Acute sensitivity of astrocytes in the Substantia Nigra to oxygen and glucose deprivation (OGD) compared with hippocampal astrocytes in brain slices

Neuroscience Letters
Rashika N KarunasingheJanusz Lipski

Abstract

The Substantia Nigra is a brainstem nucleus critical for movement control. Although its dopamine-producing neurons degenerate in Parkinsons disease, little is known of the acute effects of ischemia in this region. We recently reported that oxygen and glucose deprivation (OGD) in brain slices, an in vitro ischemia model, evokes a profound depolarization and swelling of GABAergic neurons in the Substantia Nigra pars reticulata (SNr), but not dopaminergic neurons in the Substantia Nigra pars compacta (SNc). The current study characterised the effects of OGD on nigral astrocytes, and compared these with the established responses of astrocytes in the CA1 hippocampal region. Intracellular recordings were made from astrocytes at the border between SNc and SNr subregions, in midbrain slices from postnatal day 21-23 rats. Immunoreactivity for astrocyte-specific proteins was also assessed. OGD evoked a slow, then fast depolarization of nigral astrocytes. The fast phase developed during the anoxic depolarization (indicated by a fast negative shift of extracellular DC potential and increase in light transmittance) and rapid increase in extracellular K+ concentration in the SNr. This biphasic response resembled the OGD-evoked depolarization...Continue Reading

Citations

Aug 11, 2020·Seminars in Cell & Developmental Biology·James Ak LeeScott P Allen
Apr 1, 2021·NPJ Parkinson's Disease·Paula Ramos-GonzalezFabio Cavaliere

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