| Literature DB >> 21810263 |
Orla Watters1, John J O'Connor.
Abstract
During cerebral ischemia, elevation of TNF-α and glutamate to pathophysiological levels may induce dysregulation of normal synaptic processes, leading ultimately to cell death. Previous studies have shown that patients subjected to a mild transient ischemic attack within a critical time window prior to a more severe ischemic episode may show attenuation in the clinical severity of the stroke and result in a more positive functional outcome. Studies with organotypic hippocampal cultures and mixed primary hippocampal cultures have shown that prior incubation with low concentrations of glutamate and TNF-α increase the resistance of neurones to a subsequent insult from glutamate, AMPA and NMDA, while co-exposure of TNF-α and for example AMPA may have neuroprotective effects compared to cultures exposed to excitotoxic agents alone. In addition our work has shown that although glutamate and TNF-α pretreatment induces analogous levels of desensitisation of the intracellular calcium dynamics of neurons under resting conditions and in response to acute glutamate stimulation, their downstream signalling pathways involved in this response do not converge. Glutamate and TNF-α would appear to have opposing effects on resting Ca2+ levels which supports the proposal that they have distinct modes of preconditioning.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21810263 PMCID: PMC3161872 DOI: 10.1186/1742-2094-8-87
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neuroinflammation ISSN: 1742-2094 Impact factor: 8.322
Figure 1Summary of TNFR signalling. TNF-α has two receptors TNFR1 (R1) and TNFR2 (R2) which are co-expressed on both neuronal and glial membranes. Activation of TNFR1 predominantly results in the initiation of caspases involved in apoptosis. For this reason, this receptor is known as the 'death receptor'. However, association of the death domain of this receptor with TRAF-2 can lead to the activation of NFkB gene transcription and upregulation of neuroprotective mediators such as the calcium chelator, calbindin, and the superoxide scavenger, manganese superoxide dismutase (MnSOD). This pathway is also shared with TNFR2 downstream signalling.
Figure 2Summary of the detrimental effects of TNF-α on both neuronal and glial cells during cerebral ischemia. TNF-α synthesis and release for both neuronal and glial cells may be induced via stimulation of mGlu2R by glutamate. TNF-α may then act in an autocrine and/or paracrine fashion, modulating neuronal and glial signalling. Direct stimulation of the TNFR1-caspase 3 pathway results in inactivation of glial EAAT2s, while activation of the NFkB pathway reduces the synthesis and expression of this glutamate transporter. Upregulation of glutaminase in response to microglial TNFR activation also enhances glutamate synthesis and release, elevating levels of this neurotransmitter in the synapse. TNFR1 signalling may also enhance AMPAR trafficking into the postsynaptic membrane, enhancing the sensitivity of the cells to glutamate. Together, these effects result in the exacerbation of glutamate excitotoxicity during cerebral ischemia.