Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:1.6.5.2 (NQO1)
6,196 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

To reveal neurones in the cat medulla oblongata involved in carotid baroreceptor/chemoreceptor reflexes, the distribution of c-Fos oncoprotein immunoreactivity was studied following electrical stimulation of the right carotid sinus nerve. The neurochemistry of the activated neurones was investigated using antisera to tyrosine hydroxylase, neuropeptide Y, somatostatin, and glutamate. Nitric oxide containing neurones were identified using antiserum to nitric oxide synthase (NOS) and by the histochemical localization of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH)-diaphorase. Following sinus nerve stimulation numerous c-Fos-IR cells were detected both ipsilaterally and contralaterally in the nucleus tractus solitarii, the area postrema and throughout the ventrolateral medulla. Dual labelling studies revealed that 3.3% of c-Fos-immunoreactive cells in the nucleus tractus solitarii were also immunoreactive for tyrosine hydroxylase. The double labelled cells were scattered within the medial and ventrolateral subnuclei, predominantly rostral to obex. A higher proportion (10.3%) of c-Fos-IR cells in the ventrolateral medulla also showed tyrosine hydroxylase immunoreactivity. Caudal to obex, these were scattered in the reticular formation between the spinal trigeminal nucleus and the lateral reticular nucleus, while more rostrally they were found within the lateral reticular nucleus, the nucleus ambiguus and the lateral tegmental field. Cells expressing c-fos and reactive for glutamate, neuropeptide Y or NADPH-diaphorase (or NOS) were only rarely seen, and co-localization of c-Fos and somatostatin immunoreactivities was not seen. These results suggest that of the neurones forming pathways within the medulla activated on carotid sinus nerve stimulation, presumably mediating baro- and chemoreceptor reflexes, relatively few utilize catecholamines, glutamate, neuropeptide Y or nitric oxide as their transmitter substance.
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PMID:Co-localization of c-Fos and neurotransmitter immunoreactivities in the cat brain stem after carotid sinus nerve stimulation. 931 68

Glutamate excitocytotoxicity is implied in the cause of neuronal degeneration in the neostriatum, in which the toxicity may be mediated by different families of glutamate receptors. The precise cellular localization of alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazole-propionate (AMPA)-type glutamate receptor subunits (GluR1-4), one of the major family that involves in the mechanisms of glutamate excitocytotoxicity, in different populations of striatal neurons is therefore of special interest. Immunoreactivity for GluR2/3 subunits was detected in the medium-sized spiny neurons. By double labelling experiments, immunoreactivity for GluR1 and GluR4 was detected only in aspiny striatal neurons that display parvalbumin immunoreactivity, but not in the other neuron populations that display choline acetyltransferase or muscarinic m2 receptor immunoreactivity, nor neurons that display nitric oxide synthase immunoreactivity or nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate-diaphorase activity. These results indicate that GluR1 and GluR4 immunoreactivity is displayed only in the GABAergic interneurons in the neostriatum. In addition, almost all of the GluR1-immunoreactive neurons were found to display GluR4 immunoreactivity. This finding indicates for the first time that the striatal GABAergic interneurons co-express GluR1 and GluR4 subunits. The results of the present study indicate that there is a differential localization of AMPA-type glutamate receptor subunits in different populations of striatal neurons and they may have a different susceptibility to glutamate excitocytotoxicity.
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PMID:Cellular localization of GluR1, GluR2/3 and GluR4 glutamate receptor subunits in neurons of the rat neostriatum. 946 76

In the central nervous system (CNS), nitric oxide (NO) is thought to be involved in a variety of functions including synaptic plasticity, long term potentiation, and neurotoxicity. The aim of the present study was to investigate the expression of nitric oxide synthase (NOS) in the mouse CNS, following surgical injury to the hippocampus. NOS expression was assessed by histochemical detection of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate diaphorase (NADPH-diaphorase) activity and immunohistochemistry of the inducible NOS (iNOS). Two days after injury to the CA1 hippocampal field, NADPH-diaphorase activity was detected in pyramidal and granular neurons and also in glial cells in the hippocampus, in contrast to the non-injured one where NADPH-diaphorase staining was observed only in a few interneurons. NADPH-diaphorase histochemistry combined with immunolabelling for GFAP and F4/80 demonstrated that these glial cells were astrocytes and microglia. This pattern of NOS expression is induced specifically after a hippocampal injury since lesion to the prefrontal or cerebellar cortex leads to NOS activity only in monocytes/macrophages like cells. Despite the large expression of NOS detected by NADPH-diaphorase histochemistry after lesioning the hippocampus, immunostaining for iNOS was confined to microglia. The fact that induction of high levels of NOS activity are detected in glial cells after a lesion to the hippocampus could be accounted for by the sensitivity of this structure to a high release of glutamate.
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PMID:Specific pattern of nitric oxide synthase expression in glial cells after hippocampal injury. 951 65

The substantia gelatinosa of the spinal cord (lamina II) is the major site of integration for nociceptive information. Activation of NMDA glutamate receptor, production of nitric oxide (NO), and enhanced release of substance P and calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) from primary afferents are key events in pain perception and central hyperexcitability. By combining reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH) diaphorase histochemistry for NO-producing neurons with immunogold labeling for substance P, CGRP, and glutamate, we show that (1) NO-producing neurons in lamina IIi are islet cells; (2) these neurons rarely form synapses onto peptide-immunoreactive profiles; and (3) NADPH diaphorase-positive dendrites are often in close spatial relationship with peptide-containing terminals and are observed at the periphery of type II glomeruli showing glutamate-immunoreactive central endings. By means of confocal fluorescent microscopy in acute spinal cord slices loaded with the Ca2+ indicator Indo-1, we also demonstrate that (1) NMDA evokes a substantial [Ca2+]i increase in a subpopulation of neurons in laminae I-II, with morphological features similar to those of islet cells; (2) a different neuronal population in laminae I-IIo, unresponsive to NMDA, displays a significant [Ca2+]i increase after slice perfusion with either substance P and the NO donor 3morpholinosydnonimine (SIN-1); and (3) the responses to both substance P and SIN-1 are either abolished or significantly inhibited by the NK1 receptor antagonist sendide. These results provide compelling evidence that glutamate released at type II glomeruli triggers the production of NO in islet cells within lamina IIi after NMDA receptor activation. The release of substance P from primary afferents triggered by newly synthesized NO may play a crucial role in the cellular mechanism leading to spinal hyperexcitability and increased pain perception.
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PMID:Nitric oxide-producing islet cells modulate the release of sensory neuropeptides in the rat substantia gelatinosa. 985 75

Stimulation of the nucleus magnocellularis (NMC) of the medulla produces changes in locomotion, muscle tone, heart rate, and blood pressure. Glutamatergic input has been found to modulate muscle tone, whereas cholinergic input has been found to mediate cardiovascular changes produced by stimulation of the NMC. The current study was designed to identify the brainstem afferents to NMC by using retrograde transport of wheat germ agglutinin and horseradish peroxidase (WGA-HRP) combined with glutamate and choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) immunohistochemical and nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate-diaphorase (NADPH-d) histochemical techniques. Fifty nanoliters of 2.5% WGA-HRP were microinjected into the NMC in the cat. A heavy density of WGA-HRP-labeled neurons was found in the ipsilateral mesencephalic reticular formation (MRF), periaqueductal gray, Kolliker-Fuse nucleus, and pontis centralis caudalis (PoC), in the contralateral pontis centralis oralis (PoO), and bilaterally in the nucleus paragigantocellularis lateralis. A moderate density of retrogradely labeled neurons was found in the ipsilateral side of the nuclei parvocellularis, retrorubral (RRN), PoO, and vestibular complex, in the contralateral PoC and nucleus gigantocellularis, and bilaterally in the inferior vestibular nucleus. Retrograde HRP/glutamate-positive cells could be found throughout the brainstem, with a high percentage in RRN, PoO, PoC, and MRF. Double-labeled WGA-HRP/ChAT neurons were found in the pedunculopontine nucleus. Double-labeled WGA-HRP/NADPH-d-positive neurons could be seen in many nuclei of the brainstem, although the number of labeled neurons was small. The dense glutamatergic projections to the NMC support the hypothesis that rostral brainstem glutamatergic mechanisms regulate muscle activity and locomotor coordination via the NMC, whereas the pontine cholinergic projections to the NMC participate in cardiovascular regulation.
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PMID:Brainstem projections to the ventromedial medulla in cat: retrograde transport horseradish peroxidase and immunohistochemical studies. 1034 May 15

Experiments were carried out to investigate the functional and anatomical relationships between neuronal elements and cerebral microvessels in 300-350-microm thick coronal hippocampal slices maintained at 33-35 degrees C, obtained from 150-200 g male Wistar rats. Cerebral arterioles (9-22 microm in diameter) were visualized in situ and pre-constricted by 22.0+/-6.6% by the addition of the thromboxane A2 agonist U46619 (75 nM), to the bathing medium. The glutamate agonist N-methyl-D-aspartate (0.01-1 mM) produced a dose-related increase in luminal diameter of pre-constricted vessels. In the presence of 4 microM haemoglobin to scavenge nitric oxide from the extravascular environment of the slice, the increase in diameter evoked by 0.1 mM N-methyl-D-aspartate was significantly reduced from 17.5+/-4.6% to 4.8+/-1.7% indicating that N-methyl-D-aspartate-induced vasodilatation of cerebral microvessels is mediated via a mechanism which involves neuronally-derived nitric oxide. In a parallel anatomical study, beta-nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate-dependent diaphorase staining was used to reveal the enzyme nitric oxide synthase in vascular endothelium and neurons in slices. A small subpopulation (< 11 cells per slice) of darkly-stained multipolar neurons, 21-32 microm in diameter was observed to give rise to a dense network of fine diaphorase-reactive nerve fibres that ramified throughout the whole of the hippocampus and appeared to come into close apposition with arterioles. Morphometric analysis of the relationship between cerebral microvessels, beta-nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate, reduced form-dependent diaphorase-reactive neuronal elements and individual pyramidal layer neurons, identified by filling with biocytin, revealed that for a given point on a pyramidal layer neuron, the proximity of the nearest diaphorase-reactive nerve fibre was less than 10 microm, whilst the distance to the nearest arteriole (the smallest functional unit for controlling blood flow) was in excess of 70 microm. Such a distance would probably preclude diffusion of vasoactive metabolites in effective concentrations from the area of increased neuronal activity. We therefore propose that the diaphorase-reactive nerve network constitutes the functional link. It is possible that during periods of increased neuronal activity, spillover of glutamate from synapses may activate the diaphorase-reactive network. Release of nitric oxide from the network in the vicinity of local cerebral arterioles may then produce relaxation of the vascular smooth muscle, enabling increased blood flow into the capillary network supplying the region of increased metabolic activity. This study has shown that the process whereby increases in neuronal activity elicit a local change in cerebral blood flow remains functionally intact in hippocampal slice preparations. Nitric oxide of neuronal origin appears to be involved in mediating the coupling between neurons and cerebral arterioles. Stereological analysis of the relationship between neuronal and vascular elements within hippocampal slices suggested that a small subpopulation of nitric oxide synthase-containing neurons which give rise to a diffuse network of fine nitric oxide synthase-containing nerve fibres that lie in close apposition to cerebral arterioles may provide the anatomical substrate for coupling of blood flow to metabolism.
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PMID:Neurovascular relationships in hippocampal slices: physiological and anatomical studies of mechanisms underlying flow-metabolism coupling in intraparenchymal microvessels. 1039 29

The reduced glutathione (GSH)/oxidized glutathione (GSSG) redox state is thought to function in signaling of detoxification gene expression, but also appears to be tightly regulated in cells under normal conditions. Thus it is not clear that the magnitude of change in response to physiologic stimuli is sufficient for a role in redox signaling under nontoxicologic conditions. The purpose of this study was to determine the change in 2GSH/GSSG redox during signaling of differentiation and increased detoxification enzyme activity in HT29 cells. We measured GSH, GSSG, cell volume, and cell pH, and we used the Nernst equation to determine the changes in redox potential Eh of the 2GSH/GSSG pool in response to the differentiating agent, sodium butyrate, and the detoxification enzyme inducer, benzyl isothiocyanate. Sodium butyrate caused a 60-mV oxidation (from -260 to -200 mV), an oxidation sufficient for a 100-fold change in protein dithiols:disulfide ratio. Benzyl isothiocyanate caused a 16-mV oxidation in control cells but a 40-mV oxidation (to -160 mV) in differentiated cells. Changes in GSH and mRNA for glutamate:cysteine ligase did not correlate with Eh; however, correlations were seen between Eh and glutathione S-transferase (GST) and nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH):quinone reductase activities (N:QR). These results show that 2GSH/GSSG redox changes in response to physiologic stimuli such as differentiation and enzyme inducers are of a sufficient magnitude to control the activity of redox-sensitive proteins. This suggests that physiologic modulation of the 2GSH/GSSG redox poise could provide a fundamental parameter for the control of cell phenotype.
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PMID:Glutathione redox potential in response to differentiation and enzyme inducers. 1064 13

Nitric oxide (NO) may subserve different functions in different central neurons subjected to axotomy. The difference may depend on whether the neurons basally express neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS), a biosynthetic enzyme of NO. This is supported by our previous finding that suggests the differential role of NO in neurons of nucleus dorsalis (ND) and red nucleus (RN) which have different basal expression of nNOS. This study aimed to establish firmly the functions of NO, as revealed by nNOS immunoreactivity and nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate diaphorase (NADPH-d) histochemistry, by the administration of endogenous NO donor, l-arginine (l-arg), and NOS inhibitor, l-N(G)-nitroarginine methyl ester (l-NAME). To relate the role of NO to glutamate receptors (GluR), the distributions of alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid receptor (AMPAR) and N-methyl-d-aspartate receptor (NMDAR) in the two nuclei were revealed by immunohistochemical techniques. nNOS immunoreactivity was void in ND neurons, but expressed weakly in the RN normally. It was induced in ipsilateral ND neurons and upregulated on both sides of RN after spinal cord hemisection. Neuronal loss in the ipsilateral ND was augmented by l-arg, but reduced by l-NAME. In the contralateral RN, l-arg attenuated neuronal loss. NMDAR1 was present in most neurons in ND. After axotomy, some NMDAR1 immunoreactive neurons of the ipsilateral ND were induced to express NOS, whereas RN neurons showed strong staining for NMDAR1 and all the AMPA subunits. Most of the NOS-positive neurons in the RN were coexistent with GluR2 in normal rats and those subjected to axotomy. The present data demonstrated that NO exerted neurodestructive function in the non-NOS-containing ND neurons characterized by NMDAR as the predominant glutamate receptor. NO might be beneficial to the NOS-containing RN neurons. This could be attributed to the presence of GluR2. Possible diverse synthesizing pathways of NO in two different central nuclei were suggested from the observation that NOS was colocalized with NADPH-d in ND neurons, but not in RN neurons.
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PMID:Neuroprotective and neurodestructive functions of nitric oxide after spinal cord hemisection. 1068 69

NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase (QR) catalyzes the two-electron reduction of quinones, preventing their participation in redox cycling and subsequent generation of reactive oxygen species. Pretreatment of neuroblastoma cells with compounds, such as tert-butylhydroquinone and dimethyl fumarate, that increase QR expression protect cells from oxidative stress-induced cell death by glutamate, H(2)O(2,) and dopamine. The potential neuroprotective role of QR as well as the evidence for oxidative stress-induced neuronal cell death in Alzheimer's disease (AD) led us to examine the expression pattern of QR from AD and control patients. Histochemical staining of hippocampal sections from AD patients revealed QR activity in pyramidal neurons. The presence of QR protein in these neurons also was confirmed by immunoreactivity. In control patients, hippocampal pyramidal neurons were negative for both QR enzymatic activity and QR immunoreactivity. In addition, the QR positive neurons of AD patients were selectively located in areas where neuronal populations exhibited tau immunostaining. Our data demonstrate that QR is up-regulated in hippocampal pyramidal neurons of AD patients. We hypothesize that this is part of a neuroprotective system up-regulated in response to the AD process. Understanding this system may lead to further insights into the pathogenesis and potential new avenues of treatment for AD.
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PMID:NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase activity is increased in hippocampal pyramidal neurons of patients with Aalzheimer's disease. 1092 65

Aminochrome was found to be toxic in a mouse-derived neuronal cell line (CNh). The effect was concentration dependent (10-150microM). The issue whether aminochrome toxicity involves glutamate transmission was studied with several glutamate receptors antagonists. Incubation of the cells with aminochrome (150microM) in the presence of 100microM of the AMPA antagonist, NBQX resulted in an increase of cell survival, from 52 to 73%. However, this protective effect did not seem to be related to activation of ionotropic glutamate receptors since incubation of CNh cells with 200microM of glutamate resulted in only 10% decrease of cell survival. However, NBQX was found to inhibit in vitro the autoxidation process. One hundred microM AP-5 did not have any effect on aminochrome toxicity. The toxic effect of aminochrome on CNh cells seems to be dependent of extracellular activation since addition of dicoumarol, a specific inhibitor of DT-diaphorase, did not affect that toxicity, which can be explained perhaps by a lack of a transport system for aminochrome into the CNh cells.
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PMID:Studies of aminochrome toxicity in a mouse derived neuronal cell line: is this toxicity mediated via glutamate transmission? 1094 19


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