Abstract

Reactive oxygen species (ROS) are known to mediate the protection conferred by the opening of mitochondrial ATP-sensitive potassium channels (mitoK ATP) during ischemia in heart, but this has not been demonstrated in brain. The present study examined whether ROS mediate the neuroprotection conferred by a mitoK ATP opener during ischemia in rat hippocampal slices. Ischemia was simulated by oxygen and glucose deprivation. The direct current potential and population spike were recorded in the stratum pyramidale of the CA1 region, and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) efflux into the medium was assayed. ROS generation was measured spectrophotofluorometrically. Pretreatment of slices with diazoxide (DIA, 300 μM), a mitoK ATP opener, (i) prolonged the latency to ischemic depolarization and decreased its amplitude, (ii) delayed the onset of population spike disappearance and enhanced its recovery after reperfusion, (iii) decreased LDH efflux and (iv) increased ROS levels. The effects induced by DIA were attenuated by 5-hydroxydecanoic acid (200 μM), a mitoK ATP blocker. Pretreatment with N-2-mercaptopropionyl glycine (MPG, 500 μM), a ROS scavenger, also abrogated the effects induced by DIA, while treatment with MPG alone had no effect during normoxia and ischemia. These results indicate that ROS participate in the neuroprotection conferred by a mitoK ATP opener during ischemia.

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