4.3 Article

Excitotoxic neuroprotection and vulnerability with CaMKII inhibition

Journal

MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 46, Issue 4, Pages 720-730

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.mcn.2011.02.003

Keywords

Excitotoxicity; Aberrant calcium signaling; Ischemia; Kinase inhibitors; Cortical neurons; CaMKII inactivation

Categories

Funding

  1. Indiana State Department of Health, Spinal Cord Brain Injury [ISDH/A70-0-0-079212]
  2. Paul and Carole Stark Scholars'

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Aberrant calcium signaling is a common feature of ischemia and multiple neurodegenerative diseases. While activation of calcium-calmodulin (CaM)-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII) is a key event in calcium signaling, its role in excitotoxicity is controversial. Our findings demonstrate neuroprotection in neuronal cultures treated with the small molecule (KN-93) and peptide (tat-AIP and tat-CN21) inhibitors of CaMKII immediately prior to excitotoxic glutamate/glycine insult. Unlike KN-93 which blocks CaMKII activation, but not constitutively active forms of CaMKII, tat-CN21 and tat-AIP significantly reduced excitotoxicity in cultured neurons when applied post-insult. We observed that the neuroprotective effects of tat-CN21 are greatest when applied before the toxic glutamate challenge and diminish with time, with the neuroprotection associated with CaMKII inhibition diminishing back to control 3 h post glutamate insult. Mechanistically, tat-CN21 inhibition of CaMKII resulted in an increase in CaMKII activity and the percentage of soluble alpha CaMKII observed in neuronal lysates 24 h following glutamate stimulation. To address the impact of prolonged CaMKII inhibition prior to excitotoxic insult, neuronal cultures were treated with CaMKII inhibitors overnight and then subjected to a sub-maximal excitotoxic insult. In this model, CaMKII inhibition prior to insult exacerbated neuronal death, suggesting that a loss of CaMKII enhances neuronal vulnerability to glutamate. Although changes in alpha CaMKII or NR2B protein levels are not responsible for this enhanced glutamate vulnerability, this process is blocked by the protein translation inhibitor cycloheximide. In total, the neuroprotection afforded by CaMKII inhibition can be seen as neuroprotective immediately surrounding the excitotoxic insult, whereas sustained CaMKII inhibition produced by excitotoxicity leads to neuronal death by enhancing neuronal vulnerability to glutamate. (C) 2011 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.3
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available