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Differential postreceptor signaling events triggered by excitotoxic stimulation of different ionotropic glutamate receptors in retinal neurons
Authors
Ambr�sio
Angel
+80 more
Ankarcrona
Bading
Bading
Bading
Bettler
Bittigau
Bonfoco
Carter
Carvalho
Cebers
Cebers
Chen
Choi
Choi
Condorelli
Doble
Donevan
Duarte
Duarte
Duarte
Encinas
Favata
Ferreira
Ferreira
Finiels
Glazner
Griffiths
Guyton
Herdegen
Hetman
Hollmann
Hou
Irving
Itoh
Jensen
Jensen
Jiang
Kaminska
Karin
Kasof
Katai
Kawasaki
Kitayama
Kov�cs
Kov�cs
Kurino
Kwong
Lam
Lerea
Lerea
Lidwell
Lukasiuk
Martin
Mattson
Mosmann
Moudy
Murray
Ohno
Ohno
Olney
Osborne
Osborne
Osborne
Pateruain
Patneau
Pennypacker
Perez
Perkinton
Santos
Schwarzschild
Schwarzschild
Sugino
Tong
Wenzel
White
Xia
Yamada
Yoneda
Yoneda
Zeevalk
Publication date
1 January 2001
Publisher
'Wiley'
Doi
Abstract
The aim of this work was to investigate whether excitotoxicity induced by overstimulation of different ionotropic glutamate receptors could trigger different intracellular signaling cascades. Cultured chick neuronal retina cells, essentially amacrine-like, were particularly sensitive to the toxicity induced by non-NMDA glutamate receptor agonists. One hour stimulation with 100 muM kainate induced a reduction of cell viability of about 44%, as assessed by the MTT test 24 hr after stimulation. Kainate-induced toxicity was mediated through AMPA receptors. Glutamate (100 muM, 1 hr) reduced cell viability by 26%, essentially acting through N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors. Five hours after stimulation, neuronal retina cells had an apoptotic-like nuclear morphology. In retinal neurons, the excitotoxic stimulation, with either glutamate or kainate, induced a calcium-dependent enhancement of the DNA-binding activity of the activating protein-1 (AP-1) transcription factor, which was maximal 2 hr after stimulation. Glutamate induced a greater increase in the AP-1 DNA-binding activity than did kainate. Supershift assays using antibodies directed against different members of the Fos and Jun protein families showed that the AP-1 complex in retinal neurons includes proteins of the Fos family, namely, Fra-2, c-Jun, and Jun D. The DNA-binding activity of the nuclear factor-kappaB transcription factor was not significantly changed upon excitotoxic stimulation with any agonist. Stimulation of glutamate receptors with 100 muM kainate or 100 muM glutamate for 2 min was sufficient to induce the activation of the extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK). Inhibition of the ERK activation with the MEK inhibitors U 0126 and PD 98059 increased the toxicity induced by kainate but was without effect on the toxicity induced by glutamate. These results indicate that, although stimulation with both glutamate receptor agonists increased ERK phosphorylation, only kainate-induced ERK activation correlates with the activation of a survival signaling pathway. Our results suggest that, in chick embryo retinal neurons, the signaling pathways that mediate excitotoxic cell death and neuroprotection are stimulus specific. J. Neurosci. Res. 66:643-655, 2001. © 2001 Wiley-Liss, Inc
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