4.3 Article

Diadenosine tetraphosphate (Ap4A) inhibits ATP-induced excitotoxicity: a neuroprotective strategy for traumatic spinal cord injury treatment

Journal

PURINERGIC SIGNALLING
Volume 13, Issue 1, Pages 75-87

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11302-016-9541-4

Keywords

Spinal cord injury; Neuroprotection; Diadenosine; Tissue damage; Apoptosis; Excitotoxicity; Intracellular calcium; Secondary injury; Neuro-2a; Mouse model

Funding

  1. Fundacion para la Investigacion Sanitaria de Castilla la Mancha (FISCAM) [PI-2010/19]

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Reducing cell death during the secondary injury is a major priority in the development of a cure for traumatic spinal cord injury (SCI). One of the earliest processes that follow SCI is the excitotoxicity resulting from the massive release of excitotoxicity mediators, including ATP, which induce an excessive and/or prolonged activation of their receptors and a deregulation of the calcium homeostasis. Diadenosine tetraphosphate (Ap(4)A) is an endogenous purinergic agonist, present in both extracellular and intracellular fluids, with promising cytoprotective effects in different diseases including neurodegenerative processes. In a search for efficient neuroprotective strategies for SCI, we have tested the capability of Ap(4)A to reduce the excitotoxic death mediated by the ATP-induced deregulation of calcium homeostasis and its consequences on tissue preservation and functional recovery in a mouse model of moderate contusive SCI. Our analyses with the murine neural cell line Neuro2a demonstrate that treatment with Ap(4)A reduces ATP-dependent excitotoxic death by both lowering the intracellular calcium response and decreasing the expression of specific purinergic receptors. Follow-up analyses in a mouse model of contusive SCI showed that acute administration of Ap(4)A following SCI reduces tissue damage and improves motor function recovery. These results suggest that Ap(4)A cytoprotection results from a decrease of the purinergic tone preventing the effects of a massive release of ATP after SCI, probably together with a direct induction of anti-apoptotic and pro-survival pathways via activation of P2Y(2) proposed in previous studies. In conclusion, Ap(4)A may be a good candidate for an SCI therapy, particularly to reduce excitotoxicity in combination with other modulators and/or inhibitors of the excitotoxic process that are being tested.

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