Belov Kirdajova Denisa, Kriska Jan, Tureckova Jana, Anderova Miroslava
Department of Cellular Neurophysiology, Institute of Experimental Medicine, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic (ASCR), Prague, Czechia.
Second Faculty of Medicine, Charles University, Prague, Czechia.
Front Cell Neurosci. 2020 Mar 19;14:51. doi: 10.3389/fncel.2020.00051. eCollection 2020.
A plethora of neurological disorders shares a final common deadly pathway known as excitotoxicity. Among these disorders, ischemic injury is a prominent cause of death and disability worldwide. Brain ischemia stems from cardiac arrest or stroke, both responsible for insufficient blood supply to the brain parenchyma. Glucose and oxygen deficiency disrupts oxidative phosphorylation, which results in energy depletion and ionic imbalance, followed by cell membrane depolarization, calcium (Ca) overload, and extracellular accumulation of excitatory amino acid glutamate. If tight physiological regulation fails to clear the surplus of this neurotransmitter, subsequent prolonged activation of glutamate receptors forms a vicious circle between elevated concentrations of intracellular Ca ions and aberrant glutamate release, aggravating the effect of this ischemic pathway. The activation of downstream Ca-dependent enzymes has a catastrophic impact on nervous tissue leading to cell death, accompanied by the formation of free radicals, edema, and inflammation. After decades of "neuron-centric" approaches, recent research has also finally shed some light on the role of glial cells in neurological diseases. It is becoming more and more evident that neurons and glia depend on each other. Neuronal cells, astrocytes, microglia, NG2 glia, and oligodendrocytes all have their roles in what is known as glutamate excitotoxicity. However, who is the main contributor to the ischemic pathway, and who is the unsuspecting victim? In this review article, we summarize the so-far-revealed roles of cells in the central nervous system, with particular attention to glial cells in ischemia-induced glutamate excitotoxicity, its origins, and consequences.
众多神经疾病都有一个共同的最终致命途径,即兴奋性毒性。在这些疾病中,缺血性损伤是全球范围内导致死亡和残疾的主要原因。脑缺血源于心脏骤停或中风,二者都会导致脑实质供血不足。葡萄糖和氧气缺乏会破坏氧化磷酸化,导致能量耗竭和离子失衡,进而引起细胞膜去极化、钙(Ca)超载以及兴奋性氨基酸谷氨酸在细胞外堆积。如果严格的生理调节无法清除这种神经递质的过剩,随后谷氨酸受体的持续激活会在细胞内钙离子浓度升高和异常谷氨酸释放之间形成恶性循环,加剧这种缺血途径的影响。下游钙依赖性酶的激活对神经组织具有灾难性影响,导致细胞死亡,同时伴有自由基形成、水肿和炎症。经过数十年以“神经元为中心”的研究方法,最近的研究终于也揭示了胶质细胞在神经疾病中的作用。越来越明显的是,神经元和胶质细胞相互依存。神经元细胞、星形胶质细胞、小胶质细胞、NG2胶质细胞和少突胶质细胞在所谓的谷氨酸兴奋性毒性中都发挥着各自的作用。然而,谁是缺血途径的主要促成者,谁又是无辜的受害者呢?在这篇综述文章中,我们总结了迄今为止中枢神经系统中细胞所揭示的作用,特别关注胶质细胞在缺血诱导的谷氨酸兴奋性毒性中的作用、其起源及后果。