Schubert P, Ogata T, Marchini C, Ferroni S, Rudolphi K
Department of Neuromorphology, Max Planck Institute for Psychiatry, Martinsried, Germany.
Ann N Y Acad Sci. 1997 Oct 15;825:1-10. doi: 10.1111/j.1749-6632.1997.tb48409.x.
As illustrated in Figure 1, a disturbance of the intracellular Ca2+ homeostasis is thought to be a common pathogenic factor for the generation of secondary nerve cell damage that develops after brain trauma or stroke or during the course of neurodegenerative diseases. A neuronal Ca2+ overload which may result from an excessive glutamate-evoked membrane depolarization and consecutive Ca2+ influx as well as from an activation of metabotropic receptors and consecutive intracellular Ca2+ mobilization is known to have direct toxic effects on the cytoskeleton and the cell metabolism of neurons. In addition, a Ca(2+)-dependent activation of glial cells along with the loss of physiologically required mature astrocyte functions and with the acquisition of potentially neurotoxic microglial properties, has more recently been recognized as an additive pathogenic factor. This may provide an effective target for pharmacological interference. Specifically, the reinforcement of an endogenous homeostatic regulator, which obtained its sophisticated know-how during evolution, may provide a neuroprotective therapy which can handle the complexity of the pathological process with a minor risk of pharmacological side effects. Adenosine is such an ancient molecular signal that acts on both neurons and glial cells. In neurons, adenosine activates K+ and Cl- conductances, which limits synaptically evoked depolarization, thus counteracting the Ca2+ influx through voltage-dependent and NMDA receptor-operated ion channels. This A1 receptor-mediated effect seems to be the major action by which adenosine adds directly to the protection of neurons against Ca(2+)-dependent damage. In glial cells, the prevalent effect of adenosine is its regulatory influence on the Ca2+ and cAMP-dependent molecular signaling that determines the cellular proliferation rate, the differentiation state and related functions. When mimicking the activation of metabotropic glutamate receptors in cultures of immature rat astrocytes, which largely resemble pathologically activated astrocytes, a transient Ca2+ mobilization was initiated by adenosine. This A1 receptor-mediated Ca2+ signal caused a prolonged potentiation of the A2 receptor-mediated intracellular cAMP rise. An experimentally sustained enhancement of the cAMP signaling initiated the differentiation of cultured astrocytes and the new expression of K+ and Cl- channels which are required for the physiological astrocyte function to maintain the extracellular ion homeostasis. Evidence is accumulating that a strengthening of the cAMP signaling, which can be achieved by adenosine agonists and also by the pharmacon propentofylline (an adenosine uptake blocker and phosphodiesterase inhibitor), stimulates the mRNA production of neurotrophic factors in astrocytes. In cultured microglial cells, several days' treatment with adenosine agonists or propentofylline markedly inhibited their proliferation rate, the in vitro spontaneously occurring transformation into macrophages and their particularly high formation of free oxygen radicals. Adenosine agonists also depressed the release of the potentially toxic cytokine TNF alpha and induced programmed cell death in immunologically activated microglial cells. We conclude that a pharmacological reinforcement of the endogenous cell modulator adenosine may provide neuroprotection by counteracting neuronal Ca2+ overload, by depressing potentially neurotoxic microglial functions and by regaining physiologically required properties of differentiated astrocytes. Further information about the influence of adenosine on the molecular signaling and on ischemic brain damage is given in Refs. 37 and 38, and about the implicated possible relevance for the treatment of stroke in Ref. 39.
如图1所示,细胞内Ca2+稳态紊乱被认为是脑外伤、中风后或神经退行性疾病过程中发生的继发性神经细胞损伤产生的常见致病因素。神经元Ca2+过载可能源于过量谷氨酸诱发的膜去极化和连续的Ca2+内流,以及代谢型受体的激活和连续的细胞内Ca2+动员,已知其对神经元的细胞骨架和细胞代谢具有直接毒性作用。此外,Ca(2+)依赖性激活神经胶质细胞,同时丧失生理所需的成熟星形胶质细胞功能,并获得潜在的神经毒性小胶质细胞特性,最近被认为是一个附加的致病因素。这可能为药物干预提供一个有效靶点。具体而言,增强一种在进化过程中获得其复杂技术的内源性稳态调节因子,可能提供一种神经保护疗法,该疗法能够处理病理过程的复杂性,且药物副作用风险较小。腺苷就是这样一种古老的分子信号,它作用于神经元和神经胶质细胞。在神经元中,腺苷激活K+和Cl-电导,限制突触诱发的去极化,从而抵消通过电压依赖性和NMDA受体操纵的离子通道的Ca2+内流。这种A1受体介导的效应似乎是腺苷直接增强对神经元抗Ca(2+)依赖性损伤保护作用的主要作用。在神经胶质细胞中,腺苷的普遍作用是对Ca2+和cAMP依赖性分子信号传导的调节影响,该信号传导决定细胞增殖速率、分化状态和相关功能。当在未成熟大鼠星形胶质细胞培养物中模拟代谢型谷氨酸受体的激活时(其在很大程度上类似于病理激活的星形胶质细胞),腺苷引发了短暂的Ca2+动员。这种A1受体介导的Ca2+信号导致A2受体介导的细胞内cAMP升高的延长增强。实验性持续增强的cAMP信号传导启动了培养的星形胶质细胞的分化以及K+和Cl-通道的新表达,这些通道是生理星形胶质细胞功能维持细胞外离子稳态所必需的。越来越多的证据表明,增强cAMP信号传导(可通过腺苷激动剂以及药物丙戊茶碱(一种腺苷摄取阻滞剂和磷酸二酯酶抑制剂)实现)可刺激星形胶质细胞中神经营养因子的mRNA产生。在培养的小胶质细胞中,用腺苷激动剂或丙戊茶碱处理数天可显著抑制其增殖速率、体外自发转化为巨噬细胞以及其特别高的游离氧自由基形成。腺苷激动剂还抑制了潜在毒性细胞因子TNFα的释放,并在免疫激活的小胶质细胞中诱导程序性细胞死亡。我们得出结论认为,内源性细胞调节剂腺苷的药理学增强可能通过抵消神经元Ca2+过载、抑制潜在的神经毒性小胶质细胞功能以及恢复分化星形胶质细胞的生理所需特性来提供神经保护。关于腺苷对分子信号传导和缺血性脑损伤影响的更多信息见参考文献37和38,关于其与中风治疗可能的相关性见参考文献39。