Mitochondrial deenergization underlies neuronal calcium overload following a prolonged glutamate challenge

The purpose of our work was to study the relationship between glutamate (GLU)-induced mitochondrial depolarization and deterioration of neuronal Ca 2+ homeostasis following a prolonged GLU challenge. The experiments were performed on cultured rat cerebellar granule cells using the fluorescent probes...

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Veröffentlicht in:FEBS letters 1996-11, Vol.397 (2), p.230-234
Hauptverfasser: Khodorov, B., Pinelis, V., Vergun, O., Storozhevykh, T., Vinskaya, N.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The purpose of our work was to study the relationship between glutamate (GLU)-induced mitochondrial depolarization and deterioration of neuronal Ca 2+ homeostasis following a prolonged GLU challenge. The experiments were performed on cultured rat cerebellar granule cells using the fluorescent probes, rhodamine 123 and fura-2. All the cells, in which 100 μM GLU ( 10 μM glycine, 0 Mg 2+) induced only relatively slight mitochondrial depolarization (1.1-1.3-fold increase in rhodamine 123 fluorescence), retained their ability to recover [Ca 2+] i following a prolonged GLU challenge. In contrast, the cells in which GLU treatment induced pronounced mitochondrial depolarization (2–4-fold increase in rhodamine 123 fluorescence), exhibited a high Ca 2+ plateau in the post-glutamate period. Application of 3–5 mM NaCN or 0.25–1 μM FCCP during this Ca 2+ plateau phase usually failed to produce a further noticeable increase in [Ca 2+] 1. Regression analysis revealed a good correlation ( r 2 = 0.88 ± 0.03, n = 19) between the increase in the percentage of rhodamine 123 fluorescence and the postglutamate [Ca 2+] i Collectively, the results obtained led us to conclude that the GLU-induced neuronal Ca 2+ overload was due to the collapse of the mitochondrial potential and subsequent ATP depletion.
ISSN:0014-5793
1873-3468
DOI:10.1016/S0014-5793(96)01139-8