Journal of cerebral blood flow and metabolism : official journal of the International Society of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism
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J. Cereb. Blood Flow Metab. · Jun 1999
Differential expressions of glycine transporter 1 and three glutamate transporter mRNA in the hippocampus of gerbils with transient forebrain ischemia.
The extracellular concentrations of glutamate and its co-agonist for the N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) receptor, glycine, may be under the control of amino acid transporters in the ischemic brain. However, there is little information on changes in glycine and glutamate transporters in the hippocampal CA1 field of gerbils with transient forebrain ischemia. This study investigated the spatial and temporal expressions of glycine transporter 1 (GLYT1) and three glutamate transporter (excitatory amino acid carrier 1, EAAC1; glutamate/aspartate transporter, GLAST; glutamate transporter 1, GLT1) mRNA in the gerbil hippocampus after 3 minutes of ischemia. ⋯ The GLAST and GLT1 mRNA were rather intensely expressed in the dentate gyrus and CA3 field of the control hippocampus, respectively, but they were weakly expressed in the CA1 field before and after ischemia. As GLAST and GLT1 play a major role in the control of extracellular glutamate concentration, the paucity of these transporters in the CA1 field may account for the vulnerability of CA1 neurons to ischemia, provided that the functional GLAST and GLT1 proteins are also less in the CA1 field than in the CA3 field. This study suggests that the amino acid transporters play pivotal roles in the process of delayed neuronal death in the hippocampal CA1 field.
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J. Cereb. Blood Flow Metab. · Jun 1999
Neurofilament proteolysis after focal ischemia; when do cells die after experimental stroke?
To determine the occurrence and time-course of presumably irreversible subcellular damage after moderate focal ischemia, rats were subjected to 1, 3, 6, 9, or 24 hours of permanent unilateral middle cerebral and common carotid occlusion or 3 hours of reversible occlusion followed by 3, 6, or 21 hours of reperfusion. The topography and the extent of damage were analyzed with tetrazolium staining and immunoblot using an antibody capable of detecting breakdown of neurofilament. Neurofilament proteolysis began after 3 hours in the infarct core but was still incomplete in penumbral regions up to 9 hours. ⋯ In contrast to permanent ischemia and in agreement with the authors' previous demonstration of "reperfusion injury" in this model, prolongation of reperfusion from 3 hours to 6 and 21 hours after 3 hours of reversible occlusion gradually augmented infarct volume by 203% and 324%, respectively. Neurofilament proteolysis initiated approximately 3 hours after ischemia was quantitatively greatest in the core and extended during reperfusion to incorporate penumbra with a similar time course to that of tetrazolium abnormalities. These data demonstrate that, at least as measured by neurofilament breakdown and mitochondrial failure, extensive cellular damage is not present in penumbral regions for up to 9 hours, suggesting the potential for rescuing these regions by appropriate and timely neuroprotective strategies.