Activation of Akt/protein kinase B contributes to induction of ischemic tolerance in the CA1 subfield of gerbil hippocampus

S Yano, M Morioka, K Fukunaga… - Journal of Cerebral …, 2001 - journals.sagepub.com
S Yano, M Morioka, K Fukunaga, T Kawano, T Hara, Y Kai, J Hamada, E Miyamoto, Y Ushio
Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow & Metabolism, 2001journals.sagepub.com
Apoptosis plays an important role in delayed neuronal cell death after cerebral ischemia.
Activation of Akt/protein kinase B has been recently reported to prevent apoptosis in several
cell types. In this article the authors examine whether induction of ischemic tolerance
resulting from a sublethal ischemic insult requires Akt activation. Sublethal ischemia
gradually and persistently stimulated phosphorylation of Akt-Ser-473 in the hippocampal
CA1 region after reperfusion. After lethal ischemia, phosphorylation of Akt-Ser-473 showed …
Apoptosis plays an important role in delayed neuronal cell death after cerebral ischemia. Activation of Akt/protein kinase B has been recently reported to prevent apoptosis in several cell types. In this article the authors examine whether induction of ischemic tolerance resulting from a sublethal ischemic insult requires Akt activation. Sublethal ischemia gradually and persistently stimulated phosphorylation of Akt-Ser-473 in the hippocampal CA1 region after reperfusion. After lethal ischemia, phosphorylation of Akt-Ser-473 showed no obvious decrease in preconditioned gerbils but a marked decrease in nonconditioned gerbils. Changes in Akt-Ser-473 phosphorylation were correlated with changes in Akt activities, as measured by an in vitro kinase assay. Intracerebral ventricular infusion of wortmannin before preconditioning blocked both the increase in Akt-Ser-473 phosphorylation in a dose-dependent manner and the neuroprotective action of preconditioning. These results suggest that Akt activation is induced by a sublethal ischemic insult in gerbil hippocampus and contributes to neuroprotective ischemic tolerance in CA1 pyramidal neurons.
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