Article
Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow & Metabolism (1996) 16, 585–598; doi:10.1097/00004647-199607000-00008
Metyrapone, an Inhibitor of Glucocorticoid Production, Reduces Brain Injury Induced by Focal and Global Ischemia and Seizures
Virginia L Smith-Swintosky*,†,, L Creed Pettigrew*,†,, Robert M Sapolsky§, Chris Phares§, Susan D Craddock†,, Sheila M Brooke§ and Mark P Mattson*,†,
- *Sanders-Brown Research Center on Aging, University of Kentucky, and Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Lexington, Kentucky, U.S.A.
- †Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology, University of Kentucky, and Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Lexington, Kentucky, U.S.A.
- Department of Neurology, University of Kentucky, and Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Lexington, Kentucky, U.S.A.
- §Department of Biological Sciences, Stanford University, Stanford, California, U.S.A.
Correspondence: Mark P Mattson, 211 Sanders-Brown Building, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY 40536-0230, U.S.A.
Received 16 March 1995; Revised 31 August 1995; Accepted 31 August 1995.
Abstract
Increasing evidence indicates that glucocorticoids (GCs), produced in response to physical/emotional stressors, can exacerbate brain damage resulting from cerebral ischemia and severe seizure activity. However, much of the supporting evidence has come from studies employing nonphysiological paradigms in which adrenalectomized rats were compared with those exposed to constant GC concentrations in the upper physiological range. Cerebral ischemia and seizures can induce considerable GC secretion. We now present data from experiments using metyrapone (an 11-
-hydroxylase inhibitor of GC production), which demonstrate that the GC stress-response worsens subsequent brain damage induced by ischemia and seizures in rats. Three different paradigms of brain injury were employed: middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAO) model of focal cerebral ischemia; four-vessel occlusion (4VO) model of transient global forebrain ischemia; and kainic acid (KA)-induced (seizure-mediated) excitotoxic damage to hippocampal CA3 and CA1 neurons. Metyrapone (200 mg/kg body wt) was administered systemically in a single i.p. bolus 30 min prior to each insult. In the MCAO model, metyrapone treatment significantly reduced infarct volume and also preserved cells within the infarct. In the 4VO model, neuronal loss in region CA1 of the hippocampus was significantly reduced in rats administered metyrapone. Seizure-induced damage to hippocampal pyramidal neurons (assessed by cell counts and immunochemical analyses of cytoskeletal alterations) was significantly reduced in rats administered metyrapone. Measurement of plasma levels of corticosterone (the species-typical GC of rats) after each insult showed that metyrapone significantly suppressed the injury-induced rise in levels of circulating corticosterone. These findings indicate that endogenous corticosterone contributes to the basal level of brain injury resulting from cerebral ischemia and excitotoxic seizure activity and suggest that drugs that suppress glucocorticoid production may be effective in reducing brain damage in stroke and epilepsy patients.
Keywords:
Alzheimer's, Corticosterone, Excitotoxicity, Hippocampus, Kainic acid, Microtubule-associated proteins, Middle cerebral artery occlusion, Transient global forebrain ischemia
Abbreviations:
ANOVA, analysis of variance; CCA, common carotid artery; CORT, corticosterone, 4VO, four-vessel occlusion; GC, glucocorticoid; KA, kainic acid; MCA, middle cerebral artery; MCAO, middle cerebral artery occlusion; TTC, triphenyltetrazolium chloride

