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Oxidative stress triggers neuronal caspase-independent death: Endonuclease G involvement in programmed cell death-type III.

Authors :
Higgins, Gavin C.
Beart, Philip M.
Nagley, Phillip
Source :
Cellular & Molecular Life Sciences; Aug2009, Vol. 66 Issue 16, p2773-2787, 15p, 1 Diagram, 7 Graphs
Publication Year :
2009

Abstract

To characterize neuronal death, primary cortical neurons (C57/Black 6 J mice) were exposed to hydrogen peroxide (H<subscript>2</subscript>O<subscript>2</subscript>) and staurosporine. Both caused cell shrinkage, nuclear condensation, DNA fragmentation and loss of plasma membrane integrity. Neither treatment induced caspase-7 activity, but caspase-3 was activated by staurosporine but not H<subscript>2</subscript>O<subscript>2</subscript>. Each treatment caused redistribution from mitochondria of both endonuclease G (Endo G) and cytochrome c. Neurons knocked down for Endo G expression using siRNA showed reduction in both nuclear condensation and DNA fragmentation after treatment with H<subscript>2</subscript>O<subscript>2</subscript>, but not staurosporine. Endo G suppression protected cells against H<subscript>2</subscript>O<subscript>2</subscript>-induced cell death, while staurosporine-induced death was merely delayed. We conclude that staurosporine induces apoptosis in these neurons, but severe oxidative stress leads to Endo G-dependent death, in the absence of caspase activation (programmed cell death-type III). Therefore, oxidative stress triggers in neurons a form of necrosis that is a systematic cellular response subject to molecular regulation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1420682X
Volume :
66
Issue :
16
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Cellular & Molecular Life Sciences
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
43351338
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00018-009-0079-2