Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:1.3.5.1 (succinate dehydrogenase)
8,177 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Glutamate receptor involvement and oxidative stress have both been implicated in damage to neurons due to impairment of energy metabolism. Using two different neuronal in vitro model systems, an ex vivo chick retinal preparation and dopamine neurons in mesencephalic culture, the involvement and interaction of these events as early occurring contributors to irreversible neuronal damage have been examined. Consistent with previous reports, the early acute changes in the retinal preparation, as well as irreversible loss of dopamine neurons due to inhibition of metabolism, can be prevented by blocking NMDA receptors during the time of energy inhibition. Oxidative stress was suggested to be a downstream consequence and contributor to neuronal cell loss due to either glutamate receptor overstimulation or metabolic inhibition since trapping of free radicals with the cyclic nitrone spin-trapping agent MDL 102,832 (1 mM) attenuated acute excitotoxicity in the retinal preparation or loss of mesencephalic dopamine neurons due to either metabolic inhibition by the succinate dehydrogenase inhibitor, malonate, or exposure to excitotoxins. In mesencephalic culture, malonate caused an enhanced efflux of both oxidized and reduced glutathione into the medium, a significant reduction in total reduced glutathione and a significant increase in total oxidized glutathione at time points that preceded those necessary to cause toxicity. These findings provide direct evidence for early oxidative events occurring following malonate exposure and suggest that the glutathione system is important for protecting neurons during inhibition of energy metabolism. Consistent with this, lowering of glutathione by buthionine sulfoxamine (BSO) pretreatment greatly potentiated malonate toxicity in the mesencephalic dopamine population. In contrast, BSO pretreatment did not potentiate glutamate toxicity. This latter finding indicates dissimilarities in the type of oxidative stress that is generated by the two insults and suggests that the oxidative challenge during energy inhibition is not solely a downstream consequence of glutamate receptor overstimulation.
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PMID:Excitotoxicity and oxidative stress during inhibition of energy metabolism. 977 83

Mitochondrial respiratory complex II inhibition plays a central role in Huntington's disease (HD). Remarkably, 3-NP, a complex II inhibitor, recapitulates HD-like symptoms. Furthermore, decreases in mitochondrial fusion or increases in mitochondrial fission have been implicated in neurodegenerative diseases. However, the relationship between mitochondrial energy defects and mitochondrial dynamics has never been explored in detail. In addition, the mechanism of neuronal cell death by complex II inhibition remains unclear. Here, we tested the temporal and spatial relationship between energy decline, impairment of mitochondrial dynamics, and neuronal cell death in response to 3-NP using quantitative fluorescence time-lapse microscopy and cortical neurons. 3-NP caused an immediate drop in ATP. This event corresponded with a mild rise in reactive oxygen species (ROS), but mitochondrial morphology remained unaltered. Unexpectedly, several hours after this initial phase, a second dramatic rise in ROS occurred, associated with profound mitochondrial fission characterized by the conversion of filamentous to punctate mitochondria and neuronal cell death. Glutamate receptor antagonist AP5 abolishes the second peak in ROS, mitochondrial fission, and cell death. Thus, secondary excitotoxicity, mediated by glutamate receptor activation of the NMDA subtype, and consequent oxidative and nitrosative stress cause mitochondrial fission, rather than energy deficits per se. These results improve our understanding of the cellular mechanisms underlying HD pathogenesis.
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PMID:Complex II inhibition by 3-NP causes mitochondrial fragmentation and neuronal cell death via an NMDA- and ROS-dependent pathway. 1930 Apr 56