Abstract:The GLT-1 and GLAST astroglial transporters are the glutamate transporters mainly involved in maintaining physiological extracellular glutamate concentrations. Defects in neurotransmitter glutamate transport may represent an important component of glutamateinduced neurodegenerative disorders (such as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis) and CNS insults (ischemia and epilepsy). We characterized the protein expression of GLT-1 and GLAST in primary astrocyte-neuron cocultures derived from rat hippocampal tissues during neuron differentiation/maturation. GLT-1 and GLAST are expressed by morphologically distinct glial fibrillary acidic proteinpositive astrocytes, and their expression correlates with the status of neuron differentiation/maturation and activity. Up-regulation of the transporters paralleled the content of the synaptophysin synaptic vesicle marker p38, and down-regulation was a consequence of glutamateinduced neuronal death or the reduction of synaptic activity. Finally, soluble factors in neuronal-conditioned media prevented the down-regulation of the GLT-1 and GLAST proteins. Although other mechanisms may participate in regulating GLT-1 and GLAST in the CNS, our data indicate that soluble factors dependent on neuronal activity play a major regulating role in hippocampal cocultures.
Interleukin-10 (IL-10) is a powerful suppressor of cellular immune responses, with a postulated role in brain inflammation. First, we have evaluated the role of this cytokine in ischaemic brain damage using IL-10 knockout (IL-10-/-) mice. The middle cerebral artery (MCA) was occluded in either IL-10-/- or wild-type animals of corresponding strain (C57Bl/6) and age. Infarct volume was assessed 24 h later in serial brain sections. Brain infarct produced by MCA occlusion was 30% larger in the IL-10-/- than in wild-type mice (21. 8 +/- 1.2 vs. 16.9 +/- 1.0 mm3, respectively; P < 0.01; Student's t-test). To further characterize these findings, studies were extended to in vitro models. Primary neuronal cortical cultures derived from IL-10-/- animals were more susceptible to both excitotoxicity and combined oxygen-glucose deprivation compared with cell cultures from wild-type mice. Moreover, when added to the culture medium, recombinant murine IL-10 (0.1-100 ng/mL) exerted a concentration-dependent prevention of neuronal damage induced by excitotoxicity in both cortical and cerebellar granule cell cultures taken from either strain. The accordance of in vivo and in vitro data allows us to suggest a potential neuroprotective role of IL-10 against cerebral ischaemia when administered exogenously or made available from endogenous sources.
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