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NEUROPHARMACOLOGY
Departments of Neurology (L.S.D., S.S., R.J.D.), Pharmacology and Toxicology, (R.J.D.), and Biochemistry (R.J.D.), Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Virginia; and Department of Neurosurgery, Washington University, School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri (D.D.L.)
Protracted elevation in intracellular calcium caused by the activation of the N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor is the main cause of glutamate excitotoxic injury in stroke. However, upon excitotoxic injury, despite the presence of calcium entry antagonists, calcium unexpectedly continues to enter the neuron, causing extended neuronal depolarization and culminating in neuronal death. This phenomenon is known as the calcium paradox of neuronal death in stroke, and it represents a major problem in developing effective therapies for the treatment of stroke. To investigate this calcium paradox and to determine the source of this unexpected calcium entry after neuronal injury, we evaluated whether glutamate excitotoxicity activates an injury-induced calcium-permeable channel responsible for conducting a calcium current that underlies neuronal death. We used a combination of whole-cell and single-channel patch-clamp recordings, fluorescent calcium imaging, and neuronal cell death assays in a well characterized primary hippocampal neuronal culture model of glutamate excitotoxicity/stroke. Here, we report activation of a novel calcium-permeable channel upon excitotoxic glutamate injury that carries calcium current even in the presence of calcium entry inhibitors. Blocking this injury-induced calcium-permeable channel for a significant time period after the initial injury is still effective in preventing calcium entry, extended neuronal depolarization, and delayed neuronal death, thereby accounting for the calcium paradox. This injury-induced calcium-permeable channel represents a major source for the initial calcium entry following stroke, and it offers a new target for extending the therapeutic window for preventing neuronal death after the initial excitotoxic (stroke) injury.
Address correspondence to: Dr. Robert J. DeLorenzo, Virginia Common-wealth University, School of Medicine, P.O. Box 980599, Richmond, VA 23298. E-mail: rdeloren{at}hsc.vcu.edu
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