Abstract

Glycogen synthase kinase-3, especially the beta form (GSK-3β), plays key roles in oxidative stress-induced neuronal cell death, an important pathogenic mechanism of various neurodegenerative diseases. Although the neuroprotective effects of GSK-3β inhibitors have been described, the optimal level of GSK-3β inhibition for neuronal cell survival has not yet been determined. We investigated the effect of varying GSK-3β activity on the viability of oxidative stress-injured neuronally differentiated PC12 (nPC12) cells and intracellular signals related with the GSK-3β and caspase-3 pathways. Compared to the nPC12 control cells treated with only 100 μM H 2O 2, treatment of 50–200 nM GSK-3β inhibitor II or 25–500 nM GSK-3β inhibitor VIII reduced the increased enzyme activity by about 50% and protected the cells against H 2O 2-induced oxidative stress. The optimal concentration of GSK-3β inhibitor II enhanced heat shock transcription factor-1 levels, decreased levels of phosphorylated tau (Ser202) and cytosolic cytochrome c, activated caspase-3, and cleaved poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase. In contrast, higher concentrations of GSK-3β inhibitor II (more than 500 nM) induced neuronal cell death and showed opposite effects relative to the above described intracellular signals. These results suggest that optimized inhibitor levels for modulating GSK-3β activity may prevent apoptosis induced by oxidative stress associated with neurodegenerative diseases.

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