Neurobiology of Lipids Noteworthy Articles

Noteworthy section of the Neurobiology of Lipids (ISSN 1683-5506) alerts interested readers about the selected noteworthy original research and viewpoint/review articles, book reviews, and meeting reports (published in other journals) on the subject of the journal scope

NoL Home | Noteworthy home | NoL Content | Archiving your research in NoL is a new service by the Neurobiology of Lipids NoL archives your research | Mission | PubMed | IFORA | Affiliates  | Contact us
For Graduate students: Assistant Editor and Research Assistant Opportunities

November 12, 2007

Cholesterol synthesis inhibitors protect against platelet-activating factor-induced neuronal damage

Write to authors to ask them to make this article freely available at NoL Archive

J Neuroinflammation. 2007 Jan 18;4:5
Bate C, Rumbold L, Williams A.
Department of Pathology and Infectious Diseases, Royal Veterinary College, North Mymms, Herts, UK

BACKGROUND: Platelet-activating factor (PAF) is implicated in the neuronal damage that accompanies ischemia, prion disease and Alzheimer's disease (AD). Since some epidemiological studies demonstrate that statins, drugs that reduce cholesterol synthesis, have a beneficial effect on mild AD, we examined the effects of two cholesterol synthesis inhibitors on neuronal responses to PAF. METHODS: Primary cortical neurons were treated with cholesterol synthesis inhibitors (simvastatin or squalestatin) prior to incubation with different neurotoxins. The effects of these drugs on neuronal cholesterol levels and neuronal survival were measured. Immunoblots were used to determine the effects of simvastatin or squalestatin on the distribution of the PAF receptor and an enzyme linked immunoassay was used to quantify the amounts of PAF receptor. RESULTS: PAF killed primary neurons in a dose-dependent manner. Pre-treatment with simvastatin or squalestatin reduced neuronal cholesterol and increased the survival of PAF-treated neurons. Neuronal survival was increased 50% by 100 nM simvastatin, or 20 nM squalestatin. The addition of mevalonate restored cholesterol levels, and reversed the protective effect of simvastatin. Simvastatin or squalestatin did not affect the amounts of the PAF receptor but did cause it to disperse from within lipid rafts. CONCLUSION: Treatment of neurons with cholesterol synthesis inhibitors including simvastatin and squalestatin protected neurons against PAF. Treatment caused a percentage of the PAF receptors to disperse from cholesterol-sensitive domains. These results raise the possibility that the effects of statins on neurodegenerative disease are, at least in part, due to desensitisation of neurons to PAF.

PubMed ID and Record

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home