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Vol. 290, Issue 1, 112-120, July 1999
Institute for Cognitive and Computational Sciences and Interdisciplinary Program in Neuroscience, Georgetown University Medical Center, Washington, D.C.
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Abstract |
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We examined the effects of modulating group II metabotropic glutamate receptors (mGluRs) on traumatic neuronal injury using both in vitro and in vivo models. Treatment with various selective group II mGluR agonists significantly decreased lactate dehydrogenase release, a marker of cell death, after traumatic injury to rat neuronal-glial cultures; injury-induced increases in cyclic AMP and glutamate levels were also significantly reduced by a group II agonist. The neuroprotective effects of group II agonists were markedly attenuated by coadministration of a group II antagonist or a membrane-permeable cyclic AMP analog and were additive to those provided by an N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor antagonist or a selective group I mGluR antagonist. Administration of a group II mGluR agonist 30 min after lateral fluid percussion-induced brain injury in rats significantly improved subsequent behavioral recovery as compared with vehicle-treated controls. Together these studies indicate that group II mGluR agonists protect against traumatic neuronal injury by attenuating glutamate release and cAMP levels and suggest a potential role for these agents in the treatment of clinical neurotrauma.
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Introduction |
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Activation
of ionotropic glutamate receptors has been implicated as an important
pathophysiological factor contributing to tissue damage after central
nervous system trauma (Faden et al., 1989
). Traumatic brain injury
(TBI) induces marked elevations in extracellular glutamate levels
(Faden et al., 1989
), and treatment with
N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor (NMDAR)
antagonists limits post-traumatic tissue damage and improves
neurological recovery following experimental TBI (Faden et al., 1989
).
Released glutamate can also activate metabotropic glutamate receptors
(mGluR), which are coupled to second messenger cascades through G
proteins (Pin and Duvoisin, 1990
). Although the existence of mGluR was
suggested as early as 1985 (Sladeczek et al., 1985
), only the recent
availability of relatively selective agonists and antagonists have made
it possible to address the potential physiological and
pathophysiological roles of these receptors. mGluRs have been divided
into three groups based on sequence homology and signal transduction
mechanisms. Group I receptors (mGluR1, mGluR5) stimulate phospholipase
C, leading to phosphoinositide hydrolysis and intracellular
Ca2+ mobilization; group II and group III
receptors are negatively coupled to adenylate cyclase activity but
differ in their pharmacological properties (Pin and Duvoisin, 1990
).
Pharmacological studies have shown that activation of group I receptors
leads to depolarization and excitation in a variety of model systems,
whereas group II/III receptors seem to be involved in presynaptic
depression (Sladeczek et al., 1985
; Bolshakov and Siegelbaum, 1994
).
Although a role for mGluR in modulating neuronal cell death has been
suggested by a number of studies, early reports often produced
inconsistent results due to the use of nonselective agents (Mukhin et
al., 1996
). With the recent development and use of selective agonists
and antagonists, it seems that group I and group II/III metabotropic
glutamate receptors may have opposite actions. Group I receptor
activation exacerbates post-traumatic or postischemic neuronal loss,
possibly by potentiating NMDA receptor activity (Fitzjohn et al., 1996
;
Mukhin et al., 1997a
). In contrast, activation of group II or
group III receptors may exert a protective effect due to their ability
to inhibit presynaptic glutamate release (Nakanishi, 1994
) or modulate
adenylate cyclase activity (Buisson and Choi, 1995
). We have recently
shown that treatment with group III agonists significantly attenuates
post-traumatic neuronal cell death in vitro (Faden et al., 1997
).
In the present studies, we investigated the role of group II mGluR in post-traumatic neuronal injury, using well established in vitro and in vivo trauma models, and examined potential mechanisms of action.
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Materials and Methods |
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Mixed Neuronal-Glial Cultures.
Mixed rat neuronal-glial
cultures were prepared as detailed previously (Mukhin et al., 1998
). In
brief, 17- to 18-day-gestation isolated rat embryonic cortical neurons
(Taconic Farms, Germantown, NY) were seeded at a density of 2.5 × 106 cells per 96-well plate (Primaris; Falcon,
Lincoln Park, NJ) on a confluent glial cell layer derived from 1 to
2-day-old rat cortices (Taconic Farms).
Cytosine-
-D-arabinofuranoside (10 µM; Sigma, St.
Louis, MO) was added to halt further non-neuronal cell proliferation at
4 days in vitro (DIV). Cultures were fed twice a week and were
used for experiments at 18 to 20 DIV.
In Vitro Trauma Model.
To evaluate the role of group II
mGluRs in traumatic neuronal injury, we used a well characterized in
vitro model (Mukhin et al., 1998
), which has proved useful for studying
of processes associated with secondary neuronal injury (Mukhin et al.,
1996
, 1997a
,b
; Faden et al., 1997
). Briefly, before injury
neuronal-glial cultures were transferred to an incubation media
containing minimal essential media with Earle's salts (Mediatech,
Herndon, VA) supplemented with 10 mM HEPES (pH 7.4; Biofluids,
Rockville, MD), 1 mM glutamine (Biofluids), 20 mM glucose (Biofluids),
1% antibiotic/antimycotic (Biofluids). Cultures were incubated at
37°C for 30 min in the presence or absence of selective agonists
and/or antagonists. Trauma was delivered using a device that produces
28 parallel 1.2-mm cuts uniformly distributed throughout the cell layer
at 0.5-mm intervals. After injury, cells were incubated at 37°C for an additional 30 min, washed 5 times with incubation media, and incubated in the presence or absence of the same agonists and/or antagonists in 5% CO2 for 16 to 18 h at 37°C before
assessment of injury by lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) assay. Uninjured
(control) cultures were sister cultures from the same plate; these were washed, incubated in the presence of agonists and/or antagonists, and
analyzed using the same methods as for injured cultures. In this model,
traumatic injury leads to delayed progressive neuronal, but not glial,
cell death (Mukhin et al., 1998
).
LDH Measurements.
LDH activity was used as a biochemical
marker of cell injury. Injury-induced LDH release in this model
reflects secondary neuronal cell death, and results obtained using this
assay have been well correlated to those obtained by trypan blue
staining or a fluorescent assay using the vital dye ethidium
homodimer-1 (Faden et al., 1997
; Mukhin et al., 1997b
, 1998
).
LDH activity was evaluated following a previously described method
(Mukhin et al., 1998
). An aliquot of culture medium was transferred to 96-well microplates, and LDH assay reagent (5 mM
-NAD, 25 mM lactic
acid, 0.3% bovine serum albumin, 100 mM Tris base, 0.9% NaCl, final
pH 8.45) was added to each sample. Optical density was measured 50 times at 5-s intervals at 340 nm using a Ceres 900 microplate reader
(Biotek Instruments, Winooski, VT). Lyophilized serum (Accutrol) was
used as the LDH standard. Absolute levels of LDH were not determined
for each sample; instead, LDH activity levels in experimental samples
were compared with levels obtained from control sister cultures.
Reagents used for this assay including standard serum were obtained
from Sigma.
Glutamate Release Measurements.
Cell culture media (three
wells per sample) were collected immediately before injury and 2 and
4 h after injury and briefly centrifuged before storage at
70°C to remove any detached cells. Enzymes were inactivated by
thawing samples in boiling water for 4 min, and free glutamate levels
were determined as described previously (Espey, 1997
). A sample
volume of 20 µl was loaded into an autosampler (717 plus; Waters,
Milford, MA) then derivatized with 10 µl of 10 mM
o-phthaldialdehyde and 0.06%
-mercaptoethanol in 5%
methanol and 50 mM NaB4O7
buffer (pH 9.4). Amino acids were separated using reversed phase HPLC
by injecting 20 µl of the derivatized sample onto a 100-mm-long
Absorbosphere C18 3-µm column (Alltech, Deerfield IL) and eluted with
a mobile phase consisting of 100 mM
Na2HPO4, 0.13 mM
Na2EDTA, and 30% ethanol (pH 5.8). Derivatized
amino acids were detected fluorometrically with 8ex = 338 nm and
8em = 450 nm. Peak areas were integrated (Millenium; Waters), and the glutamate concentration in each sample was quantified using amino acid standards placed at the beginning and end of each
sample series.
Evaluation of Cyclic AMP (cAMP) Accumulation. Basal cAMP leves and changes in cAMP accumulation after injury were evaluated in 18 DIV neuronal-glial cultures. Media were completely aspirated, and 50 µl of acetonitrile was added to each well. Cells were harvested (3-4 samples per treatment, three wells per sample), and cAMP was extracted by ion-exchange chromatography using Amprep SAX minicolumns (100 mg; Amersham Corp., Arlington Heights, IL). cAMP was quantified using a scintillation proximity assay system (RPA 538; Amersham). Protein content in samples was evaluated by Bradford's assay (Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA) with a bovine serum albumin standard (Pierce, Rockford, IL). Control cultures contained 109 + 0.6 fmol/sample of cAMP by this method.
Evaluation of mRNA Expression of Group II mGluRs.
The
expression of mRNA encoding mGluR2 and mGluR3 was analyzed using a
reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) approach as
previously described (Mukhin et al., 1998
). In brief, total cellular
RNA was isolated from neuronal-glial (18 DIV) and glial (28 DIV)
cultures, and adult rat cortex using acidic phenol extraction and RNA
was reverse transcribed with Moloney murine leukemia virus-RT (GIBCO,
Grand Island, NY). The resulting cDNA was amplified by PCR for 35 cycles: denaturation for 30 s at 94°C, annealing for 15 s
at 55°C, and primer extension for 45 s at 72°C. Amplified cDNA
was analyzed in 2% agarose electrophoretic gels and stained with
ethidium bromide. UV light gel images were captured and analyzed using
the Image 1.59 program. The following primer sequences were used
for cDNA amplification: mGluR2, 5'-CTCCTGCCCTGACATGGCTGCTCCC-3'; mGluR2, 5'-CTCTCTATCCCAGAGTAACTTATAA-3'; mGluR3,
5'-ATCAGCCCCAGTTCTCAGGT-3'; mGluR3, 5'-AAACAAACAGCCCAAGACCA-3'.
Western Blot Analysis.
Immunoblot analysis for mGluR2 and
mGluR3 protein was performed following a previously described protocol
(Mukhin et al., 1998
). Briefly, neuronal-glial (18 DIV) cultures were
harvested from 96-well plates in 10 mM Tris-HCl buffer (pH 7.4)
containing 100 µM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride (Sigma). Cells were
lysed with a polytron, and crude membrane preparations were obtained by
centrifugation at 33,000g for 20 min at 4°C. Pellets were
washed, and protein concentration was determined by Bradford's assay
(Bio-Rad). Samples were stored at
80°C. Five micrograms of protein
were separated by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in 7.5%
acrylamide (Sigma) and transferred onto nitrocellulose (Bio-Rad).
Primary affinity-purified rabbit anti-mGluR2/3 polyclonal antibody
directed against the carboxyl terminus (dilution 2.5 µg/ml; Chemicon,
Temecula, CA) was used for immunostaining. This antibody does not
distinguish between mGluR2 and mGluR3. Peroxidase-conjugated purified
anti-rabbit IgG (dilution 2.5 µg/ml; Vector Laboratories, Burlingame,
CA) and enhanced chemiluminescence Western blotting detection system (Amersham) were used to visualize primary antibody staining.
In Vivo Traumatic Brain Injury.
Male
Sprague-Dawley rats (Harlan, Frederick, MD) weighing 375 to 425 g
were anesthetized with sodium pentobarbital (70 mg/kg i.p.; Abbott
Laboratories, North Chicago, IL). Lateral fluid percussion-induced TBI
was performed as described previously (Faden et al., 1997
). In this
model, a fluid wave is delivered to the extradural space through a
craniotomy over left parietal cortex transiently deforming the
underlying brain. Injury severity is related to the pressure induced;
in the present studies, a moderate level of injury was chosen (2.4 atmospheres). Animals were randomly assembled to treatment with
(1S,2S,5R,6S)-2aminobicyclo[3.1.0]hexane-2,6-dicarboxylate (LY354740; 5 mg/kg, n = 12) or equal-volume normal
saline (1 ml/kg, n = 13), administered through a
femoral vein catheter 30 min after trauma. Behavioral tests were
performed at 24 h and 1 and 2 weeks after TBI by an individual
unaware of the treatment group. Neuroscores reflect a series of
behavioral tests including ability to maintain position on an incline
plane (left, right, vertical), forelimb flexion (left, right), and
lateral pulsion (left, right). Each test was evaluated using an ordinal
scale ranging from 0 (no function) to 5 (normal function). Total
neuroscore thereafter could range from 0 to 35. These tests show high
interrater reliability and can discriminate drug treatment effect
(Faden et al., 1989
; Mukhin et al., 1996
).
Drugs.
Selective agonists and antagonists for
metabotropic glutamate receptors
(R,S)-1-aminoindan-1,5-dicarboxylic acid (AIDA),
(2S,2'R,3'R)-2-(2',3'-dicarboxycyclopropyl)glycine (DCG-IV),
(2S,3S,4S)-2-methyl-2-(carboxycyclopropyl)glycine
(MCCG), (2S)-_-ethylglutamic acid
(EGLU), as well as noncompetitive NMDA receptor antagonist
(5R,10S)-(+)-5-methyl-10,11-dihydro-5H-dibenzo[a,d]-cyclohepten-5,10-imine (MK-801) were obtained from Tocris Cookson (St. Louis, MO). LY354740 was received from Lilly Research Laboratories (Eli Lilly and Company, Indianapolis, IN).
(2R,4R)-4-Aminopyrrolidine-2,4-dicarboxylate (APDC) was synthesized in Drug Discovery Laboratory (Institute for
Cognitive and Computational Sciences, Georgetown University Medical
Center, Washington, DC). Adenosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate, 8-bromo, sodium salt (8-Br-cAMP), a cell-permeable cAMP analog (Hei et
al., 1991
), was obtained from Calbiochem (La Jolla, CA).
Data Analysis. Injury-induced LDH release was calculated by subtraction of background levels of LDH estimated for control (uninjured) neuronal-glial cultures from values obtained for injured cultures. Results are expressed as a percentage of injury-induced LDH release observed in injured cultures in absence of treatment. Student's t test or analysis of variance (one-way ANOVA) followed by Student-Newman-Keuls test were used to compare differences across groups. Concentration-dependent changes in cell death (reflected by injury-induced LDH release) were analyzed using Spearman's Rank Correlation test. Neuroscore data obtained from in vivo TBI experiments were analyzed using the Mann-Whitney U test after Kruskal-Wallis nonparametric ANOVA. A p value < .05 was considered statistically significant.
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Results |
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Expression of Group II mGluR Receptors in Neuronal-Glial
Cultures.
Expression of both mGluR2 and mGluR3 was detected by
qualitative RT-PCR in 18 DIV neuronal-glial cultures (Fig.
1a). The presence of group II mGluR
protein in neuronal-glial cultures (18 DIV) was confirmed by Western
blot analysis with antibody directed against mGluR2/mGluR3 (Fig.
1b).
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Effects of Group II mGluR Agonists and Antagonists on In Vitro
Injury-Induced Neuronal Cell Death.
To evaluate the role of group
II mGluRs in neuronal injury, we used three relatively selective
agonists of group II mGluRs: DCG-IV (Ishida et al., 1993
), APDC
(Schoepp et al., 1995
), and LY354740 (Monn et al., 1997
). All three
agonists demonstrated dose-dependent neuroprotection with similar
maximal effects of approximately 26 to 30% (Fig.
2a-c). EC50 values
for DCG-IV, APDC, and LY354740 were approximately 73 nM, 9 µM, and 34 nM, respectively. Treatment of injured cultures with DCG-IV at
concentrations higher than 2.5 µM led to exacerbation of neuronal
cell death (data not shown). None of the group II mGluR agonists had
any effects in uninjured control sister cultures at the concentrations
tested.
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Modulation of Glutamate Release.
Basal levels of glutamate
present in media removed from uninjured control cultures and those
treated with LY354740 (100 nM) were approximately 0.27 nM. Significant
increases in extracellular glutamate concentrations occurred by 2 h following injury and remained elevated at 4 h (Fig.
3a). Pretreatment with 100 nM LY354740 significantly attenuated injury-induced increases in glutamate levels
at 2 h (Fig. 3a). However, extracellular glutamate levels were not
statistically different in media removed from treated and untreated
cultures at 4 h (Fig. 3a).
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Modulation of cAMP Levels. To evaluate the possible role of adenylate cyclase modulation in the neuroprotection provided by group II activation, we examined cAMP levels after injury in the presence or absence of group II mGluR agonists. Significant increases in cAMP levels were detectable 2 h after injury to neuronal-glial cultures and continued to rise at 4 h postinjury (Fig. 3b). Treatment with LY354740 (100 nM) significantly decreased injury-induced cAMP accumulation (Fig. 3b). Basal cAMP levels in neuronal-glial cultures treated for 30 min with 200 µM APDC (93 ± 2, n = 6), 0.5 µM DCG-IV (86 ± 2, n = 6), or 100 nM LY354740 (89 ± 1, n = 6) were lower than basal cAMP levels in control untreated cultures (100 ± 1, n = 8, p < .05, ANOVA followed by Student-Newman-Keuls' test).
We also examined the effects of cell-permeable cAMP analog 8-Br-cAMP on injury-induced neuronal cell death. Application of 8-Br-cAMP at concentrations of 250 and 500 µM did not affect injury-induced LDH release (data not shown), whereas 1000 µM 8-Br-cAMP significantly exacerbated injury (126 ± 5.9 versus 100 ± 4.7; n = 12-23, Student's t test, p < .01). Moreover, the neuroprotective effects of both APDC (200 µM) and LY354740 (100 nM) were completely reversed by 8-Br-cAMP (500 µM) administration (Fig. 4).
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Combined Treatment with Group II mGluR Agonists and Postsynaptic
Receptor Antagonists.
Based on our previous results, 10 µM
MK-801 provides maximal inhibition of NMDA receptors (Mukhin et al.,
1997a
, 1998
). At this concentration, MK-801 attenuated
injury-induced neuronal death by 35 to 50% (Fig.
5a). Coapplication of MK-801 (10 µM) and the group II mGluR agonist APDC (200 µM) elicited significantly more neuroprotection than that afforded by treatment with MK-801 alone
(Fig. 5a).
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Effects of Group II mGluR Activation on TBI In Vivo.
To assess
the potential role of group II mGluR in TBI-induced deficits in vivo,
we administered LY354740 to rats subjected to fluid percussion TBI, a
well characterized model of head trauma. Systemic administration of
LY354740 (5 mg/kg) 30 min following TBI significantly improved
neurologic outcome at 14 days as compared with animals receiving
vehicle alone (Fig. 6). Animals treated with LY354740 exhibited significantly better scores at 14 days on each
of the three tests used to assess functional recovery: ability to
maintain position on an inclined plane, forced lateral pulsion, and
forelimb contraflexion during tail suspension (Fig. 6).
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Discussion |
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In the present study, we demonstrated the dose-dependent
neuroprotective effects of the selective group II mGluR agonists APDC
and LY354740 and the relatively selective agonist DCG-IV against
trauma-induced neuronal cell death in vitro. These results support the
hypothesis that activation of group II mGluR protects against in vitro
injury and are consistent with the findings reported by other
investigators using different in vitro models and less selective
agonists. For example, group II agonists were found to protect against
in vitro neuronal cell death induced by ischemia (Opitz et al., 1994
;
Buisson and Choi, 1995
) and by NMDA administration (Bruno et al., 1994
;
Buisson and Choi, 1995
).
The rank order of potency of group II agonists for inhibiting
trauma-induced neuronal death in our studies was LY354740 (34 nM) > DCG-IV (73 nM) > APDC (9 µM). DCG-IV, which has been used as
a group II agonist in some of the earlier studies (Ishida et al.,
1993
), showed biphasic effects in our in vitro system. At concentrations below 2.5 µM, this compound induced neuroprotection; however, at higher concentrations DCG-IV significantly exacerbated injury. This biphasic effect is consistent with the pharmacological profile of DCG-IV. At nanomolar concentrations, DCG-IV is an agonist at
group II mGluR, whereas at micromolar concentrations it exhibits agonist activity at NMDA receptors (Ishida et al., 1993
; Wilsch et al.,
1994
). APDC, DCG-IV, and LY354740 produced a similar maximal level of
neuroprotection against in vitro trauma of approximately 25 to 30%.
This degree of protection is similar to that provided by group I mGluR
antagonists in this model (Mukhin et al., 1996
, 1997a
) and
somewhat higher than effects of group III mGluR agonists (Faden et al.,
1997
). In comparison, NMDA antagonists elicit approximately 50%
neuroprotection in this model (Mukhin et al., 1997a
,b
, 1998
).
Perhaps surprisingly, the group II mGluR antagonists EGLU and MCCG did
not exacerbate injury-induced LDH release. This finding is in contrast
with our previous work using group III antagonists, which clearly
exacerbate trauma-induced neuronal death in vitro (Faden et al., 1997
).
This suggests that group II receptors are not activated sufficiently in
response to trauma to provide endogenous neuroprotection.
Administration of MCCG at doses greater than 500 µM provided
protection against trauma; however, this compound exhibits partial
agonist activity at higher concentrations (Bushell et al., 1996
).
Although it may be argued that EGLU and MCCG may not be pure
antagonists at the concentrations used (Kemp, 1994
; Sekiyama et al.,
1996
), EGLU did completely reverse the neuroprotective effects of the
selective group II agonist APDC.
Several potential mechanisms of neuroprotection by group II mGluR
agonists against NMDA- or ischemia-induced neuronal cell death have
been proposed. One possibility is that decreased neuronal cell death
may be mediated by adenylate cyclase inhibition (Buisson and Choi,
1995
). Increased levels of cAMP are found in the hippocampus following
transient ischemia (Suyama, 1995
) and in hippocampal slices after
oxygen-glucose deprivation (Whittingham et al., 1984
). Moreover, NMDAR
activation causes significant increases in cAMP accumulation in rat
brain cortical slices (Kemp, 1994
) and in neuronal cultures (Buisson
and Choi, 1995
). Increases in cAMP levels activate protein kinase A
with subsequent phosphorylation of ion channels and other target
proteins, including NMDA receptors (Raman et al., 1996
). cAMP is also
capable of modulating ion channels in a protein kinase A-independent
manner (Pedarzani and Storm, 1995
), and increased levels of cAMP may
alter free intracellular magnesium concentrations (Romani et al., 1991
)
and cellular bioenergetics. A reduced cellular bioenergetic state may
contribute to NMDA receptor-mediated neurotoxicity (Novelli et al.,
1988
), and decreased free intracellular magnesium concentrations are
correlated with poor neurological recovery after TBI (Vink et al.,
1988
).
A second possibility is that the neuroprotective effects of group II
agonists result from inhibition of glutamate release (Nakanishi, 1994
).
Glutamate release inhibitors have been shown to produce neuroprotection
in both in vivo trauma (Sun and Faden, 1995
) and ischemia (Graham et
al., 1993
) models. In addition, Bruno and colleagues have suggested
that neuroprotection by group II agonists against NMDA-induced
excitotoxic neuronal cell death in vitro requires new protein synthesis
and involves an interaction between neurons and astrocytes (Bruno et
al., 1997
).
In the present studies, treatment with group II mGluR agonists did
reduce both cAMP levels and post-traumatic glutamate release, suggesting that one or both mechanisms may contribute to the
neuroprotective responses observed. Attenuating glutamate release would
be expected to limit both NMDA receptor and group I mGluR activation
after trauma, each of which has been shown to contribute to
post-traumatic neuronal cell death in this model (Mukhin et al., 1996
,
1997b
). A role for cAMP modulation is more speculative, although
the ability of 8-Br-cAMP to exacerbate post-traumatic neuronal loss and
correlations of cAMP levels to neuronal death are consistent with this interpretation.
Expression of group I and group III mGluRs as well as NMDAR was
previously demonstrated in our neuronal-glial cultures, and this model
was successfully used to study the roles of group I mGluR (Mukhin et
al., 1996
, 1997a
) and group III mGluR (Faden et al., 1997
) in
injury-induced neuronal cell death. In the present studies, we
demonstrated expression of group II mGluR in our neuronal-glial cultures as detected by RT-PCR and confirmed by Western blotting. Therefore, this model was used to study the possible additive neuroprotective effects of agonists at presynaptic group II mGluR and
antagonists of postsynaptic glutamate receptors (i.e., NMDAR and group
I mGluR). Treatment with MK-801 (10 µM) completely blocks NMDA-induced neurotoxicity in our neuronal-glial cultures and significantly reduces injury-induced LDH release (Mukhin et al., 1997a
, 1998
). However, coadministration of maximally effective concentrations of MK-801 and APDC provided significant additional neuroprotection above that produced by either agent alone. This added
protection may result in part from decreased glutamate release, leading
to a reduction in the neurotoxic effects mediated by group I mGluR
activation (Mukhin et al., 1996
, 1997b
).
Injury-induced neuronal cell death in vitro was also further decreased
by combined treatment with APDC and the group I mGluR antagonist AIDA,
as compared with application of either drug alone. It has been shown
previously that group I mGluR-mediated neurotoxicity may result, in
part, from NMDA receptor potentiation (Fitzjohn et al., 1996
; Mukhin et
al., 1997a
). However, this toxicity may also reflect increased
arachidonic acid release (Aramori and Nakanishi, 1992
; Dumuis et al.,
1993
) and/or a synergistic interaction between group I and group II
mGluR. Simultaneous activation of group I and II mGluR leads to
stimulation of phosphoinositide hydrolysis (Schoepp et al.,
1996b
) and stimulation of agonist-evoked increases in cAMP
formation (Schoepp et al., 1996a
). The observation that the
neuroprotective actions of group II mGluR agonists are additive to
those with NMDA or group I mGluR antagonists suggests that combination
therapy may be useful in the treatment of clinically relevant traumatic
brain injury.
To evaluate the possible role of group II mGluR in trauma-mediated
neuronal death in vivo and to determine the possible therapeutic benefits of group II agonists against in vivo TBI, we administered LY354740 (5 mg/kg) i.v. 30 min after induction of fluid percussion TBI
in rats. The dose of LY354740 used was based upon data from other in
vivo studies using this compound and corresponds to a moderate to
moderately high dose (Monn et al., 1997
). This treatment significantly
improved neurological recovery at 14 days postinjury. Surprisingly, the
degree of protection provided by LY354740 was comparable with our
previous experience with competitive and noncompetitive NMDAR
antagonists in this model (Faden et al., 1989
). However, in contrast to
NMDAR antagonists, LY354740 exhibits few side effects and is generally
well tolerated by experimental animals (Monn et al., 1997
). Thus, group
II mGluR modulation may be a useful treatment strategy for clinical
head injury. Furthermore, our in vitro results suggest that combination
therapy composed of a group II agonist and postsynaptic glutamate
receptor antagonists may provide additional neuroprotection. This
treatment paradigm may allow a reduction in the dose of NMDAR
antagonists, thereby reducing unwanted side effects.
In summary, we have demonstrated the neuroprotective effects of group II mGluR activation against in vitro trauma-induced neuronal death using two selective agonists, APDC and LY354740, and the relatively selective agonist DCG-IV. A specific role for group II mGluR was further suggested by complete blockade of the effects of APDC by the group II mGluR antagonist EGLU. In addition, our results implicate both inhibition of glutamate release and decreased injury-induced cAMP levels as mechanisms of group II mGluR-mediated neuroprotection. Additional neuroprotection was also seen after coapplication of group II mGluR and a NMDAR antagonist or a group I mGluR antagonist. Finally, the marked neuroprotection produced by LY354740 against in vivo TBI indicates that group II mGluR agonists may prove to be beneficial in clinical head injury management.
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Footnotes |
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Accepted for publication February 2, 1999.
Received for publication October 28, 1998.
1 This study was supported by a cooperative research agreement with Department of Defense Grant DAMD-17-93-V-3018 and National Institutes of Health NS 37313.
2 Laboratory of Neuroscience, National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20892.
Send reprint requests to: A. I. Faden, EP-04 Research Building, 3970 Reservoir Road, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20007. E-mail: fadena{at}giccs.georgetown.edu
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Abbreviations |
|---|
LDH, lactate dehydrogenase; mGluR, metabotropic glutamate receptor; TBI, traumatic brain injury; NMDAR, N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor; APDC, (2R,4R)-4-aminopyrrolidine-2,4-dicarboxylate; DIV, days in vitro; RT-PCR, reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction; AIDA, (R,S)-1-aminoindan-1,5-dicarboxylic acid; DCG-IV, (2S,2'R,3'R)-2-(2',3'-dicarboxycyclopropyl)glycine; MCCG, (2S,3S,4S)-2-methyl-2-(carboxycyclopropyl)glycine; EGLU, (2S)-_-ethylglutamic acid; MK-801, (5R,10S)-(+)-5-methyl-10,11-dihydro-5H-dibenzo[a,d]-cyclohepten-5,10-imine; LY354740, (1S,2S,5R,6S)-2aminobicyclo[3.1.0]hexane-2,6-dicarboxylate; 8-Br-cAMP, adenosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate, 8-bromo, sodium salt.
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Neuron
16:
415-421[Medline].This article has been cited by other articles:
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