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Targeting PSD95-nNOS interaction by Tat-N-dimer peptide during status epilepticus is neuroprotective in MAM-pilocarpine rat model

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Glutamate receptors play a crucial pathogenic role in brain damage induced by status epilepticus (SE). SE may initiate NMDAR-dependent excitotoxicity through the production of oxidative damage mediated by the activation… Click to show full abstract

Glutamate receptors play a crucial pathogenic role in brain damage induced by status epilepticus (SE). SE may initiate NMDAR-dependent excitotoxicity through the production of oxidative damage mediated by the activation of a ternary complex formed by the NMDA receptor, the post-synaptic density scaffolding protein 95 (PSD95) and the neuronal NO synthase (nNOS). The inhibition of the protein-protein-interaction (PPI) of the NMDAR-PSD95-nNOS complex is one of the most intriguing challenges recently developed to reduce neuronal death in both animal models and in patients with cerebral ischemia. We took advantage of this promising approach to verify whether early administration of a neuroprotective NMDAR-PSD95-nNOS PPI inhibitor preserves the brain from SE-induced damage in a model of acquired cortical dysplasia, the methylazoxymethanol (MAM)/pilocarpine rat. Pilocarpine-induced SE rapidly determined neurodegenerative changes mediated by a NMDAR-downstream neurotoxic pathway in MAM rats. We demonstrated that SE rapidly induces NMDAR activation, nNOS membrane translocation, PSD95-nNOS molecular interaction associated with neuronal and glial peroxynitrite accumulation in the neocortex of MAM-pilocarpine rats. These changes were paralleled by rapid c-fos overexpression and by progressive spectrin proteolysis, suggestive of calpain activity and irreversible cytoskeletal damage. Early administration of a cell-penetrating Tat-N-dimer peptide inhibitor of NMDAR-PSD95-nNOS PPI during SE significantly rescued the MAM-pilocarpine rats from SE-induced mortality, reduced the number of degenerating neurons, decreased neuronal c-fos activation, peroxynitrite formation and cytoskeletal degradation and prevented astrogliosis. Our findings suggest an overall neuroprotective effect of blocking PSD95-nNOS protein-protein-interaction against SE insult.

Keywords: pilocarpine; psd95 nnos; mam pilocarpine; pilocarpine rat; status epilepticus; interaction

Journal Title: Neuropharmacology
Year Published: 2019

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