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Excitotoxic Death of a Subset of Embryonic Rat Motor Neurons InVitro
Authors:Hugh J. L. Fryer  Ronald J. Knox  Stephen M. Strittmatter  Robert Kalb
Affiliation:Section of Neurobiology and Departments of; Neurology and; Pharmacology, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut, U. S. A.
Abstract:Abstract : We have used cultures of purified embryonic rat spinal cord motor neurons to study the neurotoxic effects of prolonged ionotropic glutamate receptor activation. NMDA and non-NMDA glutamate receptor agonists kill a maximum of 40% of the motor neurons in a concentration- and time-dependent manner, which can be blocked by receptor subtype-specific antagonists. subunit-specific antibodies stain all of the motor neurons with approximately the same intensity and for the same repertoire of subunits, suggesting that the survival of the nonvulnerable population is unlikely to be due to the lack of glutamate receptor expression. Extracellular Ca2+ is required for excitotoxicity, and the route of entry initiated by activation of non-NMDA, but not NMDA, receptors is L-type Ca2+ channels. Ca2+ imaging of motor neurons after application of specific glutamate receptor agonists reveals a sustained rise in intracellular Ca2+ that is present to a similar degree in most motor neurons, and can be blocked by appropriate receptor/channel antagonists. Although the lethal effects of glutamate receptor agonists are seen in only a subset of cultured motor neurons, the basis of this selectivity is unlikely to be simply the glutamate receptor phenotype or the level/pattern of rise in agonist-evoked intracellular Ca2+.
Keywords:Ionotropic glutamate receptors    Motor neurons    Excitotoxicity    Cell culture    L-type Ca2+ channels    Ca2+ -dependent cell death    Ca2+ imaging
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