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RP2E INRA Université de Lorraine

Free radical production and changes in superoxide dismutases associated with hypoxia/reoxygenation-induced apoptosis of embryonic rat forebrain neurons in culture

Free Radical Biology and Medicine, 29 (12), pp. 1291-1301.

Lievre, V., Becuwe, P., Bianchi, A., Koziel, V., Franck, P., Schroeder, H., Nabet, P., Dauca, M., Daval, J.-L.

2000

Following hypoxia/reoxygenation (6h/96h), cultured neurons from the embryonic rat forebrain undergo delayed apoptosis. To evaluate the participation of oxidative stress and defense mechanisms, temporal evolution of intraneuronal free radical generation was monitored by flow cytometry using dihydrorhodamine 123, in parallel with the study of transcriptional, translational, and activity changes of the detoxifying enzymes Cu/Zn-SOD and Mn-SOD. Two distinct peaks of radical generation were depicted, at the time of reoxygenation (+ 27%) and 48 h later (+ 25%), respectively. Radical production was unaffected by caspase inhibitors YVAD-CHO or DEVD-CHO, which prevented neuronal damage, suggesting that caspase activation is not an upstream initiator of radicals in this model. Cell treatment by vitamin E (100 µM) displayed significant neuroprotection, whereas the superoxide generating system xanthine/xanthine oxidase induced apoptosis. Transcript and protein levels of both SODs were reduced 1 h after the onset of hypoxia, but activities were transiently stimulated. Reoxygenation was associated with an increased expression (139%), but a decreased activity (21%) of the inducible Mn-SOD, whereas Cu/Zn-SOD protein and activity were low and progressively increased until 48 h post-hypoxia, when the second rise in radicals occurred. In spite of a temporal regulation of SODs, which parallels radical formation, oxidative stress might account for neurotoxicity induced by hypoxia.

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