Sharma H S, Alm P
Department of Medical Cell Biology, Biomedical Centre, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden.
Amino Acids. 2002;23(1-3):247-59. doi: 10.1007/s00726-001-0136-0.
The possibility that nitric oxide synthase (NOS) inhibitors influence dynorphin immunoreactivity following hyperthermia was examined in a rat model using a pharmacological approach. Previous reports from our laboratory show that hyperthermia induces an upregulation of NOS in several brain regions that seems to be instrumental in causing cell injury. Recent reports suggest that nitric oxide (NO) can influence dynorphin neurotransmission in the normal brain as well as in several pathological states. Since dynorphin is neurotoxic in different animal models of brain or spinal cord injury, it may be that the peptide will contribute to the cell injury in hyperthermia. The present investigation was carried out to determine whether hyperthermia can influence dynorphin immunoreactivity in the brain, and if so, whether inhibition of NOS will influence the peptide distribution in the brain following heat stress. Rats subjected to hyperthermia at 38 degrees C for 4 h in a biological oxygen demand incubator (BOD) resulted in a marked upregulation of dynorphin immunoreactivity in several brain regions e.g., cerebral cortex, hippocampus, cerebellum and brain stem. Pretreatment of rats with two potent NOS inhibitors, L-NAME (30 mg/kg/day, i.p. for 7 days) or L-NMMA (35 mg/kg/day, i.p. for 7 days) significantly attenuated the dynorphin immunoreactivity in the brain. These drugs were also able to reduce hyperthermia induced blood-brain barrier (BBB) permeability, brain edema formation and cell injury. Taken together, our results suggest that (i). hyperthermia has the capacity to upregulate dynorphin immunoreactivity in the brain, (ii). inhibition of NOS considerably attenuates the dynorphin immunoreaction following heat stress and (iii). upregulation of dynorphin is somehow contributing to hyperthermia induced brain damage, not reported earlier.
采用药理学方法,在大鼠模型中研究了一氧化氮合酶(NOS)抑制剂对热应激后强啡肽免疫反应性的影响。我们实验室之前的报告表明,热应激会导致几个脑区的NOS上调,这似乎是造成细胞损伤的原因。最近的报告表明,一氧化氮(NO)在正常大脑以及几种病理状态下都能影响强啡肽神经传递。由于强啡肽在不同的脑或脊髓损伤动物模型中具有神经毒性,因此该肽可能在热应激中导致细胞损伤。本研究旨在确定热应激是否会影响大脑中的强啡肽免疫反应性,如果是,那么抑制NOS是否会影响热应激后大脑中该肽的分布。在生物需氧量培养箱(BOD)中,将大鼠置于38摄氏度环境下热应激4小时,结果导致几个脑区(如大脑皮层、海马体、小脑和脑干)的强啡肽免疫反应性显著上调。用两种有效的NOS抑制剂L-NAME(30毫克/千克/天,腹腔注射,持续7天)或L-NMMA(35毫克/千克/天,腹腔注射,持续7天)对大鼠进行预处理,可显著减弱大脑中的强啡肽免疫反应性。这些药物还能够降低热应激诱导的血脑屏障(BBB)通透性、脑水肿形成和细胞损伤。综上所述,我们的结果表明:(i).热应激有能力上调大脑中的强啡肽免疫反应性;(ii).抑制NOS可显著减弱热应激后的强啡肽免疫反应;(iii).强啡肽的上调在某种程度上导致了热应激诱导的脑损伤,这一点此前未见报道。