Anandamide-induced cell death in primary neuronal cultures: role of calpain and caspase pathways
- 17 September 2004
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Cell Death & Differentiation
- Vol. 11 (10) , 1121-1132
- https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.cdd.4401442
Abstract
Anandamide (arachidonoylethanolamide or AEA) is an endocannabinoid that acts at vanilloid (VR1) as well as at cannabinoid (CB1/CB2) and NMDA receptors. Here, we show that AEA, in a dose-dependent manner, causes cell death in cultured rat cortical neurons and cerebellar granule cells. Inhibition of CB1, CB2, VR1 or NMDA receptors by selective antagonists did not reduce AEA neurotoxicity. Anandamide-induced neuronal cell loss was associated with increased intracellular Ca2+, nuclear condensation and fragmentation, decreases in mitochondrial membrane potential, translocation of cytochrome c, and upregulation of caspase-3-like activity. However, caspase-3, caspase-8 or caspase-9 inhibitors, or blockade of protein synthesis by cycloheximide did not alter anandamide-related cell death. Moreover, AEA caused cell death in caspase-3-deficient MCF-7 cell line and showed similar cytotoxic effects in caspase-9 dominant-negative, caspase-8 dominant-negative or mock-transfected SH-SY5Y neuroblastoma cells. Anandamide upregulated calpain activity in cortical neurons, as revealed by -spectrin cleavage, which was attenuated by the calpain inhibitor calpastatin. Calpain inhibition significantly limited anandamide-induced neuronal loss and associated cytochrome c release. These data indicate that AEA neurotoxicity appears not to be mediated by CB1, CB2, VR1 or NMDA receptors and suggest that calpain activation, rather than intrinsic or extrinsic caspase pathways, may play a critical role in anandamide-induced cell death.Keywords
This publication has 60 references indexed in Scilit:
- ‘Entourage’ effects of N‐acyl ethanolamines at human vanilloid receptors. Comparison of effects upon anandamide‐induced vanilloid receptor activation and upon anandamide metabolismBritish Journal of Pharmacology, 2002
- Endocannabinoids in the central nervous system-an overviewProstaglandins, Leukotrienes & Essential Fatty Acids, 2002
- Acute Neuronal Injury, Excitotoxicity, and the Endocannabinoid SystemMolecular Neurobiology, 2002
- Anandamide Activates Vanilloid Receptor 1 (VR1) at Acidic pH in Dorsal Root Ganglia Neurons and Cells Ectopically Expressing VR1Journal of Biological Chemistry, 2001
- Characterization of palmitoylethanolamide transport in mouse Neuro‐2a neuroblastoma and rat RBL‐2H3 basophilic leukaemia cells: comparison with anandamideBritish Journal of Pharmacology, 2001
- The endogenous lipid anandamide is a full agonist at the human vanilloid receptor (hVR1)British Journal of Pharmacology, 2000
- Evidence That 2-Arachidonoylglycerol but Not N-Palmitoylethanolamine or Anandamide Is the Physiological Ligand for the Cannabinoid CB2 ReceptorJournal of Biological Chemistry, 2000
- Anandamide‐induced mobilization of cytosolic Ca2+ in endothelial cellsBritish Journal of Pharmacology, 1999
- Fatty acid amide hydrolase, the degradative enzyme for anandamide and oleamide, has selective distribution in neurons within the rat central nervous systemJournal of Neuroscience Research, 1997
- Formation and inactivation of endogenous cannabinoid anandamide in central neuronsNature, 1994