Oxaloacetate decreases the infarct size and attenuates the reduction in evoked responses after photothrombotic focal ischemia in the rat cortex

D Nagy, M Marosi, Z Kis, T Farkas, G Rakos… - Cellular and molecular …, 2009 - Springer
D Nagy, M Marosi, Z Kis, T Farkas, G Rakos, L Vecsei, VI Teichberg, J Toldi
Cellular and molecular neurobiology, 2009Springer
A traumatic brain injury or a focal brain lesion is followed by acute excitotoxicity caused by
the presence of abnormally high glutamate (Glu) levels in the cerebrospinal and interstitial
fluids. It has recently been demonstrated that this excess Glu in the brain can be eliminated
into the blood following the intravenous administration of oxaloacetate (OxAc), which, by
scavenging the blood Glu, induces an enhanced and neuroprotective brain-to-blood Glu
efflux. In this study, we subjected rats to a photothrombotic lesion and treated them after the …
Abstract
A traumatic brain injury or a focal brain lesion is followed by acute excitotoxicity caused by the presence of abnormally high glutamate (Glu) levels in the cerebrospinal and interstitial fluids. It has recently been demonstrated that this excess Glu in the brain can be eliminated into the blood following the intravenous administration of oxaloacetate (OxAc), which, by scavenging the blood Glu, induces an enhanced and neuroprotective brain-to-blood Glu efflux. In this study, we subjected rats to a photothrombotic lesion and treated them after the illumination with a single 30-min-long administration of OxAc (1.2 mg/100 g, i.v.). Following induction of the lesion, we measured the infarct size and the amplitudes of the somatosensory evoked potentials (SEPs) as recorded from the skull surface. The photothrombotic lesion resulted in appreciably decreased amplitudes of the evoked potentials, but OxAc administration significantly attenuated this reduction, and also the infarct size assessed histologically. We suggest that the neuroprotective effects of OxAc are due to its blood Glu-scavenging activity, which, by increasing the brain-to-blood Glu efflux, reduces the excess Glu responsible for the anatomical and functional correlates of the ischemia, as evaluated by electrophysiological evoked potential (EP) measurements.
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