4.5 Article

Protective Function of Taurine in Glutamate-induced Apoptosis in Cultured Neurons

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE RESEARCH
Volume 87, Issue 5, Pages 1185-1194

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jnr.21926

Keywords

taurine; apoptosis; glutamate; calpain; calcium

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [NS37851]
  2. National Science Foundation [IBN-9723079]

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Previously, we showed that taurine protects neurons against glutamate-induced excitotoxicity by inhibiting the glutamate-induced increase of [Ca2+](i). In this study, we report that taurine prevents glutamate-induced chromosomal condensation, indicating that taurine inhibits glutamate-induced apoptosis. We found that Bcl-2 was down-regulated while Bax was up-regulated by glutamate treatment, and these changes were prevented in the presence of taurine. We have also shown that taurine inhibits glutamate-induced activation of calpain. Furthermore, calpastatin, a specific calpain inhibitor, also prevented glutamate-induced cell death. Here we propose the mechanisms underlying glutamate-induced apoptosis and taurine's inhibition of glutamate-induced apoptosis to be as follows: glutamate stimulation induces [Ca2+](i) elevation, which in turn activates calpain; activation of calpain leads to a reduction of Bcl-2:Bax ratios; with decreased Bcl-2:Bax ratios Bax homodimers form, Bax homodimerization, and translocation to the mitochondria result in the release of cytochrome c; released cytochrome c in turn activates a downstream caspase cascade leading to apoptosis. The antiapoptotic function of taurine is due to its inhibition of glutamate-induced membrane depolarization. (C) 2008 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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