首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
The effects of an adenosine deaminase inhibitor (deoxycoformycin, 500 μg/kg) and of an inhibitor of nucleoside transport (propentofylline, 10 mg/kg) on adenosine and adenine nucleotide levels in the ischemic rat brain were investigated. The brains of the rats were microwaved before, at the end of a 20 min period of cerebral ischemia (4 vessel occlusion+hypotension), or after 5, 10, 45, and 90 min of reperfusion. Deoxycoformycin increased brain adenosine levels during both ischemia and the initial phases of reperfusion. AMP levels were elevated during ischemia and after 5 min of reperfusion. ATP levels were elevated above those in the non-treated animals after 10 and 45 min of reperfusion. ADP levels were elevated above the non-drug controls at 90 min. These increases in ATP, ADP and AMP resulted in significant increases in total adenylates during ischemia, and after 10 min and 90 min of reperfusion. Propentofylline administration resulted in enhanced AMP levels during ischemia but did not alter adenosine or adenine nucleotide levels during reperfusion in comparison with non-treated controls.  相似文献   

2.
The effects of selective adenosine receptor agonists [N6-cyclopentyladenosine (CPA) and N-ethylcarboxamidoadenosine (NECA)] and antagonists [8-cyclopentyl-1,3-dipropylxanthine (DPCPX) and 9-chloro-2-(2-furanyl)-5,6-dihydro-1,2,4-triazolo[1,5-c]quinazoline-5-im ine (CGS-15943A)] on aspartate and glutamate release from the ischemic rat cerebral cortex were studied with the cortical cup technique. Cerebral ischemia (for 20 min) was elicited by four-vessel occlusion. Excitatory amino acid releases were compared from control ischemic rats and drug-treated rats. Basal levels of aspartate and glutamate release were not greatly affected by pretreatment with the adenosine receptor agonists or antagonists. However, CPA (10(-10) M) and NECA (10(-9) M) significantly inhibited the ischemia-evoked release of aspartate and glutamate into cortical superfusates. The ability to block ischemia-evoked release of excitatory amino acids was not evident at higher concentrations of CPA (10(-6) M) or NECA (10(-5) M). The selective A1 receptor antagonist DPCPX also had no effect on release when administered at a low dosage (0.01 mg/kg, i.p.) but blocked the ischemia-evoked release of aspartate and glutamate at a higher dosage (0.1 mg/kg). Evoked release was inhibited by the selective A2 receptor antagonist CGS-15943A (0.1 mg/kg, i.p.). Thus, adenosine and its analogs may suppress ischemia-evoked release of excitatory neurotransmitter amino acids via high-affinity A1 receptors, whereas coactivation of lower-affinity A2 receptors may block (or reverse) the A1-mediated response.  相似文献   

3.
The effects of the purine precursor 5-aminoimidazole-4-carboxamide riboside (AICAriboside) on the release of purines from cerebral cortices of normoxic and hypoxic/hypotensive rats was studied with the cortical cup technique. AICAriboside was administered either intravascularly (50 mg/kg) or intraperitoneally (500 mg/kg) to ascertain whether this agent can be used to enhance adenosine levels in the cerebral cortical interstitial fluid. Following its intraperitoneal administration AICAriboside appeared rapidly in the cortical superfusates at concentrations of up to 9 μM and remained at this level for a 90 min period. After intravascular administration, AICAriboside levels peaked at 2 μM, and then declined rapidly. No increases in basal (normoxic) or hypoxia-elicited adenosine levels in the cortical superfusates were observed. Increases did occur in the basal and hypoxia-evoked levels of hypoxanthine, xanthine and, especially, of uric acid. AICAriboside administration appears to have caused an increase in adenosine metabolite, rather than in adenosine, levels in the cerebral interstitial fluid and it may therefore be of little benefit as a precursor for adenosine formation and release in the treatment of cerebral ischemic damage.  相似文献   

4.
Extracellular (EC) adenosine, hypoxanthine, xanthine, and inosine concentrations were monitored in vivo in the striatum during steady state, 15 min of complete brain ischemia, and 4 h of reflow and compared with purine and nucleotide levels in the tissue. Ischemia was induced by three-vessel occlusion combined with hypotension (50 mm Hg) in male Sprague-Dawley rats. EC purines were sampled by microdialysis, and tissue adenine nucleotides and purine catabolites were extracted from the in situ frozen brain at the end of the experiment. ATP, ADP, and AMP were analyzed with enzymatic fluorometric techniques, and adenosine, hypoxanthine, xanthine, and inosine with a modified HPLC system. Ischemia depleted tissue ATP, whereas AMP, adenosine, hypoxanthine, and inosine accumulated. In parallel, adenosine, hypoxanthine, and inosine levels increased in the EC compartment. Adenosine reached an EC concentration of 40 microM after 15 min of ischemia. Levels of tissue nucleotides and purines normalized on reflow. However, xanthine levels increased transiently (sevenfold). In the EC compartment, adenosine, inosine, and hypoxanthine contents normalized slowly on reflow, whereas the xanthine content increased. The high EC levels of adenosine during ischemia may turn off spontaneous neuronal firing, counteract excitotoxicity, and inhibit ischemic calcium uptake, thereby exerting neuroprotective effects.  相似文献   

5.
Excitatory amino acid release and neurotoxicity in the ischemic brain may be reduced by endogenously released adenosine which can modulate both glutamate or aspartate release and depress neuronal excitability. The present study reports on the patterns of release of glutamate and aspartate; the inhibitory amino acids GABA and glycine; and of the purine catabolites adenosine and inosine from the rat parietal cerebral cortex during 20 and 60 min periods of middle cerebral artery (MCA) occlusion followed by reperfusion. Aspartate and glutamate efflux into cortical superfusates rose steadily during the period of ischemia and tended to increase even further during the subsequent 40 min of reperfusion. GABA release rose during ischemia and declined during reperfusion, whereas glycine efflux was relatively unchanged during both ischemia and reperfusion. Adenosine levels in cortical superfusates rose rapidly at the onset of ischemia and then declined even though MCA occlusion was continued. Recovery to pre-occulusion levels was rapid following reperfusion. Inosine efflux also increased rapidly, but its decline during reperfusion was slower than that of adenosine.  相似文献   

6.
The effects of free radical generating systems on basal and ischemia/reperfusion-evoked release of amino acids into cortical superfusates was examined in the rat using the cortical cup technique. Xanthine oxidase plus xanthine significantly enhanced GABA levels 358 fold over controls during 20 min of four vessel occlusion. Glutamate and phosphoethanolamine release following reperfusion were also elevated. Prostaglandin synthase plus arachidonic acid significantly enhanced the ischemia-evoked release of all amino acids (aspartate 360 fold; glutamate 433 fold; glycine 6 fold; GABA 689 fold; phosphoethanolamine 69 fold) and increased the pre-ischemic levels of glutamate, glycine and phosphoethanolamine. Administration of H2O2 plus ferrous sulfate significantly elevated both pre-ischemic amino acid release and ischemia-evoked release. A role for free radical generating systems in the development of ischemic injury is supported by the ability of superoxide dismutase plus catalase to reduce ischemia-evoked amino acid efflux into cortical superfusates. Thus, the species of free radical produced, as well as the amount generated, may alter the pattern of amino acid release under both ischemic and non-ischemic conditions.  相似文献   

7.
Release of the excitotoxic amino acids, glutamate and aspartate, from the ischemic rat cerebral cortex was compared in two models; the seven vessel occlusion model (7VO) of complete cerebral ischemia and the four vessel occlusion model (4VO) of incomplete cerebral ischemia. Amino acid efflux into cortical superfusates was measured using cortical cups placed on both hemispheres. Whereas a 20 min period of ischemia causes a pronounced release of glutamate and aspartate from the 4VO model, efflux was significantly reduced in the 7VO model. Release of the inhibitory transmitter GABA, was similar in the two models. This result suggests that excitotoxic amino acid efflux into the extracellular spaces of the cerebral cortex may be enhanced by the residual blood flow in an incomplete ischemia.Special issue dedicated to Dr. Sidney Ochs.  相似文献   

8.
The novel type of neurotransmitter/neuromodulator nitric oxide (NO) is linked to activation of the N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) class of glutamate receptors and has been shown to modify transmitter release in the brain. The inhibitory neuromodulator adenosine has been thought to act as an endogenous neuroprotectant against cerebral ischemia and neuronal damage. The effects of NO-generating compounds on the release of preloaded [3H]adenosine from hippocampal slices from developing (7-day-old) and adult (3-month-old) mice were investigated, using a superfusion system, under normal conditions and in vitro ischemia. The release of adenosine was markedly potentiated at both ages by the NO-producing compounds S-nitroso-N-acetylpenicillamine, sodium nitroprusside, and hydroxylamine. The evoked releases were reduced by the NO synthase inhibitors nitroarginine and 7-nitroindazole at both ages. They were also reduced by the inhibitor of soluble guanylyl cyclase 1H-(1,2,4-oxadiazolo(4,3a)quinoxalin-1-one (ODQ) in adults, indicating that the NO/cGMP pathway is involved in this release. Release of adenosine was also evoked when the cGMP levels were increased by superfusing slices with the phosphodiesterase inhibitor zaprinast. The markedly enhanced adenosine release under ischemic conditions was further potentiated by the ionotropic glutamate receptor agonists and NO-generating compounds, whereas zaprinast and ODQ had no effect, rendering unlikely the involvement of cGMP in the ischemic release. Moreover, NO was able to provoke substantial release of adenosine in the presence of NMDA under both normal and ischemic conditions, which could significantly add to the neuroprotective potential of this neuromodulator in both adult and developing hippocampus.  相似文献   

9.
The levels of the neurotransmitter amino acids glutamate, aspartate, and GABA were determined in different brain regions during ischemia and post-ischemic recirculation periods using the unilateral carotid artery occlusion model of stroke in gerbils. The levels of glutamate, aspartate and GABA in ischemic hemisphere were increased significantly by 10 min of ischemia and later declined with time. Reperfusion for 30 min following 10 min. of ischemia further enhanced the levels of glutamate and aspartate. Increase in GABA levels were found during early periods of reperfusion. Regional variations in the changes of amino acids' levels were noticed following ischemia. Hippocampus showed the highest increase in glutamate levels followed by striatum and cerebral cortex. Aspartate levels in striatum and hippocampus increased during 10 min ischemia (46% and 30%) and recirculation (70% and 79%), whereas in cerebral cortex the levels were doubled only during recirculation. Ischemia induced elevations of GABA levels were observed in cerebral cortex (68%) and in hippocampus (30%), and the levels were normalized during recirculation. No changes in GABA levels were found in striatum. It is suggested that the large increase in the levels of excitatory neurotransmitter amino acids in brain regions specially in hippocampus during ischemia and recirculation may be one of the causal factors for ischemic brain damage.  相似文献   

10.
Microvessel segments were isolated from rat brain and used for studies of hypoxanthine transport and metabolism. Compared to an homogenate of cerebral cortex, the isolated microvessels were 3.7-fold enriched in xanthine oxidase. Incubation of the isolated microvessels with labeled hypoxanthine resulted in its rapid uptake followed by the slower accumulation of hypoxanthine metabolites including xanthine and uric acid. The intracellular accumulation of these metabolites was inhibited by the xanthine oxidase inhibitor allopurinol. Hypoxanthine transport into isolated capillaries was inhibited by adenine but not by representative pyrimidines or nucleosides. Similar results were obtained when blood to brain transport of hypoxanthine in vivo was measured using the intracarotid bolus injection technique. Thus, hypoxanthine is transported into brain capillaries by a transport system shared with adenine. Once inside the cell, hypoxanthine can be metabolized to xanthine and uric acid by xanthine oxidase. Since this reaction leads to the release of oxygen radicals, it is suggested that brain capillaries may be susceptible to free radical mediated damage. This would be most likely to occur in conditions where the brain hypoxanthine concentration is increased as following ischemia.  相似文献   

11.
Recent data suggest that oxygen free radicals are implicated in the pathogenesis of ischemic injury. This study evaluates the effects of allopurinol, a xanthine oxidase (XO) inhibitor, on malonaldehyde generation, free sulfhydryl levels, oxygen consumption, and water contents of rat gastrocnemius muscles of female Sprague-Dawley rats subjected to tourniquet shock and after hind-limb reperfusion. Serum lactic dehydrogenase isozyme patterns after ligature release were also examined. Our results show that the four muscle parameters were not altered during 5 hr of ischemia, but that on hind-limb reperfusion, malonaldehyde production, SH levels, O2 consumption, and water contents were significantly altered in the control animals, but not in those pretreated with allopurinol. LDH serum patterns of the untreated animals showed the presence of all five isoforms; these were much less evident in the drug-protected rats. Our data suggest that following ischemia, the affected muscles are unable to recover their normal function when reperfusion is resumed. The subsequent damage is probably due to the generation of cytotoxic superoxide radicals formed during the XO-catalyzed transformation of hypoxanthine to uric acid on tissue reoxygenation. The severity of tissue damage is related to the duration of the ischemic episode possibly due to hypoxanthine accumulation during ischemia.  相似文献   

12.
The release of the inhibitory amino acid taurine is markedly enhanced under ischemic conditions in both adult and developing brain stem, together with a pronounced increase in the release of the neuromodulator adenosine. We now studied the effects of adenosine receptor agonists and antagonists on [3H]taurine release in the brain stem in normoxia and ischemia, using a superfusion system. Under standard conditions, the adenosine A1 receptor agonist N6-cyclohexyladenosine (CHA) potentiated basal taurine release in adult mice, which response was blocked by the antagonist 8-cyclopentyl-1,3-dipropylxanthine (DPCPX). CHA and the A2a receptor agonist 2-p-(2-carboxyethyl)phenylamino-5′-N-ethylcarboxaminoadenosinehydrochloride (CGS 21680) had no effect on the release in developing mice. In ischemia, CHA depressed both basal and K+-stimulated taurine release in developing mice in a receptor-mediated manner, blocked by DPCPX. The A2a receptor agonist CGS 21680 was also inhibitory. Taurine and adenosine may thus not cooperate in developing mice to prevent ischemic neuronal damage. On the other hand, CGS 21680 enhanced taurine release in the adult brain stem in ischemia, both basal and K+-stimulated release being affected. These effects were abolished by the antagonist 3,7-dimethyl-1-propargylxanthine (DMPX), indicating a receptor-mediated process. In this case elevated levels of taurine could be beneficial, protecting against hyperexcitation and excitotoxicity.  相似文献   

13.
Exogenous adenosine triphosphate (ATP) added to brush-border membrane vesicles was rapidly degraded mainly to inosine according to the high ecto-nucleotidase activities in these vesicles. In the absence of phosphate, inosine was slowly transformed into hypoxanthine, and xanthine oxidase and dehydrogenase activities were not detected. The presence of ecto-adenosine deaminase and ecto-adenosine monophosphate (AMP) nucleotidase was shown. The ecto-adenosine deaminase was inhibited by deoxycoformycin and was also detected in rat renal brush-border membrane vesicles. Using orthovanadate, levamisole, and α, β-methylene adenosine diphosphate as possible inhibitors, alkaline phosphatase was shown to be the main agent responsible for ecto-AMP nucleotidase activity. In pig renal basolateral membrane vesicles and in whole cell extracts from pig renal cortex, ecto-AMP nucleotidase was the limiting factor in ATP degradation. Comparing the ATP catabolism in the whole cell cortical extract with the catabolism in the same sample precleared of membranes, it was shown that ectonucleotidase activity is mainly bound to the membranous components. It is also shown that the whole cell extract of pig renal cortex has hypoxanthine phosphoribosyl transferase activity, and it seems probable that the rapid and specific formation of luminal inosine and its transport into the cell in competition with adenosine may start the purine salvage pathway through the synthesis of IMP from hypoxanthine. © Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

14.
The accumulations of radioactive cyclic AMP elicited by adenosine, norepinephrine, and histamine in adenine-labeled vesicular entities of a particulate fraction from guinea pig cerebral cortex are greatly reduced as a result of prolonged preincubation. The presence of adenosine deaminase during preincubations largely prevents the loss of adenosine, norepinephrine and histamine responses. Adenosine deaminase was inactivated by deoxycoformycin prior to stimulation of cyclic AMP accumulation by adenosine or amines. If adenosine deaminase is not inactivated, responses to norepinephrine are not significant and histamine responses are reduced by 50%. Adenosine deaminase cannot restore responsiveness of the cyclic AMP-generating systems. It is proposed that, in particulate fractions of guinea pig cerebral cortex, low levels of adenosine cause a slow loss of receptors and/or coupling of receptors to cyclic AMP-generating systems.  相似文献   

15.
Short-term incomplete cerebral ischemia (5 min) was induced in the rat by the bilateral clamping of the common carotid arteries. Reperfusion was obtained by removing carotid clamping and was carried out for the following 10 min. Animals were sacrificed either at the end of ischemia or reperfusion. Controls were represented by a group of sham-operated rats. Peripheral venous blood samples were withdrawn from the femoral vein from rats subjected to cerebral reperfusion 5 min before ischemia, at the end of ischemia, and 10 min after reperfusion. Neutralized perchloric acid extracts of brain tissue were analyzed by a highly sensitive high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) method for the direct determination of malondialdehyde, oxypurines, nucleosides, nicotinic coenzymes, and high-energy phosphates. In addition, plasma concentrations of malondialdehyde, hypoxanthine, xanthine, inosine, uric acid, and adenosine were determined by the same HPLC technique. Incomplete cerebral ischemia induced the appearance of a significant amount (8.05 nmol/g w.w.; SD = 2.82) of cerebral malondialdehyde (which was undetectable in control animals) and a decrease of ascorbic acid. A further 6.6-fold increase of malondialdehyde (53.30 nmol/g w.w.; SD = 17.77) and a 18.5% decrease of ascorbic acid occurred after 10 min of reperfusion. Plasma malondialdehyde, which was present in minimal amount before ischemia (0.050 mumol/L; SD = 0.015), significantly increased after 5 min of ischemia (0.277 mumol/L; SD = 0.056) and was strikingly augmented after 10 min of reperfusion (0.682 mumol/L; SD = 0.094). A similar trend was observed for xanthine, uric acid, inosine, and adenosine, while hypoxanthine reached its maximal concentration after 5 min of incomplete ischemia, being significantly decreased after reperfusion. From the data obtained, it can be concluded that tissue concentrations of malondialdehyde and ascorbic acid, and plasma levels of malondialdehyde, oxypurines, and nucleosides, reflect both the oxygen radical-mediated tissue injury and the depression of energy metabolism, thus representing early biochemical markers of short-term incomplete brain ischemia and reperfusion in the rat. In particular, these results suggest the possibility of using the variation of malondialdehyde, oxypurines, and nucleosides in peripheral blood as a potential biochemical indicator of reperfusion damage occurring to postischemic tissues.  相似文献   

16.
Hyperammonemia has been suggested to induce enhanced cerebral cortex ammonia uptake, subsequent glutamine synthesis and accumulation, and finally net glutamine release into the blood stream, but this has never been confirmed in liver insufficiency models. Therefore, cerebral cortex ammonia- and glutamine-related metabolism was studied during liver insufficiency-induced hyperammonemia by measuring plasma flow and venous-arterial concentration differences of ammonia and amino acids across the cerebral cortex (enabling estimation of net metabolite exchange), 1 day after portacaval shunting and 2, 4, and 6 h after hepatic artery ligation (or in controls). The intra-organ effects were investigated by measuring cerebral cortex tissue ammonia and amino acids 6 h after liver ischemia induction or in controls. Arterial ammonia and glutamine increased in portacaval-shunted rats versus controls, and further increased during liver ischemia. Cerebral cortex net ammonia uptake, observed in portacaval-shunted rats, increased progressively during liver ischemia, but net glutamine release was only observed after 6 h of liver ischemia. Cerebral cortex tissue glutamine, gamma-aminobutyric acid, most other amino acids, and ammonia levels were increased during liver ischemia. Glutamate was equally decreased in portacaval-shunted and liver-ischemia rats. The observed net cerebral cortex ammonia uptake, cerebral cortex tissue ammonia and glutamine accumulation, and finally glutamine release into the blood suggest that the rat cerebral cortex initially contributes to net ammonia removal from the blood during liver insufficiency-induced hyperammonemia by augmenting tissue glutamine and ammonia pools, and later by net glutamine release into the blood. The changes in cerebral cortex glutamate and gamma-aminobutyric acid could be related to altered ammonia metabolism.  相似文献   

17.
Abstract

Propentofylline is a novel xanthine that has been shown to limit the extent neuronal damage induced by cerebral ischemia in gerbils (DeLeo et al., 1987). This is in contrast to other xanthines, including, caffeine and theophylline, that increase the extent of damage (Rudolphi et al., 1987; Dux et al., 1987). Propentofylline has been demonstrated to decrease adenosine uptake into human erythrocytes (Fredholm and Lindström, 1986), and to increase extracellular concentration of adenosine in ischemic barain (Andine et al., 1990). Therefore, it was proposed that this compound provides protection in cerebral ischemia, in part, by adenosine receptor stimulation due to increased endogenous adenosine levels.  相似文献   

18.
A rat four vessel occlusion model was utilized to examine the effects of ischemia/reperfusion on cortical window superfusate levels of amino acids, glucose, and lactate. Superfusate aspartate, glutamate, phosphoethanolamine, taurine, and GABA were significantly elevated by cerebral ischemia, then declined during reperfusion. Other amino acids were affected to a lesser degree. Superfusate lactate rose slightly during the initial ischemic period, declined during continued cerebral ischemia and then was greatly elevated during reperfusion. Superfusate glucose levels declined to near zero levels during ischemia and then rebounded beyond basal levels during the reperfusion period. Inhibition of neuronal lactate uptake with alpha-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamate dramatically elevated superfusate lactate levels, enhanced the ischemia/reperfusion evoked release of aspartate but reduced glutamine levels. Topical application of an alternative metabolic fuel, glutamine, had a dose dependent effect. Glutamine (1 mM) elevated basal superfusate glucose levels, diminished the decline in glucose during ischemia, and accelerated its recovery during reperfusion. Lactate levels were elevated during ischemia and reperfusion. These effects were not evident at 5 mM glutamine. At both concentrations, glutamine significantly elevated the superfusate levels of glutamate. Topical application of sodium pyruvate (20 mM) significantly attenuated the decline in superfusate glucose during ischemia and enhanced the levels of both glucose and lactate during reperfusion. However, it had little effect on the ischemia-evoked accumulation of amino acids. Topical application of glucose (450 mg/dL) significantly elevated basal superfusate levels of lactate, which continued to be elevated during both ischemia and reperfusion. The ischemia-evoked accumulations of aspartate, glutamate, taurine and GABA were all significantly depressed by glucose, while phosphoethanolamine levels were elevated. These results support the role of lactate in neuronal metabolism during ischemia/reperfusion. Both glucose and glutamine were also used as energy substrates. In contrast, sodium pyruvate does not appear to be as effectively utilized by the ischemic/reperfused rat brain since it did not reduce ischemia-evoked amino acid efflux.  相似文献   

19.
Myocardial xanthine oxidase/dehydrogenase   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
High-energy phosphates in heart muscle deprived of oxygen are rapidly broken down to purine nucleosides and oxypurines. We studied the role of xanthine oxidase/dehydrogenase (EC 1.2.3.2/EC 1.2.1.37) in this process with novel high-pressure liquid chromatographic techniques. Under various conditions, including ischemia and anoxia, the isolated perfused rat heart released adenosine, inosine and hypoxanthine, and also substantial amounts of xanthine and urate. Allopurinol, an inhibitor of xanthine oxidase, greatly enhanced the release of hypoxanthine. From the purine release we calculated that the rat heart contained about 18 mU xanthine oxidase per g wet weight. Subsequently, we measured a xanthine oxidase activity of 9 mU/g wet wt. in rat-heart homogenate. When endogenous low molecular weight inhibitors were removed by gel-filtration, the activity increased to 31 mU/g wet wt. Rat myocardial xanthine oxidase seems to be present mainly in the dehydrogenase form, which upon storage at -20 degrees C is converted to the oxidase form.  相似文献   

20.
Adenosine is a neuromodulator known to inhibit the synaptic release of neurotransmitters, e.g., glutamate, and to hyperpolarize postsynaptic neurons. The release of adenosine is markedly enhanced under ischemic conditions. It may then act as an endogenous neuroprotectant against cerebral ischemia and excitotoxic neuronal damage. The mechanisms by which adenosine is released from nervous tissue are not fully known, particularly in the immature brain. We now characterized the release of [3H]adenosine from hippocampal slices from developing (7-day-old) and adult (3-month-old) mice using a superfusion system. The properties of the release differed only partially in the immature and mature hippocampus. The K+-evoked release was Ca2+ and Na+ dependent. Anion channels were also involved. Ionotropic glutamate receptor agonists potentiated the release in a receptor-mediated manner. Activation of metabotropic glutamate receptors enhanced the release in developing mice, with group II receptors alone being effective. The evoked adenosine release apparently provides neuroprotective effects against excitotoxicity under cell-damaging conditions. Taurine had no effect on adenosine release in adult mice, but depressed the release concentration dependently in the immature hippocampus.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号