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      The PDGF B-chain is involved in the ontogenic susceptibility of the developing rat brain to NMDA toxicity.

      Experimental Neurology
      Aging, Analysis of Variance, Animals, Animals, Newborn, Brain, drug effects, growth & development, pathology, COS Cells, Cercopithecus aethiops, DNA, metabolism, Disease Susceptibility, Drug Interactions, Excitatory Amino Acid Agonists, toxicity, Immunoblotting, methods, Immunohistochemistry, N-Methylaspartate, Oligoribonucleotides, Antisense, pharmacology, Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-sis, Rats, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction, Transfection

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          Abstract

          Hypoxic-ischemic (H-I) injury to neonatal brains can cause a life-long neuronal deficit because of increased susceptibility in the neonatal period. Excitotoxicity due to overstimulation of the N-methyl-d-aspartate receptor (NMDAR) is assumed to be the basis of the injury. However, the ontogenic profile of the susceptibility does not directly correlate with the levels of NMDAR expression. Platelet-derived growth factor B-chain (PDGF-B) has been reported to protect neurons by suppressing the NMDA-evoked current and translocating the glutamate transporter to the cell membrane. Thus, we assessed the relationship between the susceptibility to H-I injury and the expression of PDGF-B in neonatal rat brain. PDGF-B infusion before and after an intrastriatal NMDA injection significantly reduced the size of the lesions in 7-day-old rats, when they are most susceptible and the neuronal expression of PDGF-B is low. Fourteen-day-old neonatal rats were found to be resistant to NMDA injury, even though NMDARs are expressed at high levels in the brain at this age. Inhibition of PDGF-B protein synthesis by antisense oligodeoxynucleotides increased the size of the NMDA-induced lesions up to 6-fold at postnatal day 14, when PDGF-B is expressed at high levels in neurons. These data suggest that PDGF-B is an important physiological modulator of NMDAR excitability in the developing brain, and that the balance between the expression of NMDAR and PDGF-B partly determines the ontogenic susceptibility to brain injury. Enhancement of the PDGF-B/receptor signal pathway might rescue neonatal brains at risk of H-I injury.

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