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Publication : Notch signaling in response to excitotoxicity induces neurodegeneration via erroneous cell cycle reentry.

First Author  Marathe S Year  2015
Journal  Cell Death Differ Volume  22
Issue  11 Pages  1775-84
PubMed ID  25822340 Mgi Jnum  J:258650
Mgi Id  MGI:6142386 Doi  10.1038/cdd.2015.23
Citation  Marathe S, et al. (2015) Notch signaling in response to excitotoxicity induces neurodegeneration via erroneous cell cycle reentry. Cell Death Differ 22(11):1775-84
abstractText  Neurological disorders such as Alzheimer''s disease, stroke and epilepsy are currently marred by the lack of effective treatments to prevent neuronal death. Erroneous cell cycle reentry (CCR) is hypothesized to have a causative role in neurodegeneration. We show that forcing S-phase reentry in cultured hippocampal neurons is sufficient to induce neurodegeneration. We found that kainic-acid treatment in vivo induces erroneous CCR and neuronal death through a Notch-dependent mechanism. Ablating Notch signaling in neurons provides neuroprotection against kainic acid-induced neuronal death. We further show that kainic-acid treatment activates Notch signaling, which increases the bioavailability of CyclinD1 through Akt/GSK3beta pathway, leading to aberrant CCR via activation of CyclinD1-Rb-E2F1 axis. In addition, pharmacological blockade of this pathway at critical steps is sufficient to confer resistance to kainic acid-induced neurotoxicity in mice. Taken together, our results demonstrate that excitotoxicity leads to neuronal death in a Notch-dependent manner through erroneous CCR.
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