Abstract
Stroke and neurotrauma mediate neuronal death through a series of events that involve multiple interdependent molecular pathways. It has been suggested that these pathways are triggered following elevations in extracellular excitatory amino acids, primarily glutamate [1]. This report outlines mechanisms involving glutamate-mediated excitotoxicity with specific focus on (i) the role of Ca2+ in neurotoxicity, (ii) The concept of ‘source specificity’ of neurotoxicity, (iii) the role of the ionotropic N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA)-subtype glutamate receptor and its associated submembrane molecules that may give rise to signaling specificity in excitotoxicity and (iv) the role of glutamate-mediated free-radical generation and associated cell death pathways. We also highlight a novel, peptide-based approach for uncoupling NMDA receptors from excitotoxicity in the rat central nervous system subjected to focal ischemia, thereby reducing stroke infarct volume and improving neurological functioning.
Keywords: Glutamate, NMDA receptor, calcium, nitric oxide, ROS, ischemia, traumatic brain injury, postsynaptic density protein-95, superoxide
Footnotes
Received 11 August 2003; received after revision 15 September 2003; accepted 17 September 2003