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Lithium blocks the c-Jun stress response and protects neurons via its action on glycogen synthase kinase 3




TekijätHongisto V, Smeds N, Brecht S, Herdegen T, Courtney MJ, Coffey ET

KustantajaAMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY

Julkaisuvuosi2003

JournalMolecular and Cellular Biology

Tietokannassa oleva lehden nimiMOLECULAR AND CELLULAR BIOLOGY

Lehden akronyymiMOL CELL BIOL

Vuosikerta23

Numero17

Aloitussivu6027

Lopetussivu6036

Sivujen määrä10

ISSN0270-7306

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1128/MCB.23.17.6027-6036.2003


Tiivistelmä
Lithium has been used as an effective mood-stabilizing drug for the treatment of manic episodes and depression for 50 years. More recently, lithium has been found to protect neurons from death induced by a wide array of neurotoxic insults. However, the molecular basis for the prophylactic effects of lithium have remained obscure. A target of lithium, glycogen synthase kinase 3 (GSK-3), is implicated in neuronal death after trophic deprivation. The mechanism whereby GSK-3 exerts its neurotoxic effects is also unknown. Here we show that lithium blocks the canonical c-Jun apoptotic pathway in cerebellar granule neurons deprived of trophic support. This effect is mimicked by the structurally independent inhibitors of GSK-3, FRAT1, and indirubin. Like lithium, these prevent the stress induced c-Jun protein increase and subsequent apoptosis. These events are downstream of c-Jun transactivation, since GSK-3 inhibitors block neuronal death induced by constitutively active c-Jun (Ser/Thr-->Asp) and FRAT1 expression inhibits AP1 reporter activity. Consistent with this, AP1-dependent expression of proapoptotic Bim requires GSK-3-like activity. These data suggest that a GSK-3-like kinase acts in tandem with c-Jun N-terminal kinase to coordinate the full execution of the c-Jun stress response and neuronal death in response to trophic deprivation.



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