N-Acetyl-L-aspartyl-L-glutamate (NAAG) is one of the most abundant neuroactive compounds in the mammalian CNS. Our recent observations have suggested that NAAG administered into rat cerebral ventricles can cause neuronal death by apparently excitotoxic mechanisms that can be antagonized by the N-methyl-D-aspartate-receptor blockers and by ligands of metabotropic glutamate receptor of Group II.
Therefore, the principal aim of the present study has been to use quantitative morphology, electron microscopy and terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated biotin dUTP nick-end labeling to study a dose- and time-dependence as well as regional distribution of neurodegeneration in hippocampi of rats after the intraventricular infusion of 0,25 microM NAAG/ventricle and of equimolar doses of L-glutamate (L-GLU) and N-acetyl-L-aspartate (NAA), breakdown products of NAAG. The degenerative changes were observed after the infusion of 0,25 and 1,25 microM of NAAG/ventricle, but not when a dose of 0,05 microM of NAAG/ventricle was injected into each lateral cerebral ventricle.
With a dose of 0,25 microM of NAAG/ventricle the number of degenerated neurons reached a maximum on the fourth day after the infusion. : The neuronal damage following bilateral administration of 0,25 microM of NAAG/lateral cerebral ventricle exhibited features of a delayed neuronal degeneration, expressed mainly in the layer of dentale granule neurons. The degeneration was characterized on the basis of ultrastructural appearance and DNA-fragmentation.
The morphological changes caused by L-glutamate and NAA were much smaller than those observed after the administration of NAAG and displayed a different pattern of regional distribution. The present findings suggest that NAAG can cause a loss of hippocampal neurons in vivo, apparently resulting from the neurotoxicity of NAAG itself