AC105 Increases Extracellular Magnesium Delivery and Reduces Excitotoxic Glutamate Exposure within Injured Spinal Cords in Rats.

JOURNAL OF NEUROTRAUMA(2017)

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摘要
Magnesium (Mg2+) homeostasis is impaired following spinal cord injury (SCI) and the loss of extracellular Mg2+ contributes to secondary injury by various mechanisms, including glutamate neurotoxicity. The neuroprotective effects of high dose Mg2+ supplementation have been reported in many animal models. Recent studies found that lower Mg2+ doses also improved neurologic outcomes when Mg2+ was formulated with polyethylene glycol (PEG), suggesting that a PEG/ Mg2+ formulation might increase Mg2+ delivery to the injured spinal cord, compared with that of MgSO4 alone. Here, we assessed spinal extracellular Mg2+ and glutamate levels following SCI in rats using microdialysis. Basal levels of extracellular Mg2+ (similar to 0.5mM) were significantly reduced to 0.15 mM in the core and 0.12 mM in the rostral peri-lesion area after SCI. A single intravenous infusion of saline or of MgSO4 at 192 mu moL/kg did not significantly change extracellular Mg2+ concentrations. However, a single infusion of AC105 (a MgCl2 in PEG) at an equimolar Mg2+ dose significantly increased the Mg2+ concentration to 0.3 mM (core area) and 0.25 mM (rostral peri-lesion area). Moreover, multiple AC105 treatments completely restored the depleted extracellular Mg2+ concentrations after SCI to levels in the uninjured spinal cord. Repeated MgSO4 infusions slightly increased the Mg2+ concentrations while saline infusion had no effect. In addition, AC105 treatment significantly reduced extracellular glutamate levels in the lesion center after SCI. These results indicate that intravenous infusion of PEG-formulated Mg2+ normalized the Mg2+ homeostasis following SCI and reduced potentially neurotoxic glutamate levels, consistent with a neuroprotective mechanism of blocking excitotoxicity.
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关键词
magnesium,microdialysis,polyethylene glycol,spinal cord injury,rat
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