Zinc and Excitotoxic Brain Injury: A New Model
- 1 February 2004
- journal article
- review article
- Published by SAGE Publications in The Neuroscientist
- Vol. 10 (1) , 18-25
- https://doi.org/10.1177/1073858403255840
Abstract
It has been nearly 15 years since the suggestion that synaptically released Zn2+ might contribute to excitotoxic brain injury after seizures, stroke, and brain trauma. In the original “zinc-translocation” model, it was proposed that synaptically released Zn2+ ions penetrated postsynaptic neurons, causing injury. According to the model, chelating zinc in the cleft was predicted to be neuroprotective. This proved to be true: zinc chelators have proved to be remarkably potent at reducing excitotoxic neuronal injury in many paradigms. Promising new zinc-based therapies for stroke, head trauma, and epileptic brain injury are under development. However, new evidence suggests that the original translocation model was incomplete. As many as three sources of toxic zinc ions may contribute to excitotoxicity: presynaptic vesicles, postsynaptic zincsequestering proteins, and (more speculatively) mitochondrial pools. The authors present a new model of zinc currents and zinc toxicity that offers expanded opportunities for zinc-selective therapeutic chelation interventions.Keywords
This publication has 71 references indexed in Scilit:
- Treatment with a Copper-Zinc Chelator Markedly and Rapidly Inhibits β-Amyloid Accumulation in Alzheimer's Disease Transgenic MicePublished by Elsevier ,2001
- Aqueous Dissolution of Alzheimer's Disease Aβ Amyloid Deposits by Biometal DepletionJournal of Biological Chemistry, 1999
- Experience-dependent alteration of synaptic zinc in rat somatosensory barrel cortexSomatosensory & Motor Research, 1999
- Effect of metal chelating agents on the direct and seizure-related neuronal death induced by zinc and kainic acidBrain Research, 1998
- Role of zinc in blockade of excitotoxic action of quinolinic acid by picolinic acidAmino Acids, 1998
- Zinc and Alzheimer's disease: is there a direct link?Brain Research Reviews, 1997
- Zn2+ permeates Ca2+permeable AMPA/kainate channels and triggers selective neural injuryNeuroReport, 1995
- Inhibition of Nitric Oxide Synthase Activity by Zn2+ IonBiochemistry, 1995
- Zinc-positive boutons in the cerebral cortex of lizards show glutamate immunoreactivityJournal of Neurocytology, 1991
- Acid-vapor decomposition for determination of zinc in brain tissue by isotope dilution mass spectrometryAnalytical Chemistry, 1983