Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9416033 | Brain Research | 2005 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
The red wine ingredient trans-resveratrol was found to exert potent neuroprotective effects in different in vivo and in vitro models. Thus far, the mechanisms underlying the neuroprotection were attributed mainly to its antioxidant properties. The aim of this study was to investigate the actions of trans-resveratrol on voltage-gated K+ channels, which have been implicated in neuronal apoptosis. Superfusion of trans-resveratrol reversibly inhibited both the delayed rectifier (IK) and fast transient K+ current (IA) in rat dissociated hippocampal neurons with IC50 values of 13.6 ± 1.0 μM and 45.7 ± 7.5 μM, respectively. The inhibition on IK had a slow onset, was neither voltage dependent nor use dependent. Trans-resveratrol (30 μM) shifted the steady-state inactivation curve of IK to the hyperpolarizing direction by 20 mV and slowed down its recovery from inactivation. The inhibition on IA was similar to that on IK, but voltage dependent. Superfusion of trans-resveratrol (30 μM) shifted the steady-state activation curve of IA to the depolarizing direction by 17 mV. Intracellular application of trans-resveratrol (30 μM) was ineffective. Based on the comparable effective concentrations, the inhibition of voltage-activated K+ currents by trans-resveratrol may contribute to its neuroprotective effects.
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Neuroscience
Neuroscience (General)
Authors
Zhao-Bing Gao, Guo-Yuan Hu,