Abstrakt: |
A variety of neurodegenerative disease states have been associated with oxidative damage or stress. Such stress is thought to be mediated by excessive exposure of cells to reactive oxygen species such as free radicals, which can be generated following cell lysis, oxidative burst (as part of the immune response) or by the presence of an excess of free transition metals. Since the neuronal death observed in neurodegenerative disease may be related to free radical damage, we were interested in developing a model system to investigate the mechanisms by which reactive oxygen species may damage or kill neurons. To this end, we have recently reported that brief exposure of cultured cortical neurons to H2O2 can induce neuronal death that proceeds via an apoptotic cell suicide pathway. The studies reported here investigate H2O2-induced cell death in more detail. Our data suggest that exposure of cultured cortical neurons to H2O2 can induce apoptotic cell death within 3 h, as assessed by cell viability, morphological and ultrastructural measures. In addition, experiments presented show that exposure to high concentrations of H2O2 (100 μM) causes increases in intracellular free calcium within 3 h, suggesting that increased intracellular calcium may be associated with some aspects of H2O2-induced cell death. However, at intermediate concentrations of H2O2 (30 μM), intracellular calcium remained stable during a 3 h exposure, during which time membrane blebbing was observed in ultrastructural studies. |