Exposure of mature rat cerebellar granule neurons to non-depolarizing conditions (5 mM K+) for 24 h resulted in the onset of apoptosis. NMDA, forskolin, carbachol and GABA attenuated low K+-induced toxicity, although to a different extent, with NMDA and GABA being the most effective agents. When cells were co-exposed for 24 h to ethanol, the survival promoting action of NMDA and carbachol, but not that of forskolin and GABA, was attenuated. By contrast, a 24 h cell pre-treatment with ethanol, followed by its removal prior to K+ deprivation, was ineffective towards the neurotrophic action of NMDA and carbachol. The concomitant presence of alcohol and neurotrophic factors was not required for the pro-apoptotic effect of ethanol to be manifest after a long-term alcohol exposure: inhibition of NMDA- and carbachol-mediated neurotrophism was still observed when cells were pre-exposed for 72 h to alcohol in depolarizing conditions, prior to the challenge with 5 mM K+-containing medium and the test compounds in the absence of ethanol. The present study shows that ethanol promotes apoptotic cell death of cultured cerebellar neurons by selectively inhibiting the neurotrophic effect of NMDA and carbachol, and suggests that alcohol may cause permanent changes in the control mechanisms of apoptosis: this finding may have significant implications for the in vivo toxicity of prenatal ethanol exposure on the developing cerebellum.
Copyright 1998 Elsevier Science B.V.