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Excitotoxicity

In excitotoxicity, nerve cells suffer damage or death when the levels of otherwise necessary and safe neurotransmitters such as glutamate become pathologically high, resulting in excessive stimulation of receptors. For example, when glutamate receptors such as the NMDA receptor or AMPA receptor encounter excessive levels of the excitatory neurotransmitter, glutamate, significant neuronal damage might ensue. Excess glutamate allows high levels of calcium ions (Ca2+) to enter the cell. Ca2+ influx into cells activates a number of enzymes, including phospholipases, endonucleases, and proteases such as calpain. These enzymes go on to damage cell structures such as components of the cytoskeleton, membrane, and DNA.[1][2] In evolved, complex adaptive systems such as biological life it must be understood that mechanisms are rarely, if ever, simplistically direct. For example, NMDA in subtoxic amounts induces neuronal survival of otherwise toxic levels of glutamate.[3][4]

Low Ca2+ buffering and excitotoxicity under physiological stress and pathophysiological conditions in motor neuron (MNs). Low Ca2+ buffering in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) vulnerable hypoglossal MNs exposes mitochondria to higher Ca2+ loads compared to highly buffered cells. Under normal physiological conditions, the neurotransmitter opens glutamate, NMDA and AMPA receptor channels, and voltage dependent Ca2+ channels (VDCC) with high glutamate release, which is taken up again by EAAT1 and EAAT2. This results in a small rise in intracellular calcium that can be buffered in the cell. In ALS, a disorder in the glutamate receptor channels leads to high calcium conductivity, resulting in high Ca2+ loads and increased risk for mitochondrial damage. This triggers the mitochondrial production of reactive oxygen species (ROS), which then inhibit glial EAAT2 function. This leads to further increases in the glutamate concentration at the synapse and further rises in postsynaptic calcium levels, contributing to the selective vulnerability of MNs in ALS. Jaiswal et al., 2009.[1]

Excitotoxicity may be involved in cancers, spinal cord injury, stroke, traumatic brain injury, hearing loss (through noise overexposure or ototoxicity), and in neurodegenerative diseases of the central nervous system such as multiple sclerosis, Alzheimer's disease, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), Parkinson's disease, alcoholism, alcohol withdrawal or hyperammonemia and especially over-rapid benzodiazepine withdrawal, and also Huntington's disease.[5][6] Other common conditions that cause excessive glutamate concentrations around neurons are hypoglycemia. Blood sugars are the primary glutamate removal method from inter-synaptic spaces at the NMDA and AMPA receptor site. Persons in excitotoxic shock must never fall into hypoglycemia. Patients should be given 5% glucose (dextrose) IV drip during excitotoxic shock to avoid a dangerous build up of glutamate around NMDA and AMPA neurons.[citation needed] When 5% glucose (dextrose) IV drip is not available high levels of fructose are given orally. Treatment is administered during the acute stages of excitotoxic shock along with glutamate antagonists. Dehydration should be avoided as this also contributes to the concentrations of glutamate in the inter-synaptic cleft[7] and "status epilepticus can also be triggered by a build up of glutamate around inter-synaptic neurons."[8]

History Edit

The harmful effects of glutamate on the central nervous system were first observed in 1954 by T. Hayashi, a Japanese scientist who stated that direct application of glutamate caused seizure activity,[9] though this report went unnoticed for several years.[citation needed] D. R. Lucas and J. P. Newhouse, after noting that "single doses of [20–30 grams of sodium glutamate in humans] have ... been administered intravenously without permanent ill-effects", observed in 1957 that a subcutaneous dose described as "a little less than lethal", destroyed the neurons in the inner layers of the retina in newborn mice.[10] In 1969, John Olney discovered that the phenomenon was not restricted to the retina, but occurred throughout the brain, and coined the term excitotoxicity. He also assessed that cell death was restricted to postsynaptic neurons, that glutamate agonists were as neurotoxic as their efficiency to activate glutamate receptors, and that glutamate antagonists could stop the neurotoxicity.[11]

In 2002, Hilmar Bading and co-workers found that excitotoxicity is caused by the activation of NMDA receptors located outside synaptic contacts.[12] The molecular basis for toxic extrasynaptic NMDA receptor signaling was uncovered in 2020 when Hilmar Bading and co-workers described a death signaling complex that consists of extrasynaptic NMDA receptor and TRPM4.[13] Disruption of this complex using NMDAR/TRPM4 interface inhibitors (also known as ‚interface inhibitors‘) renders extrasynaptic NMDA receptor non-toxic.[citation needed]

Pathophysiology Edit

Excitotoxicity can occur from substances produced within the body (endogenous excitotoxins). Glutamate is a prime example of an excitotoxin in the brain, and it is also the major excitatory neurotransmitter in the central nervous system of mammals.[14] During normal conditions, glutamate concentration can be increased up to 1mM in the synaptic cleft, which is rapidly decreased in the lapse of milliseconds.[15] When the glutamate concentration around the synaptic cleft cannot be decreased or reaches higher levels, the neuron kills itself by a process called apoptosis.[16][17]

This pathologic phenomenon can also occur after brain injury and spinal cord injury. Within minutes after spinal cord injury, damaged neural cells within the lesion site spill glutamate into the extracellular space where glutamate can stimulate presynaptic glutamate receptors to enhance the release of additional glutamate.[18] Brain trauma or stroke can cause ischemia, in which blood flow is reduced to inadequate levels. Ischemia is followed by accumulation of glutamate and aspartate in the extracellular fluid, causing cell death, which is aggravated by lack of oxygen and glucose. The biochemical cascade resulting from ischemia and involving excitotoxicity is called the ischemic cascade. Because of the events resulting from ischemia and glutamate receptor activation, a deep chemical coma may be induced in patients with brain injury to reduce the metabolic rate of the brain (its need for oxygen and glucose) and save energy to be used to remove glutamate actively. (The main aim in induced comas is to reduce the intracranial pressure, not brain metabolism).[citation needed]

Increased extracellular glutamate levels leads to the activation of Ca2+ permeable NMDA receptors on myelin sheaths and oligodendrocytes, leaving oligodendrocytes susceptible to Ca2+ influxes and subsequent excitotoxicity.[19][20] One of the damaging results of excess calcium in the cytosol is initiating apoptosis through cleaved caspase processing.[20] Another damaging result of excess calcium in the cytosol is the opening of the mitochondrial permeability transition pore, a pore in the membranes of mitochondria that opens when the organelles absorb too much calcium. Opening of the pore may cause mitochondria to swell and release reactive oxygen species and other proteins that can lead to apoptosis. The pore can also cause mitochondria to release more calcium. In addition, production of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) may be stopped, and ATP synthase may in fact begin hydrolysing ATP instead of producing it,[21] which is suggested to be involved in depression.[22]

Inadequate ATP production resulting from brain trauma can eliminate electrochemical gradients of certain ions. Glutamate transporters require the maintenance of these ion gradients to remove glutamate from the extracellular space. The loss of ion gradients results in not only the halting of glutamate uptake, but also in the reversal of the transporters. The Na+-glutamate transporters on neurons and astrocytes can reverse their glutamate transport and start secreting glutamate at a concentration capable of inducing excitotoxicity.[23] This results in a buildup of glutamate and further damaging activation of glutamate receptors.[24]

On the molecular level, calcium influx is not the only factor responsible for apoptosis induced by excitoxicity. Recently,[25] it has been noted that extrasynaptic NMDA receptor activation, triggered by both glutamate exposure or hypoxic/ischemic conditions, activate a CREB (cAMP response element binding) protein shut-off, which in turn caused loss of mitochondrial membrane potential and apoptosis. On the other hand, activation of synaptic NMDA receptors activated only the CREB pathway, which activates BDNF (brain-derived neurotrophic factor), not activating apoptosis.[25][26]

Exogenous excitotoxins Edit

Exogenous excitotoxins refer to neurotoxins that also act at postsynaptic cells but are not normally found in the body. These toxins may enter the body of an organism from the environment through wounds, food intake, aerial dispersion etc.[27] Common excitotoxins include glutamate analogs that mimic the action of glutamate at glutamate receptors, including AMPA and NMDA receptors.[28]

BMAA Edit

The L-alanine derivative β-methylamino-L-alanine (BMAA) has long been identified as a neurotoxin which was first associated with the amyotrophic lateral sclerosis/parkinsonismdementia complex (Lytico-bodig disease) in the Chamorro people of Guam.[29] The widespread occurrence of BMAA can be attributed to cyanobacteria which produce BMAA as a result of complex reactions under nitrogen stress.[30] Following research, excitotoxicity appears to be the likely mode of action for BMAA which acts as a glutamate agonist, activating AMPA and NMDA receptors and causing damage to cells even at relatively low concentrations of 10 μM.[31] The subsequent uncontrolled influx of Ca2+ then leads to the pathophysiology described above. Further evidence of the role of BMAA as an excitotoxin is rooted in the ability of NMDA antagonists like MK801 to block the action of BMAA.[29] More recently, evidence has been found that BMAA is misincorporated in place of L-serine in human proteins.[32][33] A considerable portion of the research relating to the toxicity of BMAA has been conducted on rodents. A study published in 2016 with vervets (Chlorocebus sabaeus) in St. Kitts, which are homozygous for the apoE4 (APOE-ε4) allele (a condition which in humans is a risk factor for Alzheimer's disease), found that vervets orally administered BMAA developed hallmark histopathology features of Alzheimer's Disease including amyloid beta plaques and neurofibrillary tangle accumulation. Vervets in the trial fed smaller doses of BMAA were found to have correlative decreases in these pathology features. This study demonstrates that BMAA, an environmental toxin, can trigger neurodegenerative disease as a result of a gene/environment interaction.[34] While BMAA has been detected in brain tissue of deceased ALS/PDC patients, further insight is required to trace neurodegenerative pathology in humans to BMAA.[citation needed]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b Jaiswal MK, Zech WD, Goos M, Leutbecher C, Ferri A, Zippelius A, et al. (June 2009). "Impairment of mitochondrial calcium handling in a mtSOD1 cell culture model of motoneuron disease". BMC Neuroscience. 10: 64. doi:10.1186/1471-2202-10-64. PMC 2716351. PMID 19545440.
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Further reading Edit

excitotoxicity, excitotoxicity, nerve, cells, suffer, damage, death, when, levels, otherwise, necessary, safe, neurotransmitters, such, glutamate, become, pathologically, high, resulting, excessive, stimulation, receptors, example, when, glutamate, receptors, . In excitotoxicity nerve cells suffer damage or death when the levels of otherwise necessary and safe neurotransmitters such as glutamate become pathologically high resulting in excessive stimulation of receptors For example when glutamate receptors such as the NMDA receptor or AMPA receptor encounter excessive levels of the excitatory neurotransmitter glutamate significant neuronal damage might ensue Excess glutamate allows high levels of calcium ions Ca2 to enter the cell Ca2 influx into cells activates a number of enzymes including phospholipases endonucleases and proteases such as calpain These enzymes go on to damage cell structures such as components of the cytoskeleton membrane and DNA 1 2 In evolved complex adaptive systems such as biological life it must be understood that mechanisms are rarely if ever simplistically direct For example NMDA in subtoxic amounts induces neuronal survival of otherwise toxic levels of glutamate 3 4 Low Ca2 buffering and excitotoxicity under physiological stress and pathophysiological conditions in motor neuron MNs Low Ca2 buffering in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis ALS vulnerable hypoglossal MNs exposes mitochondria to higher Ca2 loads compared to highly buffered cells Under normal physiological conditions the neurotransmitter opens glutamate NMDA and AMPA receptor channels and voltage dependent Ca2 channels VDCC with high glutamate release which is taken up again by EAAT1 and EAAT2 This results in a small rise in intracellular calcium that can be buffered in the cell In ALS a disorder in the glutamate receptor channels leads to high calcium conductivity resulting in high Ca2 loads and increased risk for mitochondrial damage This triggers the mitochondrial production of reactive oxygen species ROS which then inhibit glial EAAT2 function This leads to further increases in the glutamate concentration at the synapse and further rises in postsynaptic calcium levels contributing to the selective vulnerability of MNs in ALS Jaiswal et al 2009 1 Excitotoxicity may be involved in cancers spinal cord injury stroke traumatic brain injury hearing loss through noise overexposure or ototoxicity and in neurodegenerative diseases of the central nervous system such as multiple sclerosis Alzheimer s disease amyotrophic lateral sclerosis ALS Parkinson s disease alcoholism alcohol withdrawal or hyperammonemia and especially over rapid benzodiazepine withdrawal and also Huntington s disease 5 6 Other common conditions that cause excessive glutamate concentrations around neurons are hypoglycemia Blood sugars are the primary glutamate removal method from inter synaptic spaces at the NMDA and AMPA receptor site Persons in excitotoxic shock must never fall into hypoglycemia Patients should be given 5 glucose dextrose IV drip during excitotoxic shock to avoid a dangerous build up of glutamate around NMDA and AMPA neurons citation needed When 5 glucose dextrose IV drip is not available high levels of fructose are given orally Treatment is administered during the acute stages of excitotoxic shock along with glutamate antagonists Dehydration should be avoided as this also contributes to the concentrations of glutamate in the inter synaptic cleft 7 and status epilepticus can also be triggered by a build up of glutamate around inter synaptic neurons 8 Contents 1 History 2 Pathophysiology 2 1 Exogenous excitotoxins 2 2 BMAA 3 See also 4 References 5 Further readingHistory EditThe harmful effects of glutamate on the central nervous system were first observed in 1954 by T Hayashi a Japanese scientist who stated that direct application of glutamate caused seizure activity 9 though this report went unnoticed for several years citation needed D R Lucas and J P Newhouse after noting that single doses of 20 30 grams of sodium glutamate in humans have been administered intravenously without permanent ill effects observed in 1957 that a subcutaneous dose described as a little less than lethal destroyed the neurons in the inner layers of the retina in newborn mice 10 In 1969 John Olney discovered that the phenomenon was not restricted to the retina but occurred throughout the brain and coined the term excitotoxicity He also assessed that cell death was restricted to postsynaptic neurons that glutamate agonists were as neurotoxic as their efficiency to activate glutamate receptors and that glutamate antagonists could stop the neurotoxicity 11 In 2002 Hilmar Bading and co workers found that excitotoxicity is caused by the activation of NMDA receptors located outside synaptic contacts 12 The molecular basis for toxic extrasynaptic NMDA receptor signaling was uncovered in 2020 when Hilmar Bading and co workers described a death signaling complex that consists of extrasynaptic NMDA receptor and TRPM4 13 Disruption of this complex using NMDAR TRPM4 interface inhibitors also known as interface inhibitors renders extrasynaptic NMDA receptor non toxic citation needed Pathophysiology EditExcitotoxicity can occur from substances produced within the body endogenous excitotoxins Glutamate is a prime example of an excitotoxin in the brain and it is also the major excitatory neurotransmitter in the central nervous system of mammals 14 During normal conditions glutamate concentration can be increased up to 1mM in the synaptic cleft which is rapidly decreased in the lapse of milliseconds 15 When the glutamate concentration around the synaptic cleft cannot be decreased or reaches higher levels the neuron kills itself by a process called apoptosis 16 17 This pathologic phenomenon can also occur after brain injury and spinal cord injury Within minutes after spinal cord injury damaged neural cells within the lesion site spill glutamate into the extracellular space where glutamate can stimulate presynaptic glutamate receptors to enhance the release of additional glutamate 18 Brain trauma or stroke can cause ischemia in which blood flow is reduced to inadequate levels Ischemia is followed by accumulation of glutamate and aspartate in the extracellular fluid causing cell death which is aggravated by lack of oxygen and glucose The biochemical cascade resulting from ischemia and involving excitotoxicity is called the ischemic cascade Because of the events resulting from ischemia and glutamate receptor activation a deep chemical coma may be induced in patients with brain injury to reduce the metabolic rate of the brain its need for oxygen and glucose and save energy to be used to remove glutamate actively The main aim in induced comas is to reduce the intracranial pressure not brain metabolism citation needed Increased extracellular glutamate levels leads to the activation of Ca2 permeable NMDA receptors on myelin sheaths and oligodendrocytes leaving oligodendrocytes susceptible to Ca2 influxes and subsequent excitotoxicity 19 20 One of the damaging results of excess calcium in the cytosol is initiating apoptosis through cleaved caspase processing 20 Another damaging result of excess calcium in the cytosol is the opening of the mitochondrial permeability transition pore a pore in the membranes of mitochondria that opens when the organelles absorb too much calcium Opening of the pore may cause mitochondria to swell and release reactive oxygen species and other proteins that can lead to apoptosis The pore can also cause mitochondria to release more calcium In addition production of adenosine triphosphate ATP may be stopped and ATP synthase may in fact begin hydrolysing ATP instead of producing it 21 which is suggested to be involved in depression 22 Inadequate ATP production resulting from brain trauma can eliminate electrochemical gradients of certain ions Glutamate transporters require the maintenance of these ion gradients to remove glutamate from the extracellular space The loss of ion gradients results in not only the halting of glutamate uptake but also in the reversal of the transporters The Na glutamate transporters on neurons and astrocytes can reverse their glutamate transport and start secreting glutamate at a concentration capable of inducing excitotoxicity 23 This results in a buildup of glutamate and further damaging activation of glutamate receptors 24 On the molecular level calcium influx is not the only factor responsible for apoptosis induced by excitoxicity Recently 25 it has been noted that extrasynaptic NMDA receptor activation triggered by both glutamate exposure or hypoxic ischemic conditions activate a CREB cAMP response element binding protein shut off which in turn caused loss of mitochondrial membrane potential and apoptosis On the other hand activation of synaptic NMDA receptors activated only the CREB pathway which activates BDNF brain derived neurotrophic factor not activating apoptosis 25 26 Exogenous excitotoxins Edit Exogenous excitotoxins refer to neurotoxins that also act at postsynaptic cells but are not normally found in the body These toxins may enter the body of an organism from the environment through wounds food intake aerial dispersion etc 27 Common excitotoxins include glutamate analogs that mimic the action of glutamate at glutamate receptors including AMPA and NMDA receptors 28 BMAA Edit The L alanine derivative b methylamino L alanine BMAA has long been identified as a neurotoxin which was first associated with the amyotrophic lateral sclerosis parkinsonism dementia complex Lytico bodig disease in the Chamorro people of Guam 29 The widespread occurrence of BMAA can be attributed to cyanobacteria which produce BMAA as a result of complex reactions under nitrogen stress 30 Following research excitotoxicity appears to be the likely mode of action for BMAA which acts as a glutamate agonist activating AMPA and NMDA receptors and causing damage to cells even at relatively low concentrations of 10 mM 31 The subsequent uncontrolled influx of Ca2 then leads to the pathophysiology described above Further evidence of the role of BMAA as an excitotoxin is rooted in the ability of NMDA antagonists like MK801 to block the action of BMAA 29 More recently evidence has been found that BMAA is misincorporated in place of L serine in human proteins 32 33 A considerable portion of the research relating to the toxicity of BMAA has been conducted on rodents A study published in 2016 with vervets Chlorocebus sabaeus in St Kitts which are homozygous for the apoE4 APOE e4 allele a condition which in humans is a risk factor for Alzheimer s disease found that vervets orally administered BMAA developed hallmark histopathology features of Alzheimer s Disease including amyloid beta plaques and neurofibrillary tangle accumulation Vervets in the trial fed smaller doses of BMAA were found to have correlative decreases in these pathology features This study demonstrates that BMAA an environmental toxin can trigger neurodegenerative disease as a result of a gene environment interaction 34 While BMAA has been detected in brain tissue of deceased ALS PDC patients further insight is required to trace neurodegenerative pathology in humans to BMAA citation needed See also EditGlutamatergic system Glutamic acid flavor NMDA receptor antagonist DihydropyridineReferences Edit a b Jaiswal MK Zech WD Goos M Leutbecher C Ferri A Zippelius A et al June 2009 Impairment of mitochondrial calcium handling in a mtSOD1 cell culture model of motoneuron disease BMC Neuroscience 10 64 doi 10 1186 1471 2202 10 64 PMC 2716351 PMID 19545440 Manev H Favaron M Guidotti A Costa E July 1989 Delayed increase of Ca2 influx elicited by glutamate role in neuronal death Molecular Pharmacology 36 1 106 112 PMID 2568579 Zheng S Eacker SM Hong SJ Gronostajski RM Dawson TM Dawson VL July 2010 NMDA induced neuronal survival is mediated through nuclear factor I A in mice The Journal of Clinical Investigation 120 7 2446 2456 doi 10 1172 JCI33144 PMC 2898580 PMID 20516644 Chuang DM Gao XM Paul SM August 1992 N methyl D aspartate exposure blocks glutamate toxicity in cultured cerebellar granule cells Molecular Pharmacology 42 2 210 216 PMID 1355259 Kim AH Kerchner GA and Choi DW Blocking Excitotoxicity or Glutamatergic Storm Chapter 1 in CNS Neuroprotection Marcoux FW and Choi DW editors Springer New York 2002 Pages 3 36 Hughes JR June 2009 Alcohol withdrawal seizures Epilepsy amp Behavior 15 2 92 97 doi 10 1016 j yebeh 2009 02 037 PMID 19249388 S2CID 20197292 Camacho A Massieu L January 2006 Role of glutamate transporters in the clearance and release of glutamate during ischemia and its relation to neuronal death Archives of Medical Research 37 1 11 18 doi 10 1016 j arcmed 2005 05 014 PMID 16314180 Fujikawa DG December 2005 Prolonged seizures and cellular injury understanding the connection Epilepsy amp Behavior 7 Suppl 3 S3 11 doi 10 1016 j yebeh 2005 08 003 PMID 16278099 S2CID 27515308 Watkins JC Jane DE January 2006 The glutamate story British Journal of Pharmacology 147 Suppl 1 Suppl 1 S100 S108 doi 10 1038 sj bjp 0706444 PMC 1760733 PMID 16402093 Lucas DR Newhouse JP August 1957 The toxic effect of sodium L glutamate on the inner layers of the retina A M A Archives of Ophthalmology 58 2 193 201 doi 10 1001 archopht 1957 00940010205006 PMID 13443577 Olney JW May 1969 Brain lesions obesity and other disturbances in mice treated with monosodium glutamate Science 164 3880 719 721 Bibcode 1969Sci 164 719O doi 10 1126 science 164 3880 719 hdl 10217 207298 PMID 5778021 S2CID 46248201 Hardingham GE Fukunaga Y Bading H May 2002 Extrasynaptic NMDARs oppose synaptic NMDARs by triggering CREB shut off and cell death pathways Nature Neuroscience 5 5 405 414 doi 10 1038 nn835 PMID 11953750 S2CID 659716 Yan J Bengtson CP Buchthal B Hagenston AM Bading H October 2020 Coupling of NMDA receptors and TRPM4 guides discovery of unconventional neuroprotectants Science 370 6513 eaay3302 doi 10 1126 science aay3302 PMID 33033186 S2CID 222210921 Temple MD O Leary DM and Faden AI The role of glutamate receptors in the pathophysiology of traumatic CNS injury Chapter 4 in Head Trauma Basic Preclinical and Clinical Directions Miller LP and Hayes RL editors Co edited by Newcomb JK John Wiley and Sons Inc New York 2001 Pages 87 113 Clements JD Lester RA Tong G Jahr CE Westbrook GL November 1992 The time course of glutamate in the synaptic cleft Science 258 5087 1498 1501 Bibcode 1992Sci 258 1498C doi 10 1126 science 1359647 PMID 1359647 Yang DD Kuan CY Whitmarsh AJ Rincon M Zheng TS Davis RJ et al October 1997 Absence of excitotoxicity induced apoptosis in the hippocampus of mice lacking the Jnk3 gene Nature 389 6653 865 870 Bibcode 1997Natur 389 865Y doi 10 1038 39899 PMID 9349820 S2CID 4430535 Ankarcrona M Dypbukt JM Bonfoco E Zhivotovsky B Orrenius S Lipton SA Nicotera P October 1995 Glutamate induced neuronal death a succession of necrosis or apoptosis depending on mitochondrial function Neuron 15 4 961 973 doi 10 1016 0896 6273 95 90186 8 PMID 7576644 Hulsebosch CE Hains BC Crown ED Carlton SM April 2009 Mechanisms of chronic central neuropathic pain after 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20842175 Brand LE 2009 Human exposure to cyanobacteria and BMAA Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis 10 Suppl 2 85 95 doi 10 3109 17482960903273585 PMID 19929739 S2CID 37986519 Vyas KJ Weiss JH 2009 BMAA an unusual cyanobacterial neurotoxin Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis 10 Suppl 2 50 55 doi 10 3109 17482960903268742 PMID 19929732 S2CID 22391321 a b Chiu AS Gehringer MM Braidy N Guillemin GJ Welch JH Neilan BA November 2012 Excitotoxic potential of the cyanotoxin b methyl amino L alanine BMAA in primary human neurons Toxicon 60 6 1159 1165 doi 10 1016 j toxicon 2012 07 169 PMID 22885173 Papapetropoulos S June 2007 Is there a role for naturally occurring cyanobacterial toxins in neurodegeneration The beta N methylamino L alanine BMAA paradigm Neurochemistry International 50 7 8 998 1003 doi 10 1016 j neuint 2006 12 011 PMID 17296249 S2CID 24476846 Team Nord 2007 Analysis occurrence and toxicity of BMAA Denmark Nordic pp 46 47 ISBN 9789289315418 Dunlop RA Cox PA Banack SA Rodgers KJ 2013 The non protein amino acid BMAA is misincorporated into human proteins in place of L serine causing protein misfolding and aggregation PLOS ONE 8 9 e75376 Bibcode 2013PLoSO 875376D doi 10 1371 journal pone 0075376 PMC 3783393 PMID 24086518 Holtcamp W March 2012 The emerging science of BMAA do cyanobacteria contribute to neurodegenerative disease Environmental Health Perspectives 120 3 A110 A116 doi 10 1289 ehp 120 a110 PMC 3295368 PMID 22382274 Cox PA Davis DA Mash DC Metcalf JS Banack SA January 2016 Dietary exposure to an environmental toxin triggers neurofibrillary tangles and amyloid deposits in the brain Proceedings Biological Sciences 283 1823 20152397 doi 10 1098 rspb 2015 2397 PMC 4795023 PMID 26791617 Further reading EditKandel ER Schwartz JH Jessel TM 2000 Principles of Neural Science 4th ed McGraw Hill p 928 Blaylock RL 1996 Excitotoxins The Taste That Kills Health Press ISBN 0 929173 25 2 page needed Lau A Tymianski M July 2010 Glutamate receptors neurotoxicity and neurodegeneration Pflugers Archiv 460 2 525 542 doi 10 1007 s00424 010 0809 1 PMID 20229265 S2CID 12421120 Invited Review Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Excitotoxicity amp oldid 1174695886, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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