Ischemic Cell Death in Brain Neurons

Department of Physiology, University of Wisconsin School of Medicine, Madison, Wisconsin Lipton, Peter Ischemic Cell Death in Brain Neurons. J. Neurophysiol. 79: 1431-1568, 1999. This review is directed at understanding how neuronal death occurs in two distinct insults, global ischemia and focal isc...

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Veröffentlicht in:Physiological reviews 1999-10, Vol.79 (4), p.1431-1568
1. Verfasser: Lipton, Peter
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Department of Physiology, University of Wisconsin School of Medicine, Madison, Wisconsin Lipton, Peter Ischemic Cell Death in Brain Neurons. J. Neurophysiol. 79: 1431-1568, 1999. This review is directed at understanding how neuronal death occurs in two distinct insults, global ischemia and focal ischemia. These are the two principal rodent models for human disease. Cell death occurs by a necrotic pathway characterized by either ischemic/homogenizing cell change or edematous cell change. Death also occurs via an apoptotic-like pathway that is characterized, minimally, by DNA laddering and a dependence on caspase activity and, optimally, by those properties, additional characteristic protein and phospholipid changes, and morphological attributes of apotosis. Death may also occur by autophagocytosis. The cell death process has four major stages. The first, the induction stage, includes several changes initiated by ischemia and reperfusion that are very likely to play major roles in cell death. These include inhibition (and subsequent reactivation) of electron transport, decreased ATP, decreased pH, increased cell Ca 2+ , release of glutamate, increased arachidonic acid, and also gene activation leading to cytokine synthesis, synthesis of enzymes involved in free radical production, and accumulation of leukocytes. These changes lead to the activation of five damaging events, termed perpetrators. These are the damaging actions of free radicals and their product peroxynitrite, the actions of the Ca 2+ -dependent protease calpain, the activity of phospholipases, the activity of poly-ADPribose polymerase (PARP), and the activation of the apoptotic pathway. The second stage of cell death involves the long-term changes in macromolecules or key metabolites that are caused by the perpetrators. The third stage of cell death involves long-term damaging effects of these macromolecular and metabolite changes, and of some of the induction processes, on critical cell functions and structures that lead to the defined end stages of cell damage. These targeted functions and structures include the plasmalemma, the mitochondria, the cytoskeleton, protein synthesis, and kinase activities. The fourth stage is the progression to the morphological and biochemical end stages of cell death. Of these four stages, the last two are the least well understood. Quite little is known of how the perpetrators affect the structures and functions and whether and how each of these changes contrib
ISSN:0031-9333
1522-1210
DOI:10.1152/physrev.1999.79.4.1431