Abstract

The effect of all-trans retinoic acid (RA), which is known as a regulator of cell growth and differentiation, was studied during neuronal apoptosis. Apoptosis was induced in primary cultures of chick embryonic neurons by treatment with staurosporine (200 nM) for 24 h which led to a reduction of cellular viability to 40% compared to 83% in untreated cultures as well as to an increase in the number of apoptotic neurons (determined by nuclear staining with Hoechst 33258) to 60% compared to 15% in untreated cultures. RA (1 nM–10 μM) reduced the number of non-viable and apoptotic cells in a concentration-dependent manner and the maximal response was seen at 1 μM RA with 60% cellular viability and 38% apoptotic neurons. The production of mitochondrial reactive oxygen species (ROS, determined by the fluorescent indicator dihydrorhodamine) was elevated 4.4-fold after 4 h of staurosporine-treatment which was reduced to a 2-fold increase in the presence of 10 μM RA. The results indicate that RA was able to reduce apoptotic damage in staurosporine-treated chick embryonic neurons by suppressing the production of ROS.

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