Literature DB >> 21129231

Threshold to N-methyl-D-aspartate-induced seizures in mice undergoing chronic nutritional magnesium deprivation is lowered in a way partly responsive to acute magnesium and antioxidant administrations.

Pierre Maurois1, Nicole Pages, Pierre Bac, Michèle German-Fattal, Geneviève Agnani, Bernadette Delplanque, Jean Durlach, Jacques Poupaert, Joseph Vamecq.   

Abstract

Magnesium deficiency may be induced by a diet impoverished in magnesium. This nutritional deficit promotes chronic inflammatory and oxidative stresses, hyperexcitability and, in mice, susceptibility to audiogenic seizures. Potentiation by low-magnesium concentrations of the opening of N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor/calcium channel in in vitro and ex vivo studies, and responsiveness to magnesium of in vivo brain injury states are now well established. By contrast, little or no specific attention has been, however, paid to the in vivo NMDA receptor function/excitability in magnesium deficiency. The present work reports for the first time that, in mice undergoing chronic nutritional deprivation in magnesium (35 v. 930 parts per million for 27 d in OF1 mice), NMDA-induced seizure threshold is significantly decreased (38 % of normal values). The attenuation in the drop of NMDA seizure threshold (percentage of reversal) was 58 and 20 % upon acute intraperitoneal administrations of magnesium chloride hexahydrate (28 mg magnesium/kg) and the antioxidant ebselen (20 mg/kg), respectively. In nutritionally magnesium-deprived animals, audiogenic seizures are completely prevented by these compound doses. Taken as a whole, our data emphasise that chronic magnesium deprivation in mice is a nutritional in vivo model for a lowered NMDA receptor activation threshold. This nutritional model responds remarkably to acute magnesium supply and moderately to acute antioxidant administration.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 21129231     DOI: 10.1017/S0007114508006752

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Br J Nutr        ISSN: 0007-1145            Impact factor:   3.718


  2 in total

1.  Brain protection by rapeseed oil in magnesium-deficient mice.

Authors:  Nicole Pages; Pierre Maurois; Bernadette Delplanque; Pierre Bac; Jean-Charles Martin; Qin Du; Stanley I Rapoport; Joseph Vamecq
Journal:  Prostaglandins Leukot Essent Fatty Acids       Date:  2011-06-12       Impact factor: 4.006

Review 2.  The biochemical and cellular basis for nutraceutical strategies to attenuate neurodegeneration in Parkinson's disease.

Authors:  Elizabeth A Mazzio; Fran Close; Karam F A Soliman
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2011-01-17       Impact factor: 5.923

  2 in total

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