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Threshold to N-methyl-D-aspartate-induced seizures in mice undergoing chronic nutritional magnesium deprivation is lowered in a way partly responsive to acute magnesium and antioxidant administrations

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 June 2008

Pierre Maurois
Affiliation:
Faculté de Pharmacie, Université Paris Sud 11, F-92296Châtenay-Malabry, France CNRS UMR 8162, IFR 13, Centre Chirurgical Marie Lannelongue, F-92350Le Plessis Robinson, France
Nicole Pages
Affiliation:
Laboratoire de Toxicologie, Faculté de Pharmacie, Université Louis Pasteur, F-67401Illkirch, France
Pierre Bac
Affiliation:
Faculté de Pharmacie, Université Paris Sud 11, F-92296Châtenay-Malabry, France CNRS UMR 8162, IFR 13, Centre Chirurgical Marie Lannelongue, F-92350Le Plessis Robinson, France
Michèle German-Fattal
Affiliation:
Faculté de Pharmacie, Université Paris Sud 11, F-92296Châtenay-Malabry, France CNRS UMR 8162, IFR 13, Centre Chirurgical Marie Lannelongue, F-92350Le Plessis Robinson, France
Geneviève Agnani
Affiliation:
NMPA, University of Paris XI, Orsay, France
Bernadette Delplanque
Affiliation:
NMPA, University of Paris XI, Orsay, France
Jean Durlach
Affiliation:
SDRM, Université Pierre et Marie Curie, Paris VI, Paris, France
Jacques Poupaert
Affiliation:
Deparment of Medicinal Chemistry, School of Pharmacy, UCL, Brussels, Belgium
Joseph Vamecq*
Affiliation:
INSERM Univ 045131, EA1046Lille, France
*
*Corresponding author: Joseph Vamecq, fax +33 320 44 53 93, email joseph.vamecq@inserm.fr
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Abstract

Magnesium deficiency may be induced by a diet impoverished in magnesium. This nutritional deficit promotes chronic inflammatory and oxidative stresses, hyperexcitability and, in mice, susceptibility to audiogenic seizures. Potentiation by low-magnesium concentrations of the opening of N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) receptor/calcium channel in in vitro and ex vivo studies, and responsiveness to magnesium of in vivo brain injury states are now well established. By contrast, little or no specific attention has been, however, paid to the in vivo NMDA receptor function/excitability in magnesium deficiency. The present work reports for the first time that, in mice undergoing chronic nutritional deprivation in magnesium (35 v. 930 parts per million for 27 d in OF1 mice), NMDA-induced seizure threshold is significantly decreased (38 % of normal values). The attenuation in the drop of NMDA seizure threshold (percentage of reversal) was 58 and 20 % upon acute intraperitoneal administrations of magnesium chloride hexahydrate (28 mg magnesium/kg) and the antioxidant ebselen (20 mg/kg), respectively. In nutritionally magnesium-deprived animals, audiogenic seizures are completely prevented by these compound doses. Taken as a whole, our data emphasise that chronic magnesium deprivation in mice is a nutritional in vivo model for a lowered NMDA receptor activation threshold. This nutritional model responds remarkably to acute magnesium supply and moderately to acute antioxidant administration.

Information

Type
Short-Communication
Copyright
Copyright © The Authors 2008
Figure 0

Table 1 Comparative seizure susceptibility of mice given a standard animal chow and a magnesium-deprived diet, and ability of compounds to reverse changes related to magnesium deprivation

Figure 1

Fig. 1 Differential effect of acute magnesium administrations on audiogenic seizure susceptibility () and N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) seizure threshold lowering () encountered in the mice fed a diet impoverished in magnesium. Each group of mice (n 6) was given chronically the magnesium-deficient diet before being (2·8, 5·6, 11·2, 16·8, 22·5 and 28 mg magnesium/kg body weight) or not (No) submitted to acute magnesium administration. Note that the effects illustrated in this figure and those shown in Table 1 are induced by the tested compounds (here, magnesium chloride hexahydrate) 30 min after the intraperitoneal administration. * and **: P < 0·005 and P < 0·001, respectively (comparison of mice given acute magnesium v. the ‘no’ group). † and ‡: P < 0·01 and P < 0·001, respectively (comparison is made between 22·4 and 28 mg/kg groups with the group of mice given 16·8 mg/kg magnesium). §: P < 0·01 when comparing the groups of mice receiving 28 mg/kg with the group given 22·4 mg/kg magnesium.