3.8 Article

Maturation of vulnerability to excitotoxicity: intracellular mechanisms in cultured postnatal hippocampal neurons

Journal

DEVELOPMENTAL BRAIN RESEARCH
Volume 124, Issue 1-2, Pages 101-116

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/S0165-3806(00)00096-1

Keywords

postnatal; calcium; hypoxia; oxygen; N-methyl-D-aspartate; electrophysiology; immunohistochemistry; morphology; necrosis

Funding

  1. NINDS NIH HHS [R01 NS038547] Funding Source: Medline

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Neuronal vulnerability to excitotoxicity changes dramatically during postnatal maturation. To study the intracellular mechanisms by which maturation alters vulnerability in single neurons, we developed techniques to maintain hippocampal neurons from postnatal rats in vitro. After establishing their neuronal phenotype with immunohistochemistry and electrophysiology, we determined that these neurons exhibit developmentally regulated vulnerability to excitotoxicity. At 5 days in vitro, NMDA-induced cell death at 24 h increased from 3.6% in 3-day-old rats to >90% in rats older than 21 days. Time-lapse imaging of neuronal morphology following NMDA demonstrated increasingly prevalent and severe injury as a function of postnatal age. Neither high- nor low-affinity calcium dyes demonstrated differences in peak NMDA-induced [Ca2+](i) increases between neurons from younger and older animals. However, neurons from older animals were uniformly distinguished from those from younger animals by their subsequent loss of [Ca2+](i) homeostasis. Because of the role of mitochondrial Ca2+ buffering in [Ca2+](i) homeostasis. we measured NMDA-induced changes in mitochondrial membrane potential (Delta Psi) as a function of postnatal age. NMDA markedly dissipated Delta Psi in neurons from mature rats, but minimally in those from younger rats. These data demonstrate that, in cultures of postnatal hippocampal neurons, (a) vulnerability to excitotoxicity increases as a function of the postnatal age of the animal from which they were harvested, and (b) developmental regulation of vulnerability to NMDA occurs at the level of the mitochondrion. (C) 2000 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.

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