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Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences: CMLS logoLink to Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences: CMLS
. 2008 Nov 8;66(1):156. doi: 10.1007/s00018-008-8490-7

Differential insult-dependent recruitment of the intrinsic mitochondrial pathway during neuronal programmed cell death

S Diwakarla 1,2, P Nagley 3, M L R Hughes 3,4, B Chen 1, P M Beart 1,2,
PMCID: PMC11131462  PMID: 18989621

Abstract.

Programmed cell death contributes to neurological diseases and may involve mitochondrial dysfunction with redistribution of apoptogenic proteins. We examined neuronal death to elucidate whether the intrinsic mitochondrial pathway and the crosstalk between caspase-dependent/-independent injury was differentially recruited by stressors implicated in neurodegeneration. After exposure of cultured cerebellar granule cells to various insults, the progression of injury was correlated with mitochondrial involvement, including the redistribution of intermembrane space (IMS) proteins, and patterns of protease activation. Injury occurred across a continuum from Bax- and caspase-dependent (trophic- factor withdrawal) to Bax-independent, calpain-dependent (excitotoxicity) injury. Trophic-factor withdrawal produced classical recruitment of the intrinsic pathway with activation of caspase-3 and redistribution of cytochrome c, whereas excitotoxicity induced early redistribution of AIF and HtrA2/Omi, elevation of intracellular calcium and mitochondrial depolarization. Patterns of engagement of neuronal programmed cell death and the redistribution of mitochondrial IMS proteins were canonical, reflecting differential insult-dependencies.

Keywords. Cell death, neurons, excitotoxicity, mitochondrial membrane potential, Bax, proteases, cytochrome c, AIF

Footnotes

Received 14 August 2008; received after revision 02 October 2008; accepted 23 October 2008


Articles from Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences: CMLS are provided here courtesy of Springer

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