- Previous Article
- Next Article
- Table of Contents
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, Vol.352, No.4, 966-972, 2007
Preconditioning with estradiol abolishes its neuroprotection in cerebellar neurons
Certain steroids are neuroprotective because they are modulators of neuronal activity or ROS scavengers. We examined neuroprotection following glutamate-induced excitotoxicity in cerebellar granule neuron cultures. 17 beta-Estradiol, 17 alpha-estradiol (nonestrogenic), or vitamins C+E were equally neuroprotective when coadministered with glutamate, consistent with protection by ROS scavenging. Progesterone protected mainly by an action on GABA-A receptors. Since exogenous antioxidants may influence the level of glutathione, the main endogenous antioxidant in neurons, we investigated if a preconditioning period with the neuroprotectors changed their efficacy as protectors. The neuroprotection by 17 beta-estradiol and 17 alpha-estradiol, but not progesterone or vitamins C+E, was almost abolished following a preconditioning period of 24 h. This reduction was accompanied by an inhibition of the gamma-glutamylcysteine synthetase promoter and a reduced level of glutathione when preconditioning was combined with the subsequent glutamate exposure. Thus, vitamins C+E and progesterone were more effective long-term neuroprotectors, since preconditioning did not reduce glutathione. (c) 2006 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Keywords:cell death;cerebellar granule neurons;estradiol;glutathione;neuroprotection;NMDA receptor;progesterone;vitamin C;vitamin E