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Excitotoxic neuronal death in the immature brain is an apoptosis-necrosis morphological continuum

Authors :
Lee J. Martin
Carlos Portera-Cailliau
Donald L. Price
Source :
The Journal of Comparative Neurology. 378:10-87
Publication Year :
1997
Publisher :
Wiley, 1997.

Abstract

Glutamate-induced excitotoxicity is a clinically relevant degenerative process that causes selective neuronal death by mechanisms that remain unclear. Cell death is usually classified as apoptotic or necrotic based on biochemical and morphological criteria. Excitotoxic lesions in the adult rat striatum result in neuronal death associated with apoptotic DNA laddering despite a necrotic appearance of neurons ultrastructurally. This suggests that apoptosis and necrosis may not be mutually exclusive modes of cell death. Here, we characterized normal developmental cell death in the newborn rat brain with respect to DNA fragmentation patterns and ultrastructural morphology to establish a standard for apoptosis in the nervous system, and we concluded that it is essentially indistinguishable from apoptosis described in other tissues. We then investigated whether brain maturity could influence the morphology of neuronal death in vivo in the excitotoxically lesioned newborn rat forebrain. Kainic acid induced DNA laddering and death of neurons exhibiting a variety of morphologies, ranging from necrosis to apoptosis. In neurons that were dying by apoptosis, morphologic changes were characterized by a highly ordered sequence of organelle abnormalities, with swelling of endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi vesiculation preceding most nuclear changes and mitochondrial disruption. We concluded that brain maturity influences the morphologic phenotype of neurodegeneration and that excitotoxic neuronal death in the immature brain is not a uniform event but, rather, a continuum of apoptotic, necrotic, and overlapping morphologies. This excitotoxic paradigm might prove useful for analyzing the mechanisms that govern cell death under physiological and pathological conditions.

Details

ISSN :
10969861 and 00219967
Volume :
378
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of Comparative Neurology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........8605f4ce59351f2e9fd13acf31833c77
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/(sici)1096-9861(19970203)378:1<10::aid-cne4>3.0.co;2-n