Article (Scientific journals)
Glutamate-induced and NMDA receptor-mediated neurodegeneration entails P2Y1 receptor activation.
Simoes, Ana P.; Gomes Da Silva, Carla; Marques, Joana M. et al.
2018In Cell Death and Disease, 9 (3), p. 297
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Abstract :
[en] Despite the characteristic etiologies and phenotypes, different brain disorders rely on common pathogenic events. Glutamate-induced neurotoxicity is a pathogenic event shared by different brain disorders. Another event occurring in different brain pathological conditions is the increase of the extracellular ATP levels, which is now recognized as a danger and harmful signal in the brain, as heralded by the ability of P2 receptors (P2Rs) to affect a wide range of brain disorders. Yet, how ATP and P2R contribute to neurodegeneration remains poorly defined. For that purpose, we now examined the contribution of extracellular ATP and P2Rs to glutamate-induced neurodegeneration. We found both in vitro and in vivo that ATP/ADP through the activation of P2Y1R contributes to glutamate-induced neuronal death in the rat hippocampus. We found in cultured rat hippocampal neurons that the exposure to glutamate (100 microM) for 30 min triggers a sustained increase of extracellular ATP levels, which contributes to NMDA receptor (NMDAR)-mediated hippocampal neuronal death through the activation of P2Y1R. We also determined that P2Y1R is involved in excitotoxicity in vivo as the blockade of P2Y1R significantly attenuated rat hippocampal neuronal death upon the systemic administration of kainic acid or upon the intrahippocampal injection of quinolinic acid. This contribution of P2Y1R fades with increasing intensity of excitotoxic conditions, which indicates that P2Y1R is not contributing directly to neurodegeneration, rather behaving as a catalyst decreasing the threshold from which glutamate becomes neurotoxic. Moreover, we unraveled that such excitotoxicity process began with an early synaptotoxicity that was also prevented/attenuated by the antagonism of P2Y1R, both in vitro and in vivo. This should rely on the observed glutamate-induced calpain-mediated axonal cytoskeleton damage, most likely favored by a P2Y1R-driven increase of NMDAR-mediated Ca(2+) entry selectively in axons. This may constitute a degenerative mechanism shared by different brain diseases, particularly relevant at initial pathogenic stages.
Disciplines :
Life sciences: Multidisciplinary, general & others
Author, co-author :
Simoes, Ana P.
Gomes Da Silva, Carla ;  Université de Liège - ULiège > GIGA-Research
Marques, Joana M.
Pochmann, Daniela
Porciuncula, Lisiane O.
Ferreira, Sofia
Oses, Jean P.
Beleza, Rui O.
Real, Joana I.
Kofalvi, Attila
Bahr, Ben A.
Lerma, Juan
Cunha, Rodrigo A.
Rodrigues, Ricardo J.
More authors (4 more) Less
Language :
English
Title :
Glutamate-induced and NMDA receptor-mediated neurodegeneration entails P2Y1 receptor activation.
Publication date :
2018
Journal title :
Cell Death and Disease
eISSN :
2041-4889
Publisher :
Nature Publishing Group, London, United Kingdom
Volume :
9
Issue :
3
Pages :
297
Peer reviewed :
Peer Reviewed verified by ORBi
Available on ORBi :
since 13 November 2018

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