U. Boschert et al., INDUCTION OF THE DUAL-SPECIFICITY PHOSPHATASE PAC1 IN RAT-BRAIN FOLLOWING SEIZURE ACTIVITY, NeuroReport, 8(14), 1997, pp. 3077-3080
RECURRENT seizure activity leads to delayed neuronal death as well as
to inflammatory responses involving microglia in hippocampal subfields
CA1, CA3 and CA4. Since mitogen activated protein (MAP) kinases contr
ol neuronal apoptosis and trigger generation of inflammatory cytokines
, their activation state could determine seizure-related brain damage.
PAC1 is a dual specificity protein phosphatase inactivating MAP kinas
es which we have found to be undetectable in normal brain. Despite thi
s, kainic acid-induced seizure activity lead to rapid (similar to 3 h)
but transient appearance of PAC1 mRNA in granule cells of the dentate
gyrus as well as in pyramidal CA1 neurons. This pattern changed with
time and after 2-3 days PAC1 was induced in dying CA1 and CA3 neurons.
At this time PAC1 mRNA was also expressed in white matter microglia a
s well as in microglia invading the damaged hippocampus. PAC1 may play
an important role controlling MAP kinase involvement in both neuronal
death and neuro-inflammation following excitotoxic damage.