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Vol. 285, Issue 1, 178-185, April 1998
Eisai Tsukuba Research Laboratories, 5-1-3 Tokodai, Tsukuba,
Ibaraki 300-2635, Japan
Ischemia is believed to induce neuronal damage by causing a sustained
increase in the level of extracellular excitatory amino acids. In our
study, we have examined the relationship between oxygen/glucose
deprivation-induced changes in extracellular glutamate/aspartate level
and subsequent neuronal injury by pharmacological manipulation of
glutamate receptors and calcium and sodium channels. Cultured hippocampal neurons were exposed to combined deprivation of
oxygen/glucose for 40 to 50 min. These cultures developed acute
neuronal swelling and widespread neuronal degeneration over the next 20 hr. The extracellular levels of glutamate and aspartate at the end of the oxygen/glucose deprivation period were measured by high-performance liquid chromatography, and neuronal injury was assessed by lactate dehydrogenase efflux assay after subsequent aerobic incubation of the
cells in normal medium for 20 hr. Both
N-methyl-D-aspartate and non-
N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor antagonists attenuated the extracellular level of glutamate/aspartate and the neuronal injury.
L-type, N-type and P-type calcium channel blockers each significantly
attenuated the neuronal injury, although the increase in the
extracellular glutamate/aspartate was not significantly inhibited by
any subtype-specific calcium channel blocker alone. A combination of
calcium channel blockers of the three subtypes showed the most
prominent neuroprotective effect and inhibited glutamate release. The
sodium channel blocker tetrodotoxin also attenuated both glutamate
efflux and neuronal injury. These observations suggest that the
overactivation of glutamate receptors, calcium channels and sodium
channels leads to excitotoxic neuronal injury through enhancing
glutamate efflux into the extracellular space under the condition of
oxygen/glucose deprivation.
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