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Wiley, Journal of Neurochemistry, 2(86), p. 306-317, 2004

DOI: 10.1046/j.1471-4159.2003.01832.x

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Involvement of apoptosis‐inducing factor in neuronal death after hypoxia‐ischemia in the neonatal rat brain

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This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

Apoptosis-inducing factor (AIF) triggers apoptosis in a caspase-independent manner. Here we report for the first time involvement of AIF in neuronal death induced by cerebral ischemia. Unilateral cerebral hypoxia-ischemia (HI) was induced in 7-day-old rats by ligation of the left carotid artery and hypoxia (7.7% O2) for 55 min. AIF release from mitochondria and AIF translocation to nuclei was detected immediately after HI, and only in damaged areas, as judged by the concurrent loss of MAP-2. AIF release was detected earlier than that of cytochrome c. Cells with AIF-positive nuclei displayed nuclear condensation and signs of DNA damage. The number of AIF-positive nuclei showed a positive correlation with the infarct volume 72 h post-HI, and this was not changed by treating the animals with boc-Asp-fmk (BAF), a multicaspase inhibitor. BAF treatment reduced the activity of caspase-3, -2 and -9 (78, 73 and 33%, respectively), and prevented caspase-dependent fodrin cleavage in vivo, but did not affect AIF release from mitochondria or the frequency of positive nuclear AIF or DNA damage 72 h post-HI, indicating that these processes occurred in a caspase-independent fashion. In summary, AIF-mediated cell death may be an important mechanism of HI-induced neuronal loss in the immature brain.