Fractalkine reduces N-methyl-d-aspartate-induced calcium flux and apoptosis in human neurons through extracellular signal-regulated kinase activation.

2004 
Our purpose was to investigate in human neurons the neuroprotective pathways induced by Fractalkine (FKN) against glutamate receptor-induced excitotoxicity. CX3CR1 and FKN are expressed constitutively in the tested human embryonic primary neurons and SK-N-SH, a human neuroblastoma cell line. Microfluorometry assay demonstrated that CX3CR1 was functional in 44% of primary neurons and in 70% of SK-N-SH. Fractalkine induced ERK1/2 phosphorylation within 1 min and Akt phosphorylation after 10 min, and both phosphorylation decreased after 20 min. No p38 and SAPK/JNK activation was observed after FKN treatment. Application of FKN triggered a 53% reduction of the NMDA-induced neuronal calcium influx, which was insensitive to pertussis toxin and LY294002 an inhibitor of Akt pathway, but abolished by PD98059, an ERK1/2 pathway inhibitor. Moreover, FKN significantly reduced neuronal NMDA-induced apoptosis, which was pertussis toxin insensitive and abolished in presence of PD98059 and LY294002. In conclusion, FKN protected human neurons from NMDA-mediated excitotoxicity in at least two ways with different kinetics: (i) an early ERK1/2 activation which reduced NMDA-mediated calcium flux; and (ii), a late Akt activation associated with the previously induced ERK1/2 activation.
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