Excited to death: different ways to lose your neurones


Autoria(s): Dodd, PR
Data(s)

01/01/2002

Resumo

The selective loss of neurones in a range of neurodegenerative diseases is widely thought to involve the process of excitotoxicity, in which glutamate-mediated neuronal killing is elaborated through the excessive stimulation of cell-surface receptors. Every such disease exhibits a distinct regional and subregional pattern of neuronal loss. so processes must be locally triggered to different extents to account for this. We have studied several mechanisms which could lead to excitotoxic glutamate pathophysiology and compared them in different diseases. Our data suggest that glutamate can reach toxic extracellular levels in Alzheimer disease by malfunctions in cellular transporters, and that the toxicity may be exacerbated by continued glutamate release from presynaptic neurones acting on hypersensitive postsynaptic receptors. Thus the excitotoxicity is direct. In contrast, alcoholic brain damage arises in regions where GABA-mediated inhibition is deficient, and fails properly to dampen trans-synaptic excitation, Thus the excitotoxicity is indirect. A variety of such mechanisms is possible, which may combine in different ways.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:61668

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Kluwer Academic

Palavras-Chave #Geriatrics & Gerontology #Alcoholism #Alzheimer Disease #Excitotoxicity #Gaba #Glutamate #Human Brain #Pathogenesis #Amyotrophic-lateral-sclerosis #Excitatory Amino-acids #Zolpidem Binding-sites #Central-nervous-system #Glutamate Transporter #Alzheimers-disease #Cerebral-cortex #Chronic-alcoholics #Gaba(a) Receptor #Hepatic-encephalopathy #C1 #270107 Cell Neurochemistry #320502 Basic Pharmacology #321020 Pathology #320702 Central Nervous System #730104 Nervous system and disorders #730203 Health related to ageing #730205 Substance abuse
Tipo

Journal Article