Lurcher is a spontaneous mouse mutant characterized by premature and aberrant apoptosis in the cerebellum. The phenotype has been shown to be caused by a point mutation in the δ2 glutamate receptor subunit gene that results in a large constitutive inward current, which has proved that endogenous excitotoxicity can lead to apoptotic cell death. Additional studies have suggested a direct link between this endogenous excitotoxicity and the activation of intracellular cell death enzymes. We have previously shown that excitotoxic neuronal degeneration elicited through exogenous insults (e.g. excitotoxins, stroke) is promoted by an extracellular cascade involving the serine protease tissue plasminogen activator (tPA). However, whether it is through necrotic or apoptotic mechanisms that this excitotoxic cell death occurs has remained contested. We describe the attenuation of the Lurcher cell death progression in tPA-deficient mice. Elimination of tPA delayed the apoptotic death of Purkinje and granule neurons in Lurcher mice, and reduced the phosphorylation of Jun and the activation of caspase 8. These results indicate that not only does tPA-promoted excitotoxic cell death proceed through a receptor-mediated apoptotic pathway, but that neuronal cell death in the Lurcher mouse is facilitated by extracellular cascades in addition to the already described intracellular pathways. Finally, these findings suggest that therapeutic benefits may be achieved for a wide variety of insults to the CNS by regulating tPA activity to preserve neuronal viability.
Partial rescue of neural apoptosis in the Lurcher mutant mouse through elimination of tissue plasminogen activator
Weiquan Lu, Stella E. Tsirka; Partial rescue of neural apoptosis in the Lurcher mutant mouse through elimination of tissue plasminogen activator. Development 15 April 2002; 129 (8): 2043–2050. doi: https://doi.org/10.1242/dev.129.8.2043
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