Ischemia leads to apoptosis - and necrosis-like neuron death in the ischemic rat hippocampus

2004 | journal article. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​Ischemia leads to apoptosis - and necrosis-like neuron death in the ischemic rat hippocampus​
Mueller, G. J.; Stadelmann, C. ; Bastholm, L.; Elling, F.; Lassmann, H. & Johansen, F. F.​ (2004) 
Brain Pathology14(4) pp. 415​-424​.​

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Authors
Mueller, G. J.; Stadelmann, Christine ; Bastholm, L.; Elling, F.; Lassmann, Hans; Johansen, F. F.
Abstract
Morphological evidence of apoptosis in transient forebrain ischemia is controversial. We therefore investigated the time sequence of apoptosis-related antigens by immunohistochemistry and correlated it with emerging nuclear patterns of cell death in a model of transient forebrain ischemia in CA1 pyramidal cells of the rat hippocampus. The earliest ischemic changes were found on day 2 and 3, reflected by an upregulation of phospho-c-Jun in a proportion of morphologically intact CA1 neurons, which matched the number of neurons that succumbed to ischemia at later time points. At day 3 and later 3 ischemic cell death morphologies became apparent: pyknosis, aploptosis-like cell death and necrosis-like cell death, which were confirmed by electron microscopy. Activated caspase-3 was present in the vast majority of cells with apoptosis-like morphology as well as in a small subset of cells undergoing necrosis; its expression peaked on days 3 to 4. Silver staining for nucleoli, which are a substrate for caspase-3, revealed a profound loss of nucleoli in cells with apoptosis-like morphology, whereas cells with necrosis-like morphology showed intact nucleoli. Overall, cells with apoptosis-like morphology and/or caspase-3 expression represented a minor fraction (<10%) of ischemic neurons, while the vast majority followed a necrosis-like pathway. Our studies suggest that CA1 pyramidal cell death following transient forebrain ischemia may be initiated through c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) pathway activation, which then either follows an apoptosis-like cell death pathway or leads to secondary necrosis.
Issue Date
2004
Status
published
Publisher
Int Soc Neuropathology
Journal
Brain Pathology 
ISSN
1015-6305

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