Wei G, Hough C J, Li Y, Sarvey J M
Department of Pharmacology, Uniformed Services University of Health Sciences, 4301 Jones Bridge Road, Bethesda, MD 20814, USA.
Neuroscience. 2004;125(4):867-77. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroscience.2004.03.011.
The mammalian CNS contains an abundance of chelatable zinc that is sequestered in the vesicles of glutamatergic presynaptic terminals and co-released with glutamate. Considerable Zn(2+) is also released during cerebral ischemia and reperfusion (I/R) although the mechanism of this release has not been elucidated. We report here the real time observation of increase of the concentration of extracellular Zn(2+) (Zn(2+)), accompanied by a rapid increase of intracellular free Zn(2+)concentration, in the areas of dentate gyrus (DG), CA1 and CA3 in acute rat hippocampus slices during ischemia simulated by deprivation of oxygen and glucose (OGD) followed by reperfusion with normal artificial cerebrospinal fluid. A brief period of OGD caused a sustained increase of Zn(2+). Subsequent reperfusion with oxygenated medium containing glucose resulted in a further increase of Zn(2+). Longer periods of OGD caused greater increases of Zn(2+) and subsequent reperfusion caused still further increases of Zn(2+) regardless of OGD duration. The Zn(2+) chelator CaEDTA (10 mM) significantly reduced the increase of [Zn(2+)] induced by OGD and reperfusion. Significant regional differences of Zn(2+) over the areas of the DG, CA1 and CA3 were not observed during I/R. Neither sodium channel blockade by tetrodotoxin (2 microM), perfusion with nominally calcium-free medium nor anatomical disassociation of the DG, CA1 and CA3 regions from one another by lesioning affected the increase of Zn(2+). The non-specific nitric oxide synthase (NOS) inhibitor, Nomega-nitro-l-arginine methyl ester (1 mM), however, blocked the increase of Zn(2+) during ischemia and reperfusion. The data indicate the important role of NO in causing the release of Zn(2+) during I/R and suggest that NOS inhibitors may be used to reduce Zn(2+)-induced neuronal injury.
哺乳动物的中枢神经系统含有大量可螯合的锌,这些锌被隔离在谷氨酸能突触前终末的囊泡中,并与谷氨酸共同释放。在脑缺血和再灌注(I/R)期间也会释放大量的Zn(2+),尽管这种释放的机制尚未阐明。我们在此报告,在急性大鼠海马切片的齿状回(DG)、CA1和CA3区域,通过缺氧和缺糖(OGD)模拟缺血,随后用正常人工脑脊液再灌注,实时观察到细胞外Zn(2+)浓度(Zn(2+))升高,同时细胞内游离Zn(2+)浓度迅速增加。短暂的OGD导致Zn(2+)持续升高。随后用含葡萄糖的充氧培养基再灌注导致Zn(2+)进一步升高。无论OGD持续时间如何,较长时间的OGD导致Zn(2+)升高幅度更大,随后的再灌注导致Zn(2+)进一步升高。Zn(2+)螯合剂CaEDTA(10 mM)显著降低了OGD和再灌注诱导的[Zn(2+)]升高。在I/R期间,未观察到DG、CA1和CA3区域Zn(2+)的显著区域差异。河豚毒素(2 microM)阻断钠通道、用无钙培养基灌注,或通过损伤使DG、CA1和CA3区域彼此解剖分离,均不影响Zn(2+)的升高。然而,非特异性一氧化氮合酶(NOS)抑制剂Nω-硝基-L-精氨酸甲酯(1 mM)可阻断缺血和再灌注期间Zn(2+)的升高。数据表明NO在I/R期间导致Zn(2+)释放中起重要作用,并提示NOS抑制剂可用于减少Zn(2+)诱导的神经元损伤。