Department of Neurobiology, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA 15261, USA.
Neuroscience. 2010 Nov 24;171(1):31-9. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroscience.2010.08.049. Epub 2010 Aug 27.
Methamphetamine is a drug of abuse that can induce oxidative stress and neurotoxicity to dopaminergic neurons. We have previously reported that oxidative stress promotes the liberation of intracellular Zn(2+) from metal-binding proteins, which, in turn, can initiate neuronal injurious signaling processes. Here, we report that methamphetamine mobilizes Zn(2+) in catecholaminergic rat pheochromocytoma (PC12) cells, as measured by an increase in Zn(2+)-regulated gene expression driven by the metal response element transcription factor-1. Moreover, methamphetamine-liberated Zn(2+) was responsible for a pronounced enhancement in voltage-dependent K(+) currents in these cells, a process that normally accompanies Zn(2+)-dependent cell injury. Overnight exposure to methamphetamine induced PC12 cell death. This toxicity could be prevented by the cell-permeant zinc chelator N,N,N', N'-tetrakis(2-pyridylmethyl)-ethylenediamine (TPEN), and by over-expression of the Zn(2+)-binding protein metallothionein 3 (MT3), but not by tricine, an extracellular Zn(2+) chelator. The toxicity of methamphetamine to PC12 cells was enhanced by the presence of co-cultured microglia. Remarkably, under these conditions, TPEN no longer protected but, in fact, dramatically exacerbated methamphetamine toxicity, tricine again being without effect. Over-expression of MT3 in PC12 cells did not mimic these toxicity-enhancing actions of TPEN, suggesting that the chelator affected microglial function. Interestingly, P2X receptor antagonists reversed the toxicity-enhancing effect of TPEN. As such, endogenous levels of intracellular Zn(2+) may normally interfere with the activation of P2X channels in microglia. We conclude that Zn(2+) plays a significant but complex role in modulating the cellular response of PC12 cells to methamphetamine exposure in both the absence and presence of microglia.
甲基苯丙胺是一种滥用药物,可诱导多巴胺能神经元的氧化应激和神经毒性。我们之前曾报道过,氧化应激会促进金属结合蛋白内细胞内 Zn(2+)的释放,而这反过来又可以启动神经元损伤信号转导过程。在这里,我们报告甲基苯丙胺会动员儿茶酚胺大鼠嗜铬细胞瘤(PC12)细胞中的 Zn(2+),这可以通过金属反应元件转录因子-1 驱动的 Zn(2+)调节基因表达的增加来衡量。此外,甲基苯丙胺释放的 Zn(2+)导致这些细胞中电压依赖性 K(+)电流明显增强,这是通常伴随 Zn(2+)依赖性细胞损伤的过程。过夜暴露于甲基苯丙胺会诱导 PC12 细胞死亡。这种毒性可以通过细胞通透性锌螯合剂 N,N,N',N'-四(2-吡啶甲基)-乙二胺(TPEN)以及 Zn(2+)结合蛋白金属硫蛋白 3(MT3)的过表达来预防,但不能通过细胞外 Zn(2+)螯合剂 tricine 来预防。共培养的小胶质细胞会增强甲基苯丙胺对 PC12 细胞的毒性。值得注意的是,在这些条件下,TPEN 不再起保护作用,实际上大大加剧了甲基苯丙胺的毒性,而 tricine 再次没有效果。在 PC12 细胞中过表达 MT3 并没有模拟出 TPEN 的这些增强毒性作用,这表明该螯合剂影响了小胶质细胞的功能。有趣的是,P2X 受体拮抗剂逆转了 TPEN 的毒性增强作用。因此,细胞内 Zn(2+)的内源性水平可能会正常干扰小胶质细胞中 P2X 通道的激活。我们得出结论,Zn(2+)在调节 PC12 细胞对甲基苯丙胺暴露的细胞反应方面发挥了重要但复杂的作用,无论是否存在小胶质细胞。