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Elsevier, Neurochemistry International, 7(47), p. 482-490

DOI: 10.1016/j.neuint.2005.06.003

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Effects of chemical ischemia in cerebral cortex slices

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This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

Superfused rat cerebral cortex slices were submitted to a continuous electrical (5 Hz) stimulation and treated with sodium azide (1-10 mM) in the presence of 2 mM 2-deoxyglucose ("chemical ischemia"). Presynaptic cholinergic activity, evaluated as acetylcholine release, was inhibited depending on the sodium azide concentrations and on the length of application (5-30 min). Following a 5-min treatment with 10 mM sodium azide, acetylcholine release was reduced to 45+/-2.3%; simultaneously, there was a 15- and 10-fold increase in glutamate and nitric oxide effluxes, respectively. After restoring normal superfusion conditions, acetylcholine release recovered to 70+/-3.1% of the controls; the N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor antagonist MK-801 (10 microM) as well as the nitric oxide scavengers, haemoglobin (20 microM) and 2-(4-carboxyphenyl)-4,4,5,5-tetramethylimidazoline-l-oxyl-3-oxide (150 microM), improved the recovery in presynaptic activity, showing that both glutamate and nitric oxide play detrimental roles in chemical ischemia. On the other hand, the post-ischemic recovery was worsened by the guanylylcyclase inhibitor 1H-[l,2,4]oxadiazolo[4,3,-a]quinoxalin-1-one (10 microM), suggesting that the activation of such a pathway plays a neuroprotective role and that the nitric oxide-induced harmful effects depend on different mechanisms. Chemical ischemia-evoked nitric oxide efflux partly derived from its calcium-dependent endogenous synthesis, since both the intracellular calcium chelator, 1,2-bis(2-aminophenoxy)ethane-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid (1 mM), and the nitric oxide synthase inhibitor, N(omega)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (100 microM), substantially prevented sodium azide effects. Nitric oxide efflux was only weakly reduced by MK-801 and was not modified by either the L-type calcium channel blocker, nifedipine (10 microM) or the N-type calcium channel blocker omega-conotoxin (0.5 microM), thus suggesting a prevailing intracellular calcium-dependence of nitric oxide production, although a partial extracellular calcium source cannot be ruled out. These findings show that sodium azide plus 2-deoxyglucose treatment is a useful protocol to induce brain ischemia in vitro and underline the involvement of nitric oxide in the complex events following the ischemic insult.