The epileptogenic and neurodegenerative effects of dendrotoxin K (DTx- K), from Dendroaspis polylepis, a specific blocker of a noninactivating, voltage-sensitive K+ channel, were studied after focal injection into one dorsal hippocampus in rats pretreated with the 21-aminosteroid U-74389G, a scavenger of free oxygen radicals. Administration of 35 pmol DTx-K elicited in all of the treated animals (n = 6) motor seizures and bilateral electrocortical (ECoG) discharges after a latent period of approximately 5 min. At 24 h, histological examination of brain (n = 6) coronal sections (10 μm; n = 6 per brain) detected bilateral damage to the hippocampal formation. Quantitation of damage revealed significant bilateral neuronal cell loss in the CA1 and CA4 pyramidal cell layer and dentate gyrus granule cell layer relative to the corresponding brain regions of rats (n=6) injected with bovine serum albumin (300 ng), which per se was ineffective in all respects. DTx-K (35 pmol) also caused a significant loss of CA3 pyramidal neurons ipsilateral to the site of toxin injection. Systemic (i.p.) administration of U-74389G (5 mg/kg given 30 min beforehand) delayed the onset of motor and ECoG seizures and reduced the number of epileptogenic discharges typically observed in rats receiving an injection of DTx-K (35 pmol) alone. Similarly, this treatment prevented the damage inflicted to the hippocampus by the toxin and in no instance was significant neuronal loss observed. At variance with these results, pretreatment with U-74389G (up to 10 mg/kg i.p.) failed to prevent seizures and CA1 hippocampal damage evoked by intra-hippocampal injection of α-DTx (35 pmol), a DTx-K homologue which preferentially inhibits a slowly inactivating, voltage-dependent K+ conductance in nerve cells. In conclusion, the present data support a role for free oxygen radicals in mediating hippocampal damage induced by DTx-K, but not α-DTx, and confirm the original deduction that these DTx homologues are complementary neurobiological tools to study mechanisms of seizures and neuronal death.

Seizures and hippocampal damage produced by dendrotoxin-K in rats is prevented by the 21-aminosteroid U-74389g

Palma E.;
1997-01-01

Abstract

The epileptogenic and neurodegenerative effects of dendrotoxin K (DTx- K), from Dendroaspis polylepis, a specific blocker of a noninactivating, voltage-sensitive K+ channel, were studied after focal injection into one dorsal hippocampus in rats pretreated with the 21-aminosteroid U-74389G, a scavenger of free oxygen radicals. Administration of 35 pmol DTx-K elicited in all of the treated animals (n = 6) motor seizures and bilateral electrocortical (ECoG) discharges after a latent period of approximately 5 min. At 24 h, histological examination of brain (n = 6) coronal sections (10 μm; n = 6 per brain) detected bilateral damage to the hippocampal formation. Quantitation of damage revealed significant bilateral neuronal cell loss in the CA1 and CA4 pyramidal cell layer and dentate gyrus granule cell layer relative to the corresponding brain regions of rats (n=6) injected with bovine serum albumin (300 ng), which per se was ineffective in all respects. DTx-K (35 pmol) also caused a significant loss of CA3 pyramidal neurons ipsilateral to the site of toxin injection. Systemic (i.p.) administration of U-74389G (5 mg/kg given 30 min beforehand) delayed the onset of motor and ECoG seizures and reduced the number of epileptogenic discharges typically observed in rats receiving an injection of DTx-K (35 pmol) alone. Similarly, this treatment prevented the damage inflicted to the hippocampus by the toxin and in no instance was significant neuronal loss observed. At variance with these results, pretreatment with U-74389G (up to 10 mg/kg i.p.) failed to prevent seizures and CA1 hippocampal damage evoked by intra-hippocampal injection of α-DTx (35 pmol), a DTx-K homologue which preferentially inhibits a slowly inactivating, voltage-dependent K+ conductance in nerve cells. In conclusion, the present data support a role for free oxygen radicals in mediating hippocampal damage induced by DTx-K, but not α-DTx, and confirm the original deduction that these DTx homologues are complementary neurobiological tools to study mechanisms of seizures and neuronal death.
1997
Animals
Antioxidants
Cerebral Cortex
Electroencephalography
Hippocampus
Male
Pregnatrienes
Rats
Rats, Wistar
Seizures
Peptides
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12317/63841
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