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Publication : ALS-linked Cu/Zn-SOD mutation increases vulnerability of motor neurons to excitotoxicity by a mechanism involving increased oxidative stress and perturbed calcium homeostasis.

First Author  Kruman II Year  1999
Journal  Exp Neurol Volume  160
Issue  1 Pages  28-39
PubMed ID  10630188 Mgi Jnum  J:58537
Mgi Id  MGI:1347767 Doi  10.1006/exnr.1999.7190
Citation  Kruman II, et al. (1999) ALS-linked Cu/Zn-SOD mutation increases vulnerability of motor neurons to excitotoxicity by a mechanism involving increased oxidative stress and perturbed calcium homeostasis. Exp Neurol 160(1):28-39
abstractText  We employed a mouse model of ALS, in which overexpression of a familial ALS-linked Cu/Zn-SOD mutation leads to progressive MN loss and a clinical phenotype remarkably similar to that of human ALS patients, to directly test the excitotoxicity hypothesis of ALS. Under basal culture conditions, MNs in mixed spinal cord cultures from the Cu/Zn-SOD mutant mice exhibited enhanced oxyradical production, lipid peroxidation, increased intracellular calcium levels, decreased intramitochondrial calcium levels, and mitochondrial dysfunction. MNs from the Cu/Zn-SOD mutant mice exhibited greatly increased vulnerability to glutamate toxicity mediated by alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methylisoxazole-4-propionate receptors. The increased vulnerability of MNs from Cu/Zn-SOD mutant mice to glutamate toxicity was associated with enhanced oxyradical production, sustained elevations of intracellular calcium levels, and mitochondrial dysfunction. Pretreatment of cultures with vitamin E, nitric oxide-suppressing agents, peroxynitrite scavengers, and estrogen protected MNs from Cu/Zn-SOD mutant mice against excitotoxicity. Excitotoxin-induced degeneration of spinal cord MNs in adult mice was more extensive in Cu/Zn-SOD mutant mice than in wild-type mice. The mitochondrial dysfunction associated with Cu/Zn-SOD mutations may play an important role in disturbing calcium homeostasis and increasing oxyradical production, thereby increasing the vulnerability of MNs to excitotoxicity.
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