Neurobiology of Disease (Nov 2005)

Neuronal damage after moderate hypoxia and erythropoietin

  • Astrid Weber,
  • Mark Dzietko,
  • Monika Berns,
  • Ursula Felderhoff-Mueser,
  • Uwe Heinemann,
  • Rolf F. Maier,
  • Michael Obladen,
  • Chrissanthi Ikonomidou,
  • Christoph Bührer

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 2
pp. 594 – 600

Abstract

Read online

Both mild hypoxia and exogenous erythropoietin may protect the brain against subsequent severe hypoxia, and the conditioning effect of transient hypoxia is partly mediated by hypoxia-induced endogenous erythropoietin. We now observed in several experimental models that combining transient hypoxia and exogenous erythropoietin may cause neuronal damage. High-dose erythropoietin (40 IU/ml) profoundly impeded synaptic transmission of rat hippocampal slice cultures when used in conjunction with moderate hypoxia (10% O2 for two 8-h periods). Addition of erythropoietin increased viability of cultured rat embryonic cortical neurons at 21% O2 but decreased viability under hypoxic conditions (2% O2) in a dose-dependent fashion. Death of human neuronal precursor cells challenged by oxygen and glucose deprivation was increased by erythropoietin when cells were cultured under hypoxic but not under normoxic conditions. In neonatal rats exposed to moderate hypoxia plus erythropoietin, numbers of degenerating cerebral neurons were increased, as compared to controls or rats subjected to either hypoxia or erythropoietin alone. Thus, erythropoietin may aggravate rather than ameliorate neuronal damage when administered during transient hypoxia.

Keywords