Choi D W, Yokoyama M, Koh J
Department of Neurology, Stanford Medical School, CA 94305.
Neuroscience. 1988 Jan;24(1):67-79. doi: 10.1016/0306-4522(88)90312-0.
Large amounts of zinc are endogenously present in synaptic vesicles of mammalian central excitatory boutons, and are likely released during synaptic activity; transient elevations in extracellular zinc concentration exceeding several hundred micromolar may accompany intense neuronal excitation. Exposure of mature cortical cell cultures, in mice, to similar concentrations of zinc for several minutes resulted in widespread neuronal injury; the extent of injury was dependent on both the concentration of zinc, and the length of exposure. Quantitative neuronal cell counts suggested an approximate neurotoxic ED50 of 600 microM for a 15 min zinc exposure, and 225 microM for an 18-24 h exposure. High zinc concentrations or long exposure times resulted in the addition of glial injury to the neuronal injury; this glial injury could also be demonstrated in neuron-free glial cell cultures, and hence likely represented a direct effect of zinc rather than a consequence of neuronal injury. Neurons in immature cultures were relatively resistant to zinc-induced injury, suggesting that neuronal vulnerability to zinc increases with maturation in vitro. An early event associated with toxic exposure to zinc was gross neuronal swelling. This swelling was dependent on the presence of extracellular sodium, and, interestingly, could be delayed by the continued presence of zinc itself. Zinc-induced neuronal cell loss, however, occurred even when both sodium and calcium were absent during the exposure to zinc. The present results provide direct evidence that zinc might be a relatively potent, rapidly acting neurotoxin, and somewhat less potent gliotoxin, in the mammalian central nervous system. We suggest that zinc should be included on the growing list of endogenous toxins which may be involved in the acute pathogenesis of central neuronal, and possibly glial, cell loss in some disease states.
大量锌内源性地存在于哺乳动物中枢兴奋性突触小体的突触小泡中,并且很可能在突触活动期间释放;细胞外锌浓度短暂升高超过几百微摩尔可能伴随着强烈的神经元兴奋。在小鼠中,将成熟皮质细胞培养物暴露于相似浓度的锌中几分钟会导致广泛的神经元损伤;损伤程度取决于锌的浓度和暴露时间。定量神经元细胞计数表明,对于15分钟的锌暴露,近似神经毒性半数有效剂量(ED50)为600微摩尔,对于18 - 24小时的暴露为225微摩尔。高锌浓度或长时间暴露会导致在神经元损伤的基础上增加胶质细胞损伤;这种胶质细胞损伤在无神经元的胶质细胞培养物中也能得到证实,因此很可能代表锌的直接作用而非神经元损伤的结果。未成熟培养物中的神经元对锌诱导的损伤相对具有抗性,这表明神经元对锌的易损性在体外随着成熟而增加。与锌中毒暴露相关的一个早期事件是神经元明显肿胀。这种肿胀依赖于细胞外钠的存在,有趣的是,锌本身的持续存在可以延迟肿胀。然而,即使在暴露于锌的过程中钠和钙都不存在时,锌诱导的神经元细胞死亡仍会发生。目前的结果提供了直接证据,表明在哺乳动物中枢神经系统中,锌可能是一种相对强效、作用迅速的神经毒素,且是一种稍弱的胶质毒素。我们建议,在可能参与某些疾病状态下中枢神经元以及可能的胶质细胞急性发病机制的内源性毒素不断增加的清单中,应纳入锌。