Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2028545 Steroids 2011 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

The therapeutic use of progesterone following traumatic brain injury has recently entered phase III clinical trials as a means of neuroprotection. Although it has been hypothesized that progesterone protects against calcium overload following excitotoxic shock, the exact mechanisms underlying the beneficial effects of progesterone have yet to be determined. We found that therapeutic concentrations of progesterone to be neuroprotective against depolarization-induced excitotoxicity in cultured striatal neurons. Through use of calcium imaging, electrophysiology and the measurement of changes in activity-dependent gene expression, progesterone was found to block calcium entry through voltage-gated calcium channels, leading to alterations in the signaling of the activity-dependent transcription factors NFAT and CREB. The effects of progesterone were highly specific to this steroid hormone, although they did not appear to be receptor mediated. In addition, progesterone did not inhibit AMPA or NMDA receptor signaling. This analysis regarding the effect of progesterone on calcium signaling provides both a putative mechanism by which progesterone acts as a neuroprotectant, as well as affords a greater appreciation for its potential far-reaching effects on cellular function.

► Progesterone is neuroprotective following excitotoxicity induced by depolarization. ► Progesterone inhibited the rise in intracellular calcium induced by depolarization. ► Progesterone reduced the influx of calcium through voltage-gated calcium channels. ► Reducing calcium influx with progesterone blocked activity-dependent transcription. ► Progesterone had no effect on glutamate receptor signaling.

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