Dna fragmentation factor 45 mutant mice exhibit resistance to kainic acid-induced neuronal cell death.

Biochem Biophys Res Commun

Department of Cell Biology, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Cincinnati, Ohio 45267-0521, USA.

Published: August 2001

Excitotoxicity is a process where glutamate or other excitatory amino acids induce neuronal cell death. Emerging evidence suggests that apoptosis plays a key part in excitotoxic neurodegeneration. The DNA fragmentation factor 45 (DFF45 or ICAD) is a subunit of a heterodimeric DNase complex crucial for DNA fragmentation during apoptosis. Using a DFF45 mutant mouse model, we previously found that DFF45 deficient cells are more resistant to apoptosis than normal control cells. To investigate whether the lack of DFF45 may attenuate neuronal cell death induced by excitotoxicity, we compared kainic acid-induced seizure behavior and neuronal cell death in DFF45 mutant and wild-type control mice. We found that the mutant mice exhibit similar kainic acid-induced seizure severity compared to control mice. However, DFF45 mutant mice are more resistant than control mice to kainic acid-induced CA3 neuronal cell death. Interestingly, residual DNA degradation can be detected in the hippocampus of DFF45 mutant mice that exhibit KA-induced lesions. Our results suggest that a lack of DFF45 can lead to neuronal resistance to excessive activity-induced toxicity.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1006/bbrc.2001.5313DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

neuronal cell
20
cell death
20
mutant mice
16
kainic acid-induced
16
dff45 mutant
16
dna fragmentation
12
mice exhibit
12
control mice
12
fragmentation factor
8
dff45
8

Similar Publications

In light of the increasing importance for measuring myelin ratios - the ratio of axon-to-fiber (axon + myelin) diameters in myelin internodes - to understand normal physiology, disease states, repair mechanisms and myelin plasticity, there is urgent need to minimize processing and statistical artifacts in current methodologies. Many contemporary studies fall prey to a variety of artifacts, reducing study outcome robustness and slowing development of novel therapeutics. Underlying causes stem from a lack of understanding of the myelin ratio, which has persisted more than a century.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Myelination is a key biological process wherein glial cells such as oligodendrocytes wrap myelin around neuronal axons, forming an insulative sheath that accelerates signal propagation down the axon. A major obstacle to understanding myelination is the challenge of visualizing and reproducibly quantifying this inherently three-dimensional process in vitro. To this end, we previously developed artificial axons (AAs), a biocompatible platform consisting of 3D-printed hydrogel-based axon mimics designed to more closely recapitulate the micrometer-scale diameter and sub-kilopascal mechanical stiffness of biological axons.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Successful resolution of approach-avoidance conflict (AAC) is fundamentally important for survival, and its dysregulation is a hallmark of many neuropsychiatric disorders, and yet the underlying neural circuit mechanisms are not well elucidated. Converging human and animal research has implicated the anterior/ventral hippocampus (vHPC) as a key node in arbitrating AAC in a region-specific manner. In this study, we sought to target the vHPC CA1 projection pathway to the nucleus accumbens (NAc) to delineate its contribution to AAC decision-making, particularly in the arbitration of learned reward and punishment signals, as well as innate signals.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The impact of islet neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) on glucose-stimulated insulin secretion (GSIS) is less understood. We investigated this issue by performing simultaneous measurements of the activity of nNOS versus inducible NOS (iNOS) in GSIS using isolated murine islets. Additionally, the significance of extracellular NO on GSIS was studied.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The conserved MAP3K DLKs are widely known for their functions in synapse formation, axonal regeneration and degeneration, and neuronal survival, notably under traumatic injury and chronic disease conditions. In contrast, their roles in other neuronal compartments are much less explored. Through an unbiased forward genetic screening in C.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!