Literature DB >> 15921884

Bilateral, vascular and perivascular glial upregulation of heat shock protein-27 after repeated epileptic seizures.

Hans-J Bidmon1, Boris Görg, Nicola Palomero-Gallagher, Freimut Schliess, Ali Gorji, Erwin-J Speckmann, Karl Zilles.   

Abstract

Heat shock protein-27 (HSP-27) is an inducible stress response protein. It inhibits apoptotic cell death and is a reliable marker for oxidative stress. We studied the induction of HSP-27 in rat brains on days 1, 4 and 14 after repeated, pentylenetetrazole (PTZ)-induced seizures using immunohistochemisty. Saline treated control rats showed no induction of HSP-27. HSP-27 reactive astrocytes were rarely seen 1 or 4 days after PTZ injection. When present, single astrocytes were located in the cortex and/or the hippocampus. After 14 days PTZ treatment, a bilateral distribution of HSP-27 immunoreactive glia was present in piriform and entorhinal cortices and in the dentate gyrus of most brains. Rats with most intense HSP-27 upregulation showed HSP-27 in amygdala and thalamic nuclei. Astrocytes associated with blood vessels presented strongest HSP-27 staining, but did not show upregulation of gial fibrillary acidic protein and none responded with HSP-47 expression. Additionally, HSP-27 immunoreactivity increased in the endothelial cells of blood vessels in the affected brain regions, although no neuronal induction occurred. Contrastingly, a subconvulsive dose of the glutamine synthetase inhibitor L-methionine sulfoxime, which acts directly on astrocytes, resulted in a rapid, homogeneous astrocyte-specific HSP-27 upregulation within 24 h. Thus, repeated PTZ-induced seizure activity elicits a focal "heat shock" response in endothelial cells and astrocytes of selected cerebral regions indicating that expression of HSP-27 occurred in a seizure-dependent manner within the affected cerebral circuitries. Therefore, this PTZ-model of repeated seizure activity exhibited a cortical pattern of HSP-27 expression which is most comparable to that known from patients with epilepsy.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15921884     DOI: 10.1016/j.jchemneu.2005.03.009

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Chem Neuroanat        ISSN: 0891-0618            Impact factor:   3.052


  1 in total

1.  Identification of QTLs involved in the development of amygdala kindling in the rat.

Authors:  Ryoko Hashimoto; Birger Voigt; Yuji Ishimaru; Ryoji Hokao; Shigeru Chiba; Tadao Serikawa; Masashi Sasa; Takashi Kuramoto
Journal:  Exp Anim       Date:  2013
  1 in total

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