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Wiley, British Journal of Pharmacology, 5(135), p. 1297-1307, 2002

DOI: 10.1038/sj.bjp.0704581

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Kainic acid-induced neuronal cell death in cerebellar granule cells is not prevented by caspase inhibitors

This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

We examined the role of non-NMDA receptors in kainic acid (KA)-induced apoptosis in cultures of rat cerebellar granule cells (CGCs). KA (1 – 500 μM) induced cell death in a concentration-dependent manner, which was prevented by NBQX and GYKI 52466, non-NMDA receptor antagonists. Moreover, AMPA blocked KA-induced excitotoxicity, through desensitization of AMPA receptors.Similarly, KA raised the intracellular calcium concentration of CGCs, which was inhibited by NBQX and GYKI 52466. Again, AMPA (100 μM) abolished the KA (100 μM)-induced increase in intracellular calcium concentration.KA-induced cell death in CGCs had apoptotic features, which were determined morphologically, by DNA fragmentation, and by expression of the prostate apoptosis response-4 protein (Par-4).KA (500 μM) slightly (18%) increased caspase-3 activity, which was strongly enhanced by colchicine (1 μM), an apoptotic stimulus. However, neither Z-VAD.fmk, a pan-caspase inhibitor, nor the more specific caspase-3 inhibitor, Ac-DEVD-CHO, prevented KA-induced cell death or apoptosis. In contrast, both drugs inhibited colchicine-induced apoptosis.The calpain inhibitor ALLN had no effect on KA or colchicine-induced neurotoxicity.Our findings indicate that colchicine-induced apoptosis in CGCs is mediated by caspase-3 activation, unlike KA-induced apoptosis.