http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Excitotoxicity
Neuroreport. 2004 Oct 5;15(14):2241-4.
Group B vitamins protect murine cerebellar granule cells from glutamate/NMDA toxicity
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Lin Y, Desbois A, Jiang S, Hou ST.
Department of Clinical Neurological Sciences, The No. 252 Hospital of P.L.A., No. 81, Huayuan Street, Baoding City, Hebei Province, China, 071000.
The role of B group vitamins in preventing neuronal death against excitotoxicity was investigated. Neuronal death of cultured mouse cerebellar granule neurons (CGNs) caused by glutamate (50 microM) or NMDA (200 microM) was delayed in CGNs that had been treated with riboflavin (B2), folic acid (B9) or cynocobalamin (B12) for 18 h. Such neuroprotection by B2, B9 and B12 was in a dose- and time-dependent manner. In contrast, application of thiamin (B1), nicotinamide (B3), d-pantothenic acid (B5), pyridoxine (B6) or carnitine (BT) did not ameliorate glutamate or NMDA-mediated excitotoxicity to CGCs. These results are the first indication that certain B group vitamins are not only required for the normal brain function, but can also play a protective role against excitotoxicity to the brain.
J Neurosci. 2001 Jan 1;21(1):98-108.
Vitamin D hormone confers neuroprotection in parallel with downregulation of L-type calcium channel expression in hippocampal neurons.
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Brewer LD, Thibault V, Chen KC, Langub MC, Landfield PW, Porter NM.
Departments of Pharmacology and Internal Medicine, Division of Nephrology, Bone and Mineral Metabolism, College of Medicine, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky 40536, USA.
Although vitamin D hormone (VDH; 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D(3)), the active metabolite of vitamin D, is the major Ca(2+)-regulatory steroid hormone in the periphery, it is not known whether it also modulates Ca(2+) homeostasis in brain neurons. Recently, chronic treatment with VDH was reported to protect brain neurons in both aging and animal models of stroke. However, it is unclear whether those actions were attributable to direct effects on brain cells or indirect effects mediated via peripheral pathways. VDH modulates L-type voltage-sensitive Ca(2+) channels (L-VSCCs) in peripheral tissues, and an increase in L-VSCCs appears linked to both brain aging and neuronal vulnerability. Therefore, we tested the hypothesis that VDH has direct neuroprotective actions and, in parallel, targets L-VSCCs in hippocampal neurons. Primary rat hippocampal cultures, treated for several days with VDH, exhibited a U-shaped concentration-response curve for neuroprotection against excitotoxic insults: lower concentrations of VDH (1-100 nm) were protective, but higher, nonphysiological concentrations (500-1000 nm) were not. Parallel studies using patch-clamp techniques found a similar U-shaped curve in which L-VSCC current was reduced at lower VDH concentrations and increased at higher (500 nm) concentrations. Real-time PCR studies demonstrated that VDH monotonically downregulated mRNA expression for the alpha(1C) and alpha(1D) pore-forming subunits of L-VSCCs. However, 500 nm VDH also nonspecifically reduced a range of other mRNA species. Thus, these studies provide the first evidence of (1) direct neuroprotective actions of VDH at relatively low concentrations, and (2) selective downregulation of L-VSCC expression in brain neurons at the same, lower concentrations.