Effects of sodium and chloride on neuronal survival after neurite transection

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Abstract

An in vitro investigation was undertaken to study the roles of Na+ and Cl- in mammalian spinal cord (SC) neuron deterioration and death after injury involving physical disruption of the plasma membrane. Individual SC neurons ir monolayer cultures were subjected to UV laser microbeam transection of a primary dendrite. Neurons lesioned in modified ionic environments (MIEs) where 50%-75% of the NaCl was replaced with sucrose had higher survival (65%-75%) than neurons lesioned in medium with normal (125 mM) NaCl (28%; p < 0.001). Subsequent experiments found a comparable increase in lesioned neuron survival in MIEs in which only Na+ was replaced with specific ionic substitutes; however, replacement of Cl- was not protective. Electron microscope examinations of neurons fixed <16 min after lesioning showed a dramatic decrease in vesiculation of the smooth endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi apparatus in the low NaCl or low Na+ MIEs. It is hypothesized that Na- entry after membrane disruption may stimulate elevation of [Ca+2]i leading to ultrastructural disruption and death of injured neurons. The results of these studies suggest that a low NaCl MIE may be useful as an irrigant to limit damage spread and cell death within CNS tissues during surgery or after trauma.

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Rosenberg, L. J., Emery, D. G., & Lucas, J. H. (2001). Effects of sodium and chloride on neuronal survival after neurite transection. Journal of Neuropathology and Experimental Neurology, 60(1), 33–48. https://doi.org/10.1093/jnen/60.1.33

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