Neurobiology of Disease (Dec 2003)

Intermittent hypoxia induces time-dependent changes in the protein kinase B signaling pathway in the hippocampal CA1 region of the rat

  • Aviv Goldbart,
  • Zixi (Jack) Cheng,
  • Kenneth R Brittian,
  • David Gozal

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 3
pp. 440 – 446

Abstract

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Intermittent hypoxia (IH) during sleep induces temporally defined increases in apoptosis within vulnerable brain regions such as the hippocampal CA1 region in rats. Protein kinase B (AKT) has emerged as major signal transduction protein underlying inhibition of apoptosis and consequent increases in cell survival. Sprague Dawley adult male rats were exposed during sleep to IH or to normoxia (RA) for periods ranging from 0 to 30 days, and expression of total and phosphorylated AKT, of forkhead family members FKHR and FKHRL1, and of glycogen synthase kinase 3β (GSK3β) was assessed. Decreases in phosphorylation occurred as early as 1 h IH exposure, reached a nadir at 6 h–3 days, and then progressively returned to baseline levels at 14–30 days. Phosphorylated AKT and GSK3β were intensely expressed and highly colocalized within neuronal cells (Neu-N positive) in the CA1 region. Thus, IH induces time-dependent biphasic changes in AKT survival pathways within the CA1 region that are temporally correlated with the initial increases and subsequent decreases in neuronal apoptosis.

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