Transient Lack of Glucose but not O2 is Involved in Ischemic Postconditioning-Induced Neuroprotection

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Abstract

Aim: Cerebral ischemic postconditioning has emerged recently as a kind of endogenous strategy for neuroprotection. We set out to test whether hypoxia or glucose deprivation (GD) would substitute for ischemia in postconditioning. Methods: Adult male C57BL/6J mice were treated with postconditioning evoked by ischemia (bilateral common carotid arteries occlusion) or hypoxia (8% O2) after 45-min middle cerebral arterial occlusion. Corticostriatal slices from mice were subjected to 1-min oxygen-glucose deprivation (OGD), GD, or oxygen deprivation (OD) postconditioning at 5 min after 15-min OGD. Results: Hypoxic postconditioning did not decrease infarct volume or improve neurologic function at 24 h after reperfusion, while ischemic postconditioning did. Similarly, OGD and GD but not OD postconditioning attenuated the OGD/reperfusion-induced injury in corticostriatal slices. The effective duration of low-glucose (1 mmol/L) postconditioning was longer than that of OGD postconditioning. Moreover, OGD and GD but not OD postconditioning reversed the changes of glutamate, GABA, glutamate transporter-1 protein expression, and glutamine synthetase activity induced by OGD/reperfusion. Conclusions: These results suggest that the transient lack of glucose but not oxygen plays a key role in ischemic postconditioning-induced neuroprotection, at least partly by regulating glutamate metabolism. Low-glucose postconditioning might be a clinically safe and feasible therapeutic approach against cerebral ischemia/reperfusion injury. © 2012 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.

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Fan, Y. Y., Zhang, X. N., He, P., Shen, Z., Shen, Y., Wang, X. F., … Chen, Z. (2013). Transient Lack of Glucose but not O2 is Involved in Ischemic Postconditioning-Induced Neuroprotection. CNS Neuroscience and Therapeutics, 19(1), 30–37. https://doi.org/10.1111/cns.12033

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