Dual effects of thrombin and a 14-amino acid peptide agonist of the thrombin receptor on septal cholinergic neurons

1996 
Abstract We have compared the effects of thrombin and of the 14-amino acid peptide agonist (TRAP-14) of the thrombin protease activated receptor (PAR) on cholinergic neurons in pure cultures of rat septal neurons and in co-cultures of septal neurons and glial cells. In pure septal cultures, low concentrations of thrombin (up to 10 nM) did not affect choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) activity, a marker of cholinergic neurons, or 3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyl tetrazolium bromide (MTT) reduction, an index of cell viability. However, 100 nM thrombin decreased ChAT activity and MTT reduction by 44 and 17%, respectively. In co-cultures, a low concentration of thrombin (1 nM) increased ChAT activity (+75%), whereas a high concentration (100 nM) decreased it (−83%). At this high concentration, thrombin was neurotoxic, as indicated by a large decrease in MTT reduction (−80%). Thrombin effects on ChAT activity were mimicked by TRAP-14 both in pure septal cultures (no effect at 0.1 μM and −63% at 100 μM) and in co-cultures (+25% at 0.1 μM and −28% at 100 μ M). In contrast, this peptide did not affect MTT reduction. These dual effects of thrombin and TRAP-14 on ChAT activity in co-cultures, were also observed on pure cultures of septal cells supplied with NGF. The activation and inhibition by TRAP-14 of the expression of ChAT activity in septal neuron/glial cell cultures were inhibited by a 9-amino acid peptide antagonist of thrombin PAR. Thus, the effects of thrombin on cholinergic neurons seem to be mainly mediated by thrombin PAR and glial cells seem to play a major role in these thrombin actions.
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