Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4340812 Neuroscience 2009 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

The aim of this study was to investigate whether nicotine acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs) are expressed in a more pronounced way in astrocytes co-cultured with microvascular endothelial cells from adult rat brain, compared with monocultured astrocytes, as a sign of a more developed signal transduction system. Also investigated was whether nicotine plays a role in the control of neuroinflammatory reactivity in astrocytes. Ca2+ imaging experiments were performed using cells loaded with the Ca2+ indicator Fura-2/AM. Co-cultured astrocytes responded to lower concentrations of nicotine than did monocultured astrocytes, indicating that they are more sensitive to nicotine. Co-cultured astrocytes also expressed a higher selectivity for α7nAChR and α4/β2 subunits and evoked higher Ca2+ transients compared with monocultured astrocytes. The Ca2+ transients referred to are activators of Ca2+-induced Ca2+ release from intracellular stores, both IP3 and ryanodine, triggered by influx through receptor channels. The nicotine-induced Ca2+ transients were attenuated after incubation with the inflammatory mediator lipopolysaccharide (LPS), but were not attenuated after incubation with the pain-transmitting peptides substance P and calcitonin-gene-related peptide, nor with the infection and inflammation stress mediator, leptin. Furthermore, LPS-induced release of interleukin-1β (IL-1β) measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) was more pronounced in co-cultured versus monocultured astrocytes. Incubation with both LPS and IL-1β further attenuated nicotine-induced Ca2+ response. We also found that LPS and IL-1β induced rearrangement of the F-actin filaments, as measured with an Alexa488-conjugated phalloidin probe. The rearrangements consisted of increases in ring formations and a more dispersed appearance of the filaments. These results indicate that there is a connection between a dysfunction of nicotine Ca2+ signaling in inflammatory reactive astrocytes and upregulation of IL-1β and the rearrangements of actin filaments in the cells.

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