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Intensive production of synthetic polymer-based materials such as polyvinyl chloride, phenolic and melamine plastics, polystyrene, polyethylene or fibre-forming polymers involves the use of compounds having an inhibitory effect on the ignition of the materials, which aims enhancing their safety of use. So far approx. 70 bromine compounds are used as flame-retarding substances. Several studies have suggested that some brominated flame retardants (BFRs) could potentially pose a risk to human health. Tetrabromobisphenol A (TBBPA) is the most widely used compound among BFRs. Products with both additive and chemically bonded forms of TBBPA have been shown to release it into the environment. Although studies indicate high metabolism of TBBPA in rats and humans owing to rapid conjugation with glucuronic acid and elimination in the bile, TBBPA has been detected in cow and human milk, human serum, human adipose tissue and umbilical cord serum. Due to its structural homology with bisphenol A, TBBPA is a candidate to be one of some endocrine disruptors. TBBPA was also shown to accumulate in different brain regions and to induce the behavioral alterations (Nakajima et al. 2009). Some in vivo studies suggest that exposure to TBBPA during the perinatal period may affect locomotor activity and/ or memory and learning. However, only few studies have been undertaken to investigate the mechanism of TBBPA neurotoxic effects. Recently, it was demonstrated that TBBPA could act as the PPAR-γ ligand in NIH3T3-L1 cells (Riu et al. 2011). The aim of the present study was to investigate the effect of TBBPA on viability of cultured hippocampal mouse neurons. Additionally, the role of PPAR-γ in TBBPA-induced cytotoxicity of hippocampus neurons was studied. The cultures of hippocampal neurons were prepared from Swiss mouse embryos on 17/18 days of gestation. The cells were cultured in phenol red-free Neurobasal medium supplemented with glutamine and B27 onto poly-ornithinecoated plates. For experiment cells were exposed to TBBPA in a following concentrations: 1, 10, 50, 100 nM, and 1, 10, 50 and 100 μM. To study the involvement of PPAR-γ in mechanism of TBBPA action the specific agonist GW1929 and antagonist GW9662 were used. Cell cultures were exposed to experimental dose of TBBPA for 6 hours and after this time media were collected for measurement of LDH activity. Our study for the first time demonstrated that TBBPA in a wide range of concentrations stimulated, in a dose-dependent manner, the LDH activity in the cultured mouse hippocampal cells. Moreover, the cytotoxic effect of TBBPA was diminished by the addition of both PPAR-γ agonist and antagonist. The presented results suggest that neurotoxic effects of TBBPA are mediated by PPAR gamma. This study implicates this receptor as a novel toxicity target for TBBPA in neuronal cells. This work was supported by the University of Agriculture in Krakow, Poland, DS No 3242/12 .
We applied the whole-cell patch-clamp technique to study the influence of zinc ions (Zn2+) and extracellular protons at acidic pH (pHo) on voltage-gated potassium currents in cultured rat hippocampal neurons. The first goal of the study was to estimate whether Kv1.3 currents significantly contributed to voltage-gated potassium currents in examined cells. Then, the influence of both ions on the activity of other voltage-gated potassium currents in the neurons was examined. We examined both the total current and the delayed - rectifier component. Results obtained in both cases were not significantly different from each other. Available data argued against any significant contribution of Kv1.3 currents to the recorded currents. Nevertheless, application of Zn2+ in the concentration range from 100 µM to 5 mM reversibly modulated the recorded currents. The activation midpoint was shifted by about 40 mV (total current) and 30 mV (delayed-rectifier current) towards positive membrane potentials and the activation kinetics were slowed significantly (2 - 3 fold) upon application of Zn2+. The inactivation midpoint was also shifted towards positive membrane potentials, but less significantly (about 14 mV). The current amplitudes were reduced in a concentration-dependent manner to about 0.5 of the control value. The effects of Zn2+ were saturated at the concentration of 1 mM. Raising extracellular proton concentration by lowering the pHo from 7.35 to 6.4 did not affect significantly the currents. Possible mechanisms underlying the observed phenomena and their possible physiological significance are discussed.
A one-dimensional diffusion-reaction equation for the probability of finding of a random walker (ion) in a space-time domain (protein channel) is proposed to model the process of ionic wave propagation through membranes. The diffusion process stands here for a kind of kinetic hindrance or perturbation because it is assumed to be very slow. The chemical reaction, in turn, proceeds in an usual way rather, but is presumed to be considered in the fractal-like chemical reaction kinetics regime. The damped pendulum theory is effectively applied to get the solution to the problem studied. This solution has been found to reflect the Kohlrausch-Williams-Watts behaviour characteristic of the slow relaxation kinetics, e g. in spin glasses or fragile liquids. As a quite specific result, the Weibull function stated in the work of L.S. Liebovitch and J.M. Sullivan, Biophys.J. 52 (1987) 979- 988, and describing the channel kinetics in cultured mouse hippocampal neurons has been gained.
Cell culture is a convenient model for pharmacokinetic studies, but during the culture period, GABAa receptors are likely to undergo different modulatory processes. In this study, the current responses to ultrafast GABA applications were recorded from patches excised from neurons cultured for either up to two days (short-term culture) or for more than two weeks (long-term culture). The dose-dependencies of the currentrising phases revealed significant differences between the two groups. In the short-term cultures, the responses to both saturating and non-saturating GABA concentrations were slower than in the case of the long-term cultures. We conclude that the GABAa receptors in cultured neurons undergo profound kinetic changes involving the modulation of the binding reaction and transitions between bound states.
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