation of synaptic NMDA receptors with bath application of 100 μM bicuculline in acute brain slices, we observed a significant up-regulation in activation of neuronal survival-related signaling (p-CREB, p-ERK1/2 and p-AKT), without an obvious increase of LDH release and neuronal death. Interestingly, activation of extrasynaptic NMDA receptors alone by high dose of glutamate (200 μM) following blockade of synaptic NMDA receptors with co-application of 20 μM MK801 and 100 μM bicuculline, we failed to observe inhibition of neuronal survival signaling and neuronal damage. In contrast, co-activation of synaptic and extrasynaptic NMDA receptors by applying 200 μM glutamate or oxygen–glucose deprivation (OGD) to acute brain slices for 30 min, we observed a significant inhibition of CREB, ERK1/2 and AKT activation, an increase of LDH release and neuronal condensation. Together, co-activation of synaptic and extrasynaptic NMDA receptors by neuronal insults contributes to cell death in acute brain slice.  相似文献   

16.
Abstract: Elevated extracellular potassium concentration ([K+]e) has been shown to induce reversal of glial Na+-dependent glutamate uptake in whole-cell patch clamp preparations. It is uncertain, however, whether elevated [K+]e similarly induces a net glutamate efflux from intact cells with a physiological intracellular milieu. To answer this question, astrocyte cultures prepared from rat and mouse cortices were incubated in medium with elevated [K+]e (by equimolar substitution of K+ for Na+), and glutamate accumulation was measured by HPLC. With [K+]e elevations to 60 m M , medium glutamate concentrations did not increase during incubation periods of 5–120 min. By contrast, 45 min of combined inhibition of glycolytic and oxidative ATP production increased medium glutamate concentrations 50–100-fold. Similar results were obtained in both rat and mouse cultures. Studies were also performed using astrocytes loaded with the nonmetabolized glutamate tracer d -aspartate, and parallel results were obtained; no increase in medium d -aspartate content resulted from [K+]e elevation up to 90 m M , whereas a large increase occurred during inhibition of energy metabolism. These results suggest that a net efflux of glutamate from intact astrocytes is not induced by any [K+]e attainable in brain.  相似文献   

17.
We examined the impact of hypoxia-ischemia on high-affinity [3H]glutamate uptake into a synaptosomal fraction prepared from immature rat corpus striatum. In 7-day-old pups the right carotid artery was ligated, and pups were exposed to 8% oxygen for 0, 0.5, 1, or 2.5 h, and allowed to recover for up to 24 h before they were killed. High-affinity glutamate uptakes in striatal synaptosomes derived from tissue ipsilateral and contralateral to ligation were compared. After 1 h of hypoxia plus ischemia, high-affinity glutamate uptake in the striatum was reduced by 54 +/- 13% compared with values from the opposite (nonischemic) side of the brain (p less than 0.01, t test versus ligates not exposed to hypoxia). There were similar declines after 2.5 h of hypoxia-ischemia. Activity remained low after a 1 h recovery period in room air, but after 24 h of recovery, high-affinity glutamate uptake was equal bilaterally. Kinetic analysis revealed that loss of activity could be attributed primarily to a 40% reduction in the number of uptake sites. Hypoxia alone had no effect on high-affinity glutamate uptake although it reduced synaptosomal uptake of [3H]3,4-dihydroxyphenylethylamine. Addition of 1 mg/ml of bovine serum albumin to the incubation medium preferentially stimulated high-affinity glutamate uptake in hypoxic-ischemic brain compared with its effects in normal tissue. These studies demonstrate that hypoxia-ischemia reversibly inhibits high-affinity glutamate uptake and this occurs earlier than the time required to produce neuronal damage in the model.  相似文献   

18.
Glucose and Synaptosomal Glutamate Metabolism: Studies with [15N]Glutamate   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The metabolism of [15N]glutamate was studied with gas chromatography-mass spectrometry in rat brain synaptosomes incubated with and without glucose. [15N]Glutamate was taken up rapidly by the preparation, reaching a steady-state level in less than 5 min. 15N was incorporated predominantly into aspartate and, to a much lesser extent, into gamma-aminobutyrate. The amount of [15N]ammonia formed was very small, and the enrichment of 15N in alanine and glutamine was below the level of detection. Omission of glucose substantially increased the rate and amount of [15N]aspartate generated. It is proposed that in synaptosomes (a) the predominant route of glutamate nitrogen disposal is through the aspartate aminotransferase reaction; (b) the aspartate aminotransferase pathway generates 2-oxoglutarate, which then serves as the metabolic fuel needed to produce ATP; (c) utilization of glutamate via transamination to aspartate is greatly accelerated when flux through the tricarboxylic acid cycle is diminished by the omission of glucose; (d) the metabolism of glutamate via glutamate dehydrogenase in intact synaptosomes is slow, most likely reflecting restriction of enzyme activity by some unknown factor(s), which suggests that the glutamate dehydrogenase reaction may not be near equilibrium in neurons; and (e) the activities of alanine aminotransferase and glutamine synthetase in synaptosomes are very low.  相似文献   

19.
Isolated rat cerebral cortical synaptosomes made anoxic by addition of cyanide developed an inhibition of the Ca2+-dependent release of glutamate 2 min after the addition of the metabolic inhibitor when the intrasynaptosomal ATP/ADP ratio decreased below 1.7. In contrast, cyanide induced a continuous efflux of glutamate through a Ca2+-independent pathway that accounted for the release of 25% of total intrasynaptosomal glutamate in 5 min. The results suggest that a Ca2+-independent release of glutamate could be implicated in the neurotoxic action of this amino acid during anoxia.  相似文献   

20.
Pre-ischemic hyperglycemia aggravates brain damage due to transient global ischemia as demonstrated by exacerbation of brain lesions. Lactacidosis and elevated glutamate levels have been implicated as mechanisms of the increased damage. Our objective was to determine the effects of different levels of glucose (0, 66.5, 450 mg/dL) in cortical superfusates on the ischemia/reperfusion-evoked release of amino acids from the rat cerebral cortex. Physiologic levels of glucose significantly reduced the amount of aspartate, glutamate and gamma-aminobutyric acid and the supra-physiologic levels of glucose reduced the amount of aspartate and phosphoethanolamine released from the cortex during ischemia/reperfusion in comparison with no glucose. The decrease in glutamate release may be due to increased availability of glucose for glycolysis with the subsequent formation of ATP and lactate, which has been shown to act as an energy source for neurons. The decreased levels may also reflect the continued energy-dependent uptake of glutamate by glial cells.  相似文献   

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