Sudo S, Wen T C, Desaki J, Matsuda S, Tanaka J, Arai T, Maeda N, Sakanaka M
Department of Anesthesiology, Ehime University School of Medicine, Shigenobu, Japan.
Neurosci Res. 1997 Dec;29(4):345-54. doi: 10.1016/s0168-0102(97)00106-5.
Beta-estradiol has been considered to be a neurotrophic agent, but its in vivo effect on gerbils with transient forebrain ischemia has not yet been demonstrated. In the first set of the present experiments, we infused beta-estradiol at a dose of 0.05 or 0.25 microg/day for 7 days into the lateral ventricles of normothermic gerbils starting 2 h before 3-min forebrain ischemia. Beta-estradiol infusion at a dose of 0.25 microg/day prevented significantly the ischemia-induced reduction of response latency time as revealed by a step-down passive avoidance task. Subsequent light and electron microscopic examinations showed that pyramidal neurons in the hippocampal CA1 region as well as synapses within the strata moleculare, radiatum and oriens of the region were significantly more numerous in gerbils infused with beta-estradiol than in those receiving saline infusion. Beta-estradiol at a dose of 1.25 microg/day was ineffective and occasionally increased the mortality of experimental animals. Since the total brain content of exogenous beta-estradiol at 12 h after forebrain ischemia was estimated to be less than 145 ng, the second set of experiments focused on the neurotrophic action of beta-estradiol at concentrations around 100 ng/ml in vitro. Beta-estradiol at concentrations of 1-100 ng/ml facilitated the survival and process extension of cultured hippocampal neurons, but it did not exhibit any significant radical-scavenging effects at the concentration range. On the other hand, 100 microg/ml of beta-estradiol, even though failing to support hippocampal neurons in vitro, effectively scavenged free radicals in subsequent in vitro studies, as demonstrated elsewhere. These findings suggest that beta-estradiol at a dose of 0.25 microg/day prevents ischemia-induced learning disability and neuronal loss at early stages after transient forebrain ischemia, possibly via a receptor-mediated pathway without attenuating free radical neurotoxicity.
β-雌二醇被认为是一种神经营养因子,但其对短暂性前脑缺血沙鼠的体内作用尚未得到证实。在本实验的第一组中,我们在正常体温的沙鼠前脑缺血3分钟前2小时开始,以0.05或0.25微克/天的剂量向其侧脑室注入β-雌二醇,持续7天。以0.25微克/天的剂量注入β-雌二醇可显著防止缺血诱导的反应潜伏期缩短,这通过一步被动回避任务得以揭示。随后的光镜和电镜检查显示,注入β-雌二醇的沙鼠海马CA1区的锥体细胞以及该区域分子层、辐射层和原层内的突触明显比注入生理盐水的沙鼠更多。1.25微克/天的β-雌二醇无效,且偶尔会增加实验动物的死亡率。由于前脑缺血后12小时外源β-雌二醇的全脑含量估计低于145纳克,第二组实验聚焦于体外浓度约为100纳克/毫升的β-雌二醇的神经营养作用。浓度为1-100纳克/毫升的β-雌二醇促进了培养的海马神经元的存活和突起生长,但在该浓度范围内未表现出任何显著的自由基清除作用。另一方面,100微克/毫升的β-雌二醇尽管在体外不能支持海马神经元,但在随后的体外研究中有效地清除了自由基,如其他地方所证明的。这些发现表明,0.25微克/天的β-雌二醇可预防短暂性前脑缺血后早期缺血诱导的学习障碍和神经元丢失,可能通过受体介导的途径,而不减弱自由基神经毒性。