Glu and Stroke Flashcards
Briefly describe ionotropic glutamate receptors
Receptor-ionophore complex; ligand gated non-selective cation channel
Briefly describe metabotropic glutamate receptors
G protein coupled receptor
iGlu-R families and homology
18-40% homology between families
AMPA: GluR1-4 (56-73%) [GluA1-4]
Kainate: GluR5-7 (75-80%) [GluK1-3]; KA1-2 (68%) [GluK4-5] } 45%
NMDA: NR1; NR2A-2D (38-53%) [GluN1-3]; NR3A-3B (50)%
mGlu-R families and homology
Group I (ACPD): mGlu1&5 (62%) Group II (ACPD): mGlu2&3 (68%) Group III (L-AP4): mGlu4,6,7&8 (69-74%) (mGlu6 retina only)
NMDA receptors
N-methyl-D-aspartate, is a specific agonist; D-2-amino-5-phosphponopentanoate (D-AP5) is a specific antagonist (competitive)
AMPA receptors:
alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-ethyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid, prefer AMPA to kainate; NB QX is a specific antagonist for non NMDA-Rs (competitive)
Kainate receptors
Like AMPA but kainate > AMPA
IGlu-R stoichiometry and signalling
GluA1-4(AMPA) & GluK1-3 (kainate): homomeric or heteromeric
GluK4/5 (kainate) heteromeric only, must be with GluK1-3; have dual mechanism of action (diagram)
GluN1-2: heteromeric only- dual agonism
Outline mGlu-R structure
Cys rich domain
7 transmembrane domains
Intracellular carboxy terminal
G-protein binding to intracellular loops 2 and 3
Functional receptors are homodimers linked by S-S bridge between VFT domains
First toxic effect of L-glu
(Lucas & Newhouse 1957)- systemic IV MSG in young mice P2-16 led to inner retina degeneration → complete cell loss in 2 weeks
MSG as flavouring raised concerns when…
Olney (1969) demonstrated brain damage in primates and mice following systemic subcutaneous IV administration
Olney-1971
described the neurotoxicity of a number of amino acids that caused necrotic cell death (L-Glu, L-Asp, NMDA); in 1980’s terminology updated to excitotoxicity as understanding of L-Glu and iGlu-Rs in excitatory neurotransmission increased
Glu has been previously used to treat epilepsy (TCA link)
Which disease has Glu been previously used to treat?
Glu has been previously used to treat epilepsy (TCA link)
Definition of excitotoxicity (Olney)
Over-activation iGlu-Rs triggering cell death via necrosis +/apoptosis (NB high L-Glu not toxic per se); possibly involves permissive or facilitatory role of L-Glu
How many types of excitotoxicity have been described in vitro?
3
Acute (1-3 hours)
Delayed (2-12 hours)
Slow (24-72 hours)
Acute Glu excitotoxicity
Induced by high levels of EC Glu applied up to 30 mins, mainly NMDA-R mediated
Non-NMDA-R not involved as non-NMDA-R desensitised (due to duration)
Not Ca2+ dependent
Depol- Na+ and Ca 2+ influx and passive Cl- influx
Osmotic concentration of cytosol increase
Oedema
Mitochondrial collapse and cell membrane lysis
Delayed Glu excitotoxicity (Ca2+ dependent)
Induced by high levels of EC Glu applied up to 5 mins, neurones recover from acute swelling
All iGlu-Rs involved
Ca2+ dependent, with prolonged rise in IC Ca2+ from influx through NMDA and some CA2+ permeable AMPA/KA-Rs
Probably self propagating (1st wave of cell death initiates further Glu release
Similarities with progressive neurodegeneration seen in disease states in vivo
Slow excitotoxicity
Induce by prolonged exposure to AMPA or KA agonists for 24-72 hours, non NMDA-R mediated
Probably Ca2+ dependent with a prolonged rise in IC Ca2+ from influx through AMPA/KA-Rs or VGCCs
Clinical causes of excitotoxicity
Epilepsy
Ischaemia
Hypoxia
Neurodegeneration
Types of stroke
Ischaemic- 85%, blockage of blood vessel from thrombotic or embolic small artery occlusion
Haemorrhagic- 15%, rupture of blood vessels from intracerebral (hypertensive) haemorrhage or subarachnoid haemorrhage (ruptured aneurysm)
Impact of ischaemia
Hypoxia: reduced blood supply, reduced O2, decreased ATP:ADP; Na+/Ka+ ATPase less effective thus Na+i increase and K+o increase; ion gradients reduced so ErevS tends to 0
Depolarisation of presynaptic terminals increases vesicular Glu release; Glu transporter mechanisms reversed
MK-801 in animal models of ischemia (middle cerebral artery occlusion)
Very effective BUT Narrow therapeutic window Low therapeutic index Schizophrenic like psychosis, memory impairment and neurotoxic syndrome
NBQX is a poor clinical agent because
it has poor water solubility
Zonampanel
Reduces MCAO infarct volume in rats by 50-60% if given up 3 hours after ischaemic episode, abandoned at phase II trials