These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.
Pubmed for Handhelds
PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS
Search MEDLINE/PubMed
Title: Neuronal protection from glucose deprivation via modulation of glucose transport and inhibition of apoptosis: a role for the insulin-like growth factor system. Author: Russo VC, Kobayashi K, Najdovska S, Baker NL, Werther GA. Journal: Brain Res; 2004 May 29; 1009(1-2):40-53. PubMed ID: 15120582. Abstract: Glucose is the brain's major energy source; therefore, loss of neuronal cells is a potential consequence of hypoglycaemia. Since apoptosis is a major mechanism of neuronal loss following a range of insults, we explored potent anti-apoptotic systems (IGF-I and bcl-2) as means of enhancing neuronal survival in the face of glucose deprivation. Human neuroblastoma cells (SH-SY5Y, SHEP and SHEP-bcl-2) were exposed to low glucose as a model of glucopenia-induced neuronal damage. Administration of IGF-I and/or over-expression of the survival gene bcl-2 were exploited to attempt to limit neuronal loss. Neuronal survival mechanisms and interactions between these systems were investigated. Low glucose (0.25-2.5 mM) adversely affected cell growth and survival; however, IGF-I ameliorated these outcomes. Over-expression of bcl-2 blunted low glucose-induced apoptosis and up-regulated IGF-I receptor, with the effect of IGF-I addition being negligible on apoptosis, while significantly enhancing mitochondrial activity. In SH-SY5Y cells, IGF-I significantly changed >two-fold mRNA levels of the apoptosis-related genes gadd45, fas, iNOS, NFkB, TRAIL, without further affecting bcl-2 expression. In low glucose, IGF-I acutely enhanced glucose transport and translocation of GLUT1 protein to the cell membrane. GLUT1 mRNA expression was up-regulated by both IGF-I and bcl-2. The potent anti-apoptotic systems IGF-I and bcl-2 are both thus able to enhance cell survival in a glucose-deprived human neuronal model. Although we clearly show evidence of positive cross-talk via bcl-2 modulation of IGF-I receptor, IGF-I also has enhancing effects on mitochondrial function outside the bcl-2 pathway. The common effect of both systems on enhancement of GLUT-1 expression suggests that this is a key mechanism for enhanced survival. These studies also point to the potential use of IGF-I therapy in prevention or amelioration of hypoglycaemic brain injury.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]