Korean J Physiol Pharmacol.
1999 Apr;3(2):127-135.
Effects of dexamethasone and DHEA on the responses of rat cerebral cortical astrocytes to lipopolysaccharide and antimycin A
- Affiliations
-
- 1Department of Pharmacology, Korea University College of Medicine,
Seoul, 136-705 South Korea.
Abstract
-
As part of a study on the effects of dexamethasone and
dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) on the biological roles of astrocytes in
brain injury, this study evaluated the effects of dexamethasone and
DHEA on the responses of primary cultured rat cortical astrocytes to
lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and antimycin A. Dexamethasone decreased
spontaneous release of LDH from astrocytes, and the dexamethasone
effect was inhibited by DHEA. However, the inhibitory effect of DHEA on
the dexamethasone-induced decrease of LDH release was not shown in
astrocytes treated with LPS, and antimycin A-induced LDH release was
not affected by dexamethasone or DHEA. Unlike dexamethasone, DHEA
increased MTT value of astrocytes and also attenuated the antimycin
A-induced decrease of MTT value. Glutamine synthetase activity of
astrocytes was not affected by DHEA or LPS but increased by
dexamethasone, and the dexamethasone-dependent increase was attenuated
by DHEA. However, antimycin A markedly decreased glutamine synthetase
activity, and the antimycin A effect was not affected by dexamethasone
or DHEA. Basal release of (3H)arachidonic acid from astrocytes was
moderately increased by LPS and markedly by antimycin A. Dexamethasone
inhibited the basal and LPS-dependent releases of (3H)arachidonic acid,
but neither dexamethasone nor DHEA affected antimycin A-induced
(3H)arachidonic acid release. Basal IL-6 release from astrocytes was
not affected by dexamethasone or DHEA but markedly increased by LPS and
antimycin A. LPS-induced IL-6 release was attenuated by dexamethasone
but was little affected by DHEA, and antimycin A-induced IL-6 release
was attenuated by DHEA as well as dexamethasone. At the concentration
of dexamethasone and DHEA which does not affect basal NO release from
astrocytes, they moderately inhibited LPS-induced NO release but little
affected antimycin A-induced decrease of NO release. Taken together,
these results suggest that dexamethasone and DHEA, in somewhat
different manners, modulate the astrocyte reactivity in brain injuries
inhibitorily.