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Research article summary (published 13 Aug 2009):

Conduction block and glial injury induced in developing central white matter by glycine, GABA, noradrenalin, or nicotine, studied in isolated neonatal rat optic nerve.

Full Abstract

The damaging effects of excessive glutamate receptor activation have been highlighted recently during injury in developing central white matter. We have examined the effects of acute exposure to four other neurotransmitters that have known actions on white matter. Eighty minutes of Glycine or GABA-A receptor activation produced a significant fall in the compound action potential recorded from isolated post-natal day 10 rat optic nerve. This effect was largely reversed upon washout. Nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) or adrenoreceptor activation with noradrenalin resulted in an approximately 35% block of the action potential that did not reverse during a 30-min washout period. While the effect of nAChR activation was blocked by a nAChR antagonist, the effect of noradrenalin was not ablated by alpha- or beta-adrenoreceptor blockers applied alone or in combination. In the absence of noradrenalin, co-perfusion with alpha- and beta-adrenoreceptor blockers resulted in nonreversible nerve failure indicating that tonic adrenoreceptor activation is required for nerve viability, while overactivation of these receptors is also damaging. Nerves exposed to nAChR + adrenoreceptor activation showed no axon pathology but had extensive glial injury revealed by ultrastructural analysis. Oligodendroglia exhibited regions of membrane vacuolization while profound changes were evident in astrocytes and included the presence of swollen and expanded mitochondria, vacuolization, cell processes disintegration, and membrane breakdown. Blinded assessment revealed higher levels of astrocyte injury than oligodendroglial injury. The findings show that overactivation of neurotransmitter receptors other than those for glutamate can produce extensive injury to developing white matter, a phenomenon that may be clinically significant.

 

Author information

Author/s: Constantinou, Stavros (S); Fern, Robert (R);

Affiliation: Department of Cell Physiology and Pharmacology, University of Leicester, Leicester, United Kingdom.

Journal and publication information

Publication Type: Journal Article

Journal: Glia (Glia), published in United States. (Language: eng)

Reference: 2009-Aug; vol 57 (issue 11) : pp 1168-77

Dates: Created 2009/07/07; Completed 2009/09/14;

PMID: 19170183, status: MEDLINE (last retrieval date: 9/14/2009, IMS Date: )

Sourced from the National Library of Medicine. Abstract text and other information may be subject to copyright.

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MeSH headings (categories)

This article was linked to the MESH Headings shown below.

Associated Chemicals: Norepinephrine (51-41-2) ; Nicotine (54-11-5) ; gamma-Aminobutyric Acid (56-12-2) ; Glycine (56-40-6)

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