In vitro ischemic preconditioning induced by subjecting rat cortical cultures to nonlethal oxygen-glucose deprivation protects against a subsequent exposure to otherwise lethal oxygen-glucose deprivation. We provide evidence that attenuation of the postsynaptic N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor- and Ca(2+)-dependent neurotoxicity underlies oxygen-glucose deprivation tolerance. It is demonstrated that extended tolerance to otherwise lethal NMDA or oxygen-glucose deprivation can be induced by either of their sublethal forms of preconditioning. These four pathways are linked, since NMDA receptor blockade during preconditioning by oxygen-glucose deprivation eliminates tolerance. These results suggest that NMDA tolerance, induced by nonlethal activation of these receptors during oxygen-glucose deprivation preconditioning, underlies oxygen-glucose deprivation tolerance. Several neurotoxic downstream Ca(2+)-dependent signaling events specifically linked to NMDA receptor activation are attenuated during otherwise lethal oxygen-glucose deprivation in preconditioned cultures. Specifically, calpain activation, as well as degradation of microtubule-associated protein-2 and postsynaptic density-95, are attenuated 2 h following otherwise lethal NMDA treatment alone or oxygen-glucose deprivation in preconditioned cultures. Formation of microtubule-associated protein-2-labeled dendritic varicosities is also attenuated in preconditioned cultures within 1 h of lethal oxygen-glucose deprivation or NMDA application. Intracellular Ca(2+) levels, measured using the high- or low-affinity dyes Fluo-4 (K(d) approximately equal 345 nM) or Fluo-4FF (K(d) approximately equal 9.7 microM) respectively, are markedly attenuated during lethal oxygen-glucose deprivation in preconditioned cultures.Collectively, the results suggest the attenuation of the postsynaptic NMDA-mediated component of otherwise lethal oxygen-glucose deprivation through the suppression of Ca(2+)-dependent neurotoxic signaling, a mechanism that is initially induced by transient nonlethal activation of this receptor during ischemic preconditioning.