Involvement of autophagy in hypoxic-excitotoxic neuronal death.

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Version: Author's accepted manuscript
Serval ID
serval:BIB_9D791CF3B1D8
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Involvement of autophagy in hypoxic-excitotoxic neuronal death.
Journal
Autophagy
Author(s)
Ginet V., Spiehlmann A., Rummel C., Rudinskiy N., Grishchuk Y., Luthi-Carter R., Clarke P.G., Truttmann A.C., Puyal J.
ISSN
1554-8635 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
1554-8627
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2014
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
10
Number
5
Pages
846-860
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal ArticlePublication Status: ppublish
Abstract
Neuronal autophagy is increased in numerous excitotoxic conditions including neonatal cerebral hypoxia-ischemia (HI). However, the role of this HI-induced autophagy remains unclear. To clarify this role we established an in vitro model of excitotoxicity combining kainate treatment (Ka, 30 µM) with hypoxia (Hx, 6% oxygen) in primary neuron cultures. KaHx rapidly induced excitotoxic death that was completely prevented by MK801 or EGTA. KaHx also stimulated neuronal autophagic flux as shown by a rise in autophagosome number (increased levels of LC3-II and punctate LC3 labeling) accompanied by increases in lysosomal abundance and activity (increased SQSTM1/p62 degradation, and increased LC3-II levels in the presence of lysosomal inhibitors) and fusion (shown using an RFP-GFP-LC3 reporter). To determine the role of the enhanced autophagy we applied either pharmacological autophagy inhibitors (3-methyladenine or pepstatinA/E64) or lentiviral vectors delivering shRNAs targeting Becn1 or Atg7. Both strategies reduced KaHx-induced neuronal death. A prodeath role of autophagy was also confirmed by the enhanced toxicity of KaHx in cultures overexpressing BECN1 or ATG7. Finally, in vivo inhibition of autophagy by intrastriatal injection of a lentiviral vector expressing a Becn1-targeting shRNA increased the volume of intact striatum in a rat model of severe neonatal cerebral HI. These results clearly show a death-mediating role of autophagy in hypoxic-excitotoxic conditions and suggest that inhibition of autophagy should be considered as a neuroprotective strategy in HI brain injuries.
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
08/04/2014 10:39
Last modification date
20/08/2019 16:03
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