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Adenosine A1 receptor activation preferentially protects cultured cerebellar neurons versus astrocytes against hypoxia-induced death
被引:18
|作者:
Logan, M
Sweeney, MI
机构:
[1] UNIV SASKATCHEWAN,DEPT PHYSIOL,SASKATOON,SK S7N 5E5,CANADA
[2] UNIV SASKATCHEWAN,SASKATCHEWAN STROKE RES CTR,SASKATOON,SK S7N 5E5,CANADA
关键词:
adenosine A1 receptors;
cultured neurons;
cultured astrocytes;
simulated ischemia;
hypoxia;
hypoglycemia;
cell death;
stroke;
D O I:
10.1007/BF02815237
中图分类号:
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号:
071006 ;
摘要:
Administration of adenosine A1 receptor agonists in vivo is neuroprotective in various stroke models. Experiments using either mixed cultures of neurons and astrocytes or brain slices, in which several cell types are present, have demonstrated that activation of A1 receptors also is protective against hypoxia and/or hypoglycemia in vitro. Ln this study, we have examined the effect of the A1 agonist cyclopentyladenosine (CPA) on cellular damage, measured by efflux of lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), in highly enriched primary cultures of either neurons or astrocytes exposed to different metabolic insults. CPA reduced neuronal LDH release induced by a combination of hypoxia and substrate deprivation (''simulated ischemia''; IC50 = 28 nM) or by hypoxia alone (IC50 = 170 nM). In contrast, CPA had no effect on neuronal damage induced by substrate deprivation alone, nor did it affect ischemic death to astrocytes. The neuroprotective effects of CPA during simulated ischemia and hypoxia were reversed by the A1 antagonist 1, 3-dipropyl-8-cyclopentylxanthine (DPCPX). These data demonstrate that activation of an adenosine A1 receptor on neurons, but not astrocytes, is protective against cellular damage or death induced specifically by hypoxia as opposed to other metabolic insults such as hypoglycemia.
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页码:119 / 133
页数:15
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