Literature DB >> 2314949

Hypoxic injury to developing glial cells: protective effect of high glucose.

D J Callahan1, M J Engle, J J Volpe.   

Abstract

Hypoxic injury to differentiating glial cells is a critical event in the development of periventricular leukomalacia, the major hypoxic-ischemic lesion of the premature infant. This study has addressed the effects of hypoxia on differentiating glial cells, primarily astrocytes. Primary cultures of dissociated newborn rat brain, which are composed predominantly of differentiating astroglia, were used. Efflux of lactate dehydrogenase, an enzyme enriched in astroglia, was used to quantitate cellular injury. Three major findings are reported. First, differentiating astrocytes were resistant to hypoxic injury for many hours, although by 24 h of hypoxia severe cellular injury (lactate dehydrogenase efflux of 86% of total and morphologic changes) was obvious. Second, increase of glucose in the culture medium from the approximately physiological concentration of 5.6 to 15 mM had a marked protective effect versus hypoxia, i.e. lactate dehydrogenase efflux was totally prevented during 24 h of hypoxia in 15 mM glucose. Third, the protective effect of high glucose appeared to be related to increased utilization by glycolysis, because there was a direct correlation between the resistance to hypoxic cellular injury and the amount of lactate generated and of glucose consumed by the cells. Thus, the cells with the lowest lactate dehydrogenase efflux (and highest glucose supplementations) had medium lactate concentrations as high as 32-36 mM. These concentrations of lactate are approximately double the reported threshold concentration of lactate considered to produce cellular necrosis in in vivo models of hypoxic injury, primarily in mature animals. The data raise the possibility that hypoxic injury to differentiating glia can be prevented or ameliorated by increase in glucose availability.

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Year:  1990        PMID: 2314949     DOI: 10.1203/00006450-199002000-00020

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pediatr Res        ISSN: 0031-3998            Impact factor:   3.756


  9 in total

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Review 2.  Hypoxia-induced changes in neuronal network properties.

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Journal:  Nat Rev Neurosci       Date:  2021-07-21       Impact factor: 34.870

4.  Hyperglycaemia after Stage I palliation does not adversely affect neurodevelopmental outcome at 1 year of age in patients with single-ventricle physiology.

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6.  Hypoxia inducible factor-1alpha inactivation unveils a link between tumor cell metabolism and hypoxia-induced cell death.

Authors:  Elena Favaro; Giorgia Nardo; Luca Persano; Massimo Masiero; Lidia Moserle; Rita Zamarchi; Elisabetta Rossi; Giovanni Esposito; Mario Plebani; Ulrike Sattler; Thomas Mann; Wolfgang Mueller-Klieser; Vincenzo Ciminale; Alberto Amadori; Stefano Indraccolo
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7.  Outcome-related metabolomic patterns from 1H/31P NMR after mild hypothermia treatments of oxygen-glucose deprivation in a neonatal brain slice model of asphyxia.

Authors:  Jia Liu; Lawrence Litt; Mark R Segal; Mark J S Kelly; Hikari A I Yoshihara; Thomas L James
Journal:  J Cereb Blood Flow Metab       Date:  2010-08-18       Impact factor: 6.200

8.  Hemodynamic and metabolic correlates of perinatal white matter injury severity.

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Review 9.  Rethinking the necessity of low glucose intervention for cerebral ischemia/reperfusion injury.

Authors:  Jiahua Xie; Farooqahmed S Kittur; P Andy Li; Chiu-Yueh Hung
Journal:  Neural Regen Res       Date:  2022-07       Impact factor: 5.135

  9 in total

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