Aggregating Brain Cell Cultures as a Model to Study Ischaemia-induced Neurodegeneration.


Autoria(s): Pardo B.; Honegger P.
Data(s)

1999

Resumo

Rotation-mediated aggregating brain cell cultures at two different maturational stages (DIV 11 and DIV 20) were subjected for 1 or 2 hours to ischaemic conditions by transient immobilization (arrest of media circulation). During recovery, cell damage was evaluated by measuring changes in cell type-specific enzyme activities and total protein content. It was found that in immature cultures (DIV 11), immobilization for 1 or 2 hours did not affect the parameters measured. By contrast, at DIV 20, ischaemic conditions for 1 hour caused a pronounced decrease in the activities of glutamic acid decarboxylase and choline acetyltransferase. A significant decrease in these neuron-specific enzyme activities was found at post-ischaemic days 1-14, indicating immediate and irreversible neuronal damage. The activity of the astrocyte-specific enzyme, glutamine synthetase, was significantly increased at 4 days post-treatment; equal to control values at 6 days; and significantly decreased at 14 days after the ischaemic insult. Immobilization of DIV 20 cultures for 2 hours caused a drastic reduction in all the parameters measured at post-ischaemic day 6. Generally, the ischaemic conditions appeared to be more detrimental to neurons than to astrocytes, and GABAergic neurons were more affected than cholinergic neurons.

Identificador

https://serval.unil.ch/?id=serval:BIB_0530308D59DF

isbn:0887-2333 (Print)

pmid:20654513

doi:10.1016/S0887-2333(99)00033-8

isiid:000082144100006

Idioma(s)

en

Fonte

Toxicology in Vitro, vol. 13, no. 4-5, pp. 543-547

Palavras-Chave #aggregating brain cell cultures; ischaemia; neurotoxicity
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article

article