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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0241981 (
loss of balance
)
452
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A
loss of balance
between excitatory and inhibitory signaling leads to excitoxicity, and contributes to ischemic cell death. Reduced synaptic inhibition as a result of dysfunction of the ionotropic GABAA receptor has been suggested as one of the major causes for this imbalance, although the underlying mechanisms remain poorly understood. In the present study, we investigated whether oxygen-glucose deprivation (OGD), an ischemia-like challenge, alters cell-surface expression of GABAA receptors in cultured hippocampal neurons, and thereby leads to excitotoxic cell death. Using cell culture ELISA as a cell surface receptor assay, we found that OGD produced a marked decrease in cell surface GABAA receptors, without altering the total amount of receptors. Furthermore, the reduction could be prevented by inhibition of receptor endocytosis with hypertonic sucrose treatment. Notably,
insulin
significantly limited OGD-induced changes in cell-surface GABAA receptors. In parallel,
insulin
protected cultured neurons against both glutamate toxicity and OGD, as assayed by mitochondrial reduction of Alamar Blue. Importantly,
insulin
-mediated neuroprotection was eliminated when bicuculline, a GABAA receptor antagonist, was co-applied with
insulin
during OGD. Together, our results strongly suggest that ischemia-like insults decrease cell surface GABAA receptors in neurons via accelerated internalization, and that
insulin
provides neuroprotection by counteracting this reduction.
...
PMID:Insulin exerts neuroprotection by counteracting the decrease in cell-surface GABA receptors following oxygen-glucose deprivation in cultured cortical neurons. 1560
Obesity is one of the most prevalent diseases in the modern world. It results from the progressive
loss of balance
between food intake and whole body energy expenditure. Recent studies have shown that consumption of fat-rich diets induces hypothalamic inflammation and dysfunction which is characterized by defective response to anorexygenic and thermogenic hormones, such as leptin and
insulin
, leading to anomalous neurotransmitter production and favoring body mass gain. In this chapter, we present the main recent advances in this rapidly evolving field, focusing on the role of hypothalamic inflammation on the genesis of obesity.
...
PMID:Hypothalamic inflammation and obesity. 2047 36