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Pharmacological Reports 2015-Apr

The cyclic AMP effects and neuroprotective activities of PACAP and VIP in cultured astrocytes and neurons exposed to oxygen-glucose deprivation.

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Marta Jóźwiak-Bębenista
Edward Kowalczyk
Jerzy Z Nowak

Keywords

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide (PACAP) and vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) are endogenous peptides, widely expressed in the central and peripheral nervous system. The adenylyl cyclase (AC)/cyclic AMP (cAMP) is their main intracellular signal transduction pathway. Numerous data suggest that PACAP and VIP have considerable neuroprotective potential, indicating the possibility for their use as new therapeutic strategies in stroke treatment. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of oxygen-glucose deprivation (OGD) - an established in vitro model for ischemic cell stress - on PACAP and VIP-evoked receptor-mediated cAMP generation in glial and neuronal cells, and to determine whether PACAP and VIP have neuroprotective activity under these conditions.

METHODS

The formation of [(3)H]cAMP by PACAP, VIP and forskolin (a direct activator of AC) was measured in [(3)H]adenine prelabeled primary rat glial and neuronal cells under normoxia and OGD conditions. The effects of PACAP and VIP on cell viability were measured using the MTT conversion method, and were compared to tacrolimus (FK506), a well known neuroprotective agent.

RESULTS

The OGD model inhibited the PACAP and VIP-induced cAMP formation in rat astrocytes and neurons. Incubation of neuronal cells with PACAP prevented OGD-induced cell death, more efficiently than VIP and FK506.

CONCLUSIONS

The obtained results showed that hypoxia/ischemia may trigger down-regulation of the brain AC-coupled PACAP/VIP receptors, with a consequent decrease of PACAP- and/or VIP-ergic-dependent cAMP-driven signaling. Moreover, our findings indicate that PACAP and VIP can prevent the deleterious effect of OGD on rat neuronal cells.

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