Neurochemistry international
-
Mitochondria are central to both apoptotic and necrotic cell death, as well as to normal physiological function. Astrocytes are crucial for neuronal metabolic, antioxidant, and trophic support, as well as normal synaptic function. In the setting of stress, such as during cerebral ischemia, astrocyte dysfunction may compromise the ability of neurons to survive. ⋯ Bcl-2 family proteins are the best studied regulators of cell death, especially apoptosis, and mitochondria are a major site of action for these proteins. Although much data supports the role of Bcl-2 family proteins in the regulation of some of these mitochondrial alterations, this remains an area of active investigation. This mini-review summarizes current knowledge regarding mitochondrial control of cell survival and death in astrocytes and the effects of anti-apoptotic Bcl-2 proteins on astrocyte mitochondrial function.
-
Activated spinal glial cells have been strongly implicated in the development and maintenance of persistent pain states following a variety of stimuli including traumatic nerve injury. The present study was conducted to characterize the time course of surface markers indicative of microglial and astrocytic activation at the transcriptional level following an L5 nerve transection that results in behavioral hypersensitivity. Male Sprague-Dawley rats were divided into a normal group, a sham surgery group with an L5 spinal nerve exposure and an L5 spinal nerve transected group. ⋯ Our optimized real-time RT-PCR method was highly sensitive, specific and reproducible at a wide dynamic range. This study demonstrates that peripheral nerve injury induces an early spinal microglial activation that precedes astrocytic activation using mRNA for surface marker expression; the delayed but sustained expression of mRNA coding for GFAP implicates astrocytes in the maintenance phase of persistent pain states. In summary, these data demonstrate a distinct spinal glial response following nerve injury using real-time RT-PCR.