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Aminoglutethimide prevents excitotoxic and ischemic injuries in cortical neurons
Author(s) -
Shirakawa Hisashi,
Katsuki Hiroshi,
Kume Toshiaki,
Kaneko Shuji,
Akaike Akinori
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
british journal of pharmacology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.432
H-Index - 211
eISSN - 1476-5381
pISSN - 0007-1188
DOI - 10.1038/sj.bjp.0706636
Subject(s) - aminoglutethimide , neuroactive steroid , glutamate receptor , nmda receptor , pregnenolone , pharmacology , kainate receptor , excitotoxicity , neuroprotection , allopregnanolone , endocrinology , ampa receptor , medicine , biology , receptor , aromatase , steroid , gabaa receptor , hormone , cancer , breast cancer
Aminoglutethimide is a clinically available drug that suppresses steroid biosynthesis by inhibiting enzymes such as cytochrome P 450scc and aromatase. Because several members of neurosteroids regulate glutamate receptors, we investigated the effect of aminoglutethimide on cell death induced by overactivation of glutamate receptors in CNS neurons. Long‐term pretreatment of organotypic cerebrocortical slice cultures with aminoglutethimide (100–1000  μ M ) for 6 days or over resulted in concentration‐dependent suppression of neuronal cell death induced by NMDA. Aminoglutethimide (1000  μ M ) also inhibited neurotoxicity of AMPA and kainate, but not of ionomycin or staurosporine. The protective effect of aminoglutethimide against NMDA cytotoxicity was not mimicked by other steroid synthesis inhibitors including trilostane and exemestane, and was not reversed by concurrent application of steroids such as pregnenolone, estrone, 17 β ‐estradiol and estriol. In dissociated rat cerebrocortical cell cultures, long‐term treatment with aminoglutethimide (10–1000  μ M ) attenuated NMDA receptor‐mediated glutamate cytotoxicity but produced no significant effect on glutamate‐induced increases in intracellular Ca 2+ . Brief as well as long‐term pretreatment with aminoglutethimide (30–1000  μ M ) prevented NMDA receptor‐dependent ischemic neuronal injury in organotypic cerebrocortical slice cultures, which was associated with suppression of glutamate release during the ischemic insult. These results indicate that aminoglutethimide, irrelevant to its actions on neurosteroid synthesis, protects CNS neurons from excitotoxic and ischemic injuries. Development of aminoglutethimide analogs possessing neuroprotective properties may be of therapeutic value.British Journal of Pharmacology (2006) 147 , 729–736. doi: 10.1038/sj.bjp.0706636

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