Title: Mechanisms of Ischemic Brain Damage
1Mechanisms of Ischemic Brain Damage
22 Hypothesis of Brain Ischemia
- Calcium Hypothesis
- Excitotoxic Hypothesis
3Calcium Hypothesis
- Massive Ca2 entry into cells leads to cell death
- Ca2 catalyzed the breakdown of structural
components of cells (membrane lipids and
cytoskeletal proteins). - Agonist-receptor interactions at the motor end
plate caused necrosis of the target, innervated
by cholinergic fibers.
4When this general hypothesis was applied to the
nervous system, it was assumed that calcium
entering dendritic cells, caused necrosis of
selectively vulnerable neurons by ischemia or
hypoxia, hypoglycemic coma, and status
epilepticus. Calcium was assumed to enter cells
by way of voltage-sensitive calcium channels,
which are abundant at the basal dendrites of
cells with a tendency to epileptogenic firing.
5Calcium Metabolism
- Presynaptic depolarization causes Ca2 to enter
the cytoplasm of the presynaptic endings - Followed by release of glutamate. This activates
two types of ionotropic glutamate receptors- AMPA
and NMDA. - (AMPA amino-3-hydroxy-5-methol-4-isoazole
propionic acid) - (NMDA N-methyl D- aspartate)
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7- When glutamate activates the AMPA receptor, a
channel is opened that - allows the passage of Na, K and H. When Na
enters down its electrochemical gradient, it
depolarizes the membrane. This allows the influx
of Ca2 by way of any voltage-sensitive calcium
channels that may be localized to the
postsynaptic membranes of the dendrites and cell
body (eg. L and T types) - In addition, it relieves the Mg2 block of the
NMDA gated channel, allowing Ca2 to enter this
high-conductance, unselective cation channel. - The excitatory event is terminated by reuptake of
glutamate into presynaptic vesicles and into
glial cells.
8- Ca2 entry via NMDA receptors has special
pathophysiologic significance - NMDA receptor-gated channel has a high calcium
conductance - The channels or calcium ions they conduct are in
contact with cell - structures that are vulnerable to the increase
in intracellular Ca2. -
- When Ca2 ions enter cells by way of NMDA
receptor-gated - channels, they are more prone to trigger the
production of ROS - , reactive oxygen species, such as H2O2,
O2-, OH. - Postynaptic calcium influx stimulates neuronal NO
synthase, allowing - for the simultaneous appearance of O2- and
NO in postsynaptic - structures.
9Excitotoxic Hypothesis
- Described in 1981
- Excitatory amino acid-related toxicity led to
neuronal cell death in tissue slices or primary
neuronal cell cultures. - It was initially argued that glutamate activation
of AMPA receptors leads to an influx of Na, Cl-
and water- which causes osmolytic cell damage. - Later, results showed that the osmolytic damage
was reversible, but the influx of calcium caused
a delayed type of damage.
10- It is now clear that a single Ca2 exposure can
lead to secondary compromise of Ca2, suggesting
a delayed failure of calcium regulation.
11Glutamate and Calcium Triggered Events
- Enhanced Lipolysis
- Altered Phosphorylation of Proteins
- Enhanced production of reactive oxygen and
reactive nitrogen species.
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13Enhanced Lipolysis
- Ischemia leads to lipolysis because ATP and
cytidine triphosphate are no longer present to
catalyze the resynthesis of phospholipids, once
they are broken down, and because calcium
activates enzymes, degrading phospholipids to
biologically active compounds such as FFAs and
lysophospholipids. - FFAs and lysophospholipids are mediators of
membrane dysfunction b/c they make act as
ionophores and uncoupling agents.
14- Once reperfusion is initiated, the oxidative
meta- - bolism of arachidonic acid accumulated during
the ischemia leads to the formation of
cyclooxygenase and lipooxygenase products- active
in triggering inflammatory responses.
15Altered Phosphorylation of Proteins
- Ca2 is an important modulator of the
phosphorylation state of many proteins. When
proteins are phosphorylated and dephosphorylated,
their functions are altered. So, when calcium
concentration is transient,particularly when Ca2
is excessive and sustained, membrane function and
metabolic activities alteration can cause harmful
effects.
16Production of ROS and NOS
- Ischemia with reperfusion leads to the production
of ROS . These free radicals give rise to lipid
peroxidation, protein oxidation and DNA damage. - Oxygen radicals and NO, together, exert toxicity
- NO has important role in brain ischemia.
- 3 types
- n-NOS and e-NOS (calcium dependent and
constitutively expressed) - i-NOS (expressed by activated macrophages and
neutrophils)
17Neuronal NOS is involved in synaptic signalling
however, under ischemic conditions, it mediates
cell death. The same is true for
i-NOS. Therefore, the production of NO by the
calcium- Dependent n-NOS may be detrimental
because it Allows additional and toxic ROS to be
formed.
18Dissolution of the Cytoskeleton
- Increase in intracellular Ca2 activates
proteases that break down neurofilaments and
contribute to the disassembly of microtubules. - This breakdown cause serious problems in
intracellular communication, which depends on the
integrity of the cytoskeleton as well as cause
damage to the mitochondria of cells.