| Literature DB >> 35194729 |
R David Andrew1, Eszter Farkas2, Jed A Hartings3, K C Brennan4, Oscar Herreras5, Michael Müller6, Sergei A Kirov7, Cenk Ayata8, Nikita Ollen-Bittle9, Clemens Reiffurth10,11, Omer Revah12, R Meldrum Robertson13, Ken D Dawson-Scully14, Ghanim Ullah15, Jens P Dreier10,11,16,17,18,19,20,21.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Within 2 min of severe ischemia, spreading depolarization (SD) propagates like a wave through compromised gray matter of the higher brain. More SDs arise over hours in adjacent tissue, expanding the neuronal damage. This period represents a therapeutic window to inhibit SD and so reduce impending tissue injury. Yet most neuroscientists assume that the course of early brain injury can be explained by glutamate excitotoxicity, the concept that immediate glutamate release promotes early and downstream brain injury. There are many problems with glutamate release being the unseen culprit, the most practical being that the concept has yielded zero therapeutics over the past 30 years. But the basic science is also flawed, arising from dubious foundational observations beginning in the 1950sEntities:
Keywords: Alzheimer disease; Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis; Brain swelling; Concussion; Dendritic beading; Huntington disease; Ischemia; Ketamine; Migraine; Modeling; Na+/K+ pump; Penumbra; Persistent vegetative state; Stroke; Sudden cardiac arrest; Traumatic brain injury
Mesh:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35194729 PMCID: PMC9259542 DOI: 10.1007/s12028-021-01429-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurocrit Care ISSN: 1541-6933 Impact factor: 3.532
Fig. 1In brain slices, SD is well underway before the extracellular glutamate concentration climbs significantly. A The intrinsic optical signal (IOS) change (top trace) was temporally correlated with the DC negative shift (bottom trace). Both signals denote SD onset (shaded region). The glutamate efflux transient is shown in the middle trace. The horizontal bar indicates [K+]o elevation to 40 mM for 80 s, thereby inducing SD. From Dr. N. Zhou’s doctoral thesis [161]. B More recent recordings using a finer glutamate biosensor also implicated SD as preceding glutamate release. C During SD, glutamate release took ~ 35 s to peak. In mice where the glutamate transporter GLT-1 is knocked out, glutamate uptake is slowed. B and C from [83]; B is digitally stretched horizontally from the original. In such multi-recording studies, it is important that sensors are closely placed to precisely determine signal onset times, as further demonstrated in Fig. 2
Fig. 2Dynamics of extracellular glutamate and K+ during SD in vivo. The SD was evoked at a distance by applying a droplet of 1 mM KCl to the surface of the mouse brain. A iGluSnFR, a fluorescent probe, monitors the extracellular glutamate level. B Speed of the extracellular glutamate wave. C Average fluorescence traces with 95% confidence interval, amplitude, and duration of the glutamate transient. D Glutamate trace (blue) aligned to the DC potential below. E Latency between negative DC deflection and glutamate increase. F Relationship between [K+]o, DC potential, and neuronal [Ca2+]i. The latency between 0.25 mM [K+]o rise (arrow over K+ trace) and increase in fluorescence (red vertical line) is indicated to the right. Dashed line indicates start of the negative DC potential shift. G As in F but with [Ca2+]i in astrocytes instead of neurons. H As in F but with [glutamate]e instead of neuronal [Ca2+]i. Images in F–H show positions of electrodes (stippled lines) and sampled regions (white circles). Sampled regions were picked along the front edge of the SD wave as it hit the K+-sensitive microelectrode. Scale bars: 50 μm; error bars, SEM. From [85]
Studies using live brain slices to test one or more drugs that might block SD under the energy compromise imparted by hypoxia or OGD
| Study | Stimulus | Glutamate receptor blockers | Na+ channel blockers | GABAA receptor blockers | Ca2+ channel blockers | Other channels blocked | Recording mode | SD blocked? (in some slices) | SD imaged? |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Radek and Giardina [ | Hypoxia | 100 µM AP-5 | Yes | No | |||||
| Tanaka et al. [ | OGD | 50–250 µM AP-5 or 10–20 µM CNQX | 20 µM bicuculline | Intracellular | No | No | |||
| Yamamoto et al. [ | OGD | 50–250 µM AP-5 or 10–20 µM CNQX | Procaine (0.3–1 mM) or TTX (0.3 μM) | 2 mM Co2+ 2 mM Ni2+ or 10 μM nifedipine | K+: (20 mM TEA) | Intracellular | No | No | |
| Müller and Somjen [ | Hypoxia | 10 µM CPP or 10 µM DNQX | 1 µM TTX | 2 mM Ni2+ | Field recording or imaging | Partly | Yes | ||
| Müller and Somjen [ | Hypoxia | 10 µM CPP or 10 µM DNQX | 1 µM TTX | Field recording or intracellular | No in 50% of neurons | No | |||
| Rossi et al. [ | Chemical ischemia + OGD | 50 µM D-AP5, 50 µM MK-801, 25 µM NBQX, 100 µM 7-chlorokynurenate | 100 µM bicuculline | Intracellular | No, but yes in a few slices when glutamate transport also inhibited | No | |||
Jarvis et al. [ Joshi and Andrew [ | OGD | 50 μM AP-5 + 10 μM CNQX or 2 mM kynurenate | Field recording or intracellular | Delayed | Yes | ||||
| Anderson et al. [ | OGD | Sigma receptor-activated | Imaging | Yes | Yes | ||||
| Madry et al. [ | Chemical ischemia + OGD | 50 µM D-AP5, 50 µM MK-801, 25 µM NBQX, 100 µM 7-chlorokynurenate | 100 µM bicuculline | Pannexin block had no effect | Intracellular | Yes, but residual current | No | ||
| Douglas et al. [ | OGD | 1–10 µM dibucaine or other caines | Imaging | Yes | Yes | ||||
| Revah et al. [ | Hypoxia | 50 μM APV, 50 μM MK-801, 50 μM DNQX, 25 µM NBQX | 25 μM bicuculline | Pannexin block had no effect | Intracellular | Yes | No | ||
| Gagolewicz et al. [ | OGD | 1 mM kynurenic acid | 1 μM TTX | 100 μM picrotoxin | 10 μM nifedipine | K+: (10 mM TEA); pannexin block had no effect | Intracellular | No | Yes |
| Gagolewicz et al. [ | OGD | Block of ASIC, P27X, and TRPM7 channels + glutamate transport inhibition had no effect | Intracellular | No | Yes |
GluR antagonists, applied either separately or as a cocktail, do not block SD in the majority of studies of OGD. Being less metabolically demanding, hypoxic SD is more easily inhibited. Where SD is reported as blocked, a caveat is that SD may have occurred outside the recorded cell’s area, unless confirmed with imaging. Invariably, none of these studies block SD in all slices tested
N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) receptor antagonists inhibit NMDA receptors: AP5 or APV DL-2-amino-5-phosphono-valerate, CPP (±)-3-(2-carboxypiperazin-4-yl)-propyl-1-phosphonic acid, ketamine 2-(2-chlorophenyl)-2-(methylamino)cyclohexan-1-one, MK-801 (5R,10S)-(+)-5-methyl-10,11-dihydro-5H-dibenzo[a,d]cyclohepten-5,10-imine
Non-NMDA receptor antagonists inhibit AMPA/kainate receptors: CNQX 6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline2,3-dione, DNQX 6,7-dinitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione, NBQX 2,3-dioxo-6-nitro-1,2,3,4-tetrahydrobenzo[f]quinoxaline-7-sulfonamide. TEA tetraethylammonium, TTX tetrodotoxin. For additional treatments that do not block OGD–SD, see [63, 64]
Kynurenate 3-Anthraniloyl-l-alanine, broadly inhibits glutamate receptors
1Some sigma receptor ligands dramatically inhibit SD onset [37], but the function of sigma receptors remains unclear
2Two studies, [57, 58], showed neuronal protection from SD initiation and injury by 1–10 mM dibucaine, the most potent Na+ channel blocker of the caine group
3OGD-induced intracellular Ca2+ increases are mediated by Ca2+ influx through NMDARs, VGCCs and TRPC channels as well as by Ca2+ release from RyRs and IP3Rs. This impairs mitochondria, facilitating SD generation [63]
Fig. 3Unlike O2/glucose deprivation (OGD), bath superfusion of glutamate at pathophysiological concentrations onto a brain slice does not induce SD. A Imaging change in light transmittance (ΔLT) reveals OGD-induced SD and propagation (arrows) along neocortical gray matter (NC) and through striatum (S) with damage arising in the wake of SD (magenta). w = slice weight. B A cocktail of blockers (Mix-1, constituents listed in Fig. D) delays OGD-induced SD onset but not propagation (arrows). By 16.8 min, light scattering in NC caused by dendritic beading indicates acute neuronal damage. C Bath superfusion of glutamate causes slight signal creep from the overlying weight, but no SD. D Superfusion of Mix-1 significantly (p = 0.002) delayed OGD-induced SD onset by 46 ± 11.8%. Adding MK-801 slightly but significantly (p < 0.0001) further delayed SD onset by 52 ± 9.9%. E Percent of slices generating signal creep but no SD in three experimental groups of glutamate application to naïve slices. No SD was observed in slices superfused in aCSF alone (n = 6) or in aCSF + 1 mM glutamate (n = 6)