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Query: EC:2.4.2.30 (
PARP
)
13,611
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (
PARP
) transfers ADP ribose groups from NAD(+) to nuclear proteins after activation by DNA strand breaks.
PARP
overactivation by massive DNA damage causes cell death via NAD(+) and ATP depletion. Heretofore,
PARP
has been thought to be inactive under basal physiologic conditions. We now report high basal levels of
PARP
activity and DNA strand breaks in discrete neuronal populations of the brain, in ventricular ependymal and subependymal cells and in peripheral tissues. In some peripheral tissues, such as skeletal muscle, spleen, heart, and kidney,
PARP
activity is reduced only partially in mice with
PARP-1
gene deletion (
PARP-1
(-/-)), implicating activity of alternative forms of
PARP
.
Glutamate
neurotransmission involving N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) receptors and neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) activity in part mediates neuronal DNA strand breaks and
PARP
activity, which are diminished by NMDA antagonists and NOS inhibitors and also diminished in mice with targeted deletion of nNOS gene (nNOS(-/-)). An increase in NAD(+) levels after treatment with NMDA antagonists or NOS inhibitors, as well as in nNOS(-/-) mice, indicates that basal glutamate-
PARP
activity regulates neuronal energy dynamics.
...
PMID:Poly(ADP-ribosyl)ation basally activated by DNA strand breaks reflects glutamate-nitric oxide neurotransmission. 1067 44
The central role of glutamate receptors in mediating excitotoxic neuronal death in stroke, epilepsy and trauma has been well established.
Glutamate
is the major excitatory amino acid transmitter within the CNS and it's signaling is mediated by a number of postsynaptic ionotropic and metabotropic receptors. Although calcium ions are considered key regulators of excitotoxicity, new evidence suggests that specific second messenger pathways rather than total Ca(2+) load, are responsible for mediating neuronal degeneration.
Glutamate
receptors are found localized at the synapse within electron dense structures known as the postsynaptic density (PSD). Localization at the PSD is mediated by binding of glutamate receptors to submembrane proteins such as actin and PDZ containing proteins. PDZ domains are conserved motifs that mediate protein-protein interactions and self-association. In addition to glutamate receptors PDZ-containing proteins bind a multitude of intracellular signal molecules including nitric oxide synthase. In this way PDZ proteins provide a mechanism for clustering glutamate receptors at the synapse together with their corresponding signal transduction proteins. PSD organization may thus facilitate the individual neurotoxic signal mechanisms downstream of receptors during glutamate overactivity. Evidence exists showing that inhibiting signals downstream of glutamate receptors, such as nitric oxide and
PARP-1
can reduce excitotoxic insult. Furthermore we have shown that uncoupling the interaction between specific glutamate receptors from their PDZ proteins protects neurons against glutamate-mediated excitotoxicity. These findings have significant implications for the treatment of neurodegenerative diseases using therapeutics that specifically target intracellular protein-protein interactions.
...
PMID:Molecular mechanisms underlying specificity of excitotoxic signaling in neurons. 1503 10
Glutamate
has toxic effects on a number of tissues, partly by inducing toxic (e.g., oxidative) stress, whereas adenosine can be protective. Since there is evidence that glutamate and adenosine receptors are present in bone, we set out to study whether oxidative stress, induced by hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), affected viability in the MC3T3-E1 osteoblast-like cell line and whether treatment with adenosine receptor ligands attenuated this. Hydrogen peroxide (100 microM to 5 mM) reduced the viability of the MC3T3-E1 cells, while catalase reversed this cell loss and itself had some mitogenic effect. Superoxide dismutase (SOD) increased the number of viable cells alone but failed to modify significantly the effect of H2O2 treatments.
Glutamate
(100 microM, 1 mM) and NMDA (10 microM), applied alone for up to 1 h, had a mitogenic effect (P < 0.05). Adenosine A1 and A2A receptor agonists and antagonists at low and high concentrations showed some mitogenic effects when added singly, but only high concentrations of the agonists showed significant protection against cell death resulting from H2O2 treatments. Contributions from both apoptotic and necrotic pathways were implicated in the H2O2-induced cell loss as was demonstrated by the use of the caspase-3 inhibitor (Z-DEVD-fmk) and the
PARP-1
inhibitor (DPQ). The results demonstrate that hydrogen peroxide was toxic to MC3T3-E1 cells, whereas glutamate was not and may even have a trophic influence. Adenosine and its receptors afforded some protection to osteoblasts against cellular death mediated partly by apoptosis and partly by necrosis.
...
PMID:Hydrogen peroxide-induced oxidative stress in MC3T3-E1 cells: The effects of glutamate and protection by purines. 1661 12
Agonists at A(1) receptors and antagonists at A(2A) receptors are known to be neuroprotective against excitotoxicity. We set out to clarify the mechanisms involved by studying interactions between adenosine receptor ligands and endogenous glutamate in cultures of rat cerebellar granule neurons (CGNs).
Glutamate
and the selective agonist N-methyl-D: -aspartate (NMDA), applied to CGNs at 9 div (days in vitro), both induced cell death in a concentration-dependent manner, which was attenuated by treatment with the NMDA receptor antagonists dizocilpine, D: -2-amino-5-phosphono-pentanoic acid (D: -AP5) or kynurenic acid (KYA), but not by the non-NMDA receptor antagonist 6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione (CNQX).
Glutamate
toxicity was reduced in the presence of all of the following: cyclosporin A (CsA), a blocker of the membrane permeability transition pore, the caspase-3 inhibitor, benzyloxycarbonyl-Asp(OMe)-Glu(OMe)-Val-Asp(OMe)-fluoromethylketone (Z-DEVD-fmk), the poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase (
PARP-1
) inhibitor 3,4-dihydro-5-[4-(1-piperidinyl)butoxyl]-1(2H)-isoquinolinone (DPQ), and nicotinamide. This is indicative of involvement of both apoptotic and necrotic processes. The A(1) receptor agonist, N (6)-cyclopentyladenosine (CPA), and the A(2A) receptor antagonist 4-(2-[7-amino-2-[2-furyl][1,2,4]triazolo[2,3-a][1,3,5]triazo-5-yl-amino]ethyl)phenol (ZM241385) afforded significant protection, while the A(1) receptor blocker 8-cyclopentyl-1,3-dipropylxanthine (DPCPX) and the A(2A) receptor agonist 2-p-(2-carboxyethyl)phenethylamino-5'-N-ethylcarboxyamidoadenosine (CGS21680) had no effect. These results confirm that glutamate-induced neurotoxicity in CGNs is mainly via the NMDA receptor, but show that a form of cell death which exhibits aspects of both apoptosis and necrosis is involved. The protective activity of A(1) receptor activation or A(2A) receptor blockade occurs against this mixed profile of cell death, and appears not to involve the selective inhibition of classical apoptotic or necrotic cascades.
...
PMID:Adenosine receptor ligands protect against a combination of apoptotic and necrotic cell death in cerebellar granule neurons. 1804 Jun 69
Glutamate
excitotoxicity amplifies neuronal death following stroke. We have explored the mechanisms underlying the collapse of mitochondrial potential (Deltapsi(m)) and loss of [Ca(2+)](c) homeostasis in rat hippocampal neurons in culture following toxic glutamate exposure. The collapse of Deltapsi(m) is multiphasic and Ca(2+)-dependent.
Glutamate
induced a decrease in NADH autofluorescence which preceded the loss of Deltapsi(m). Both the decrease in NADH signal and the loss of Deltapsi(m) were suppressed by Ru360 and both were delayed by inhibition of
PARP
(by 3-AB or DPQ). During this period, addition of mitochondrial substrates (methyl succinate and TMPD-ascorbate) or buffering [Ca(2+)](i) (using BAPTA-AM or EGTA-AM), rescued Deltapsi(m). These data suggest that mitochondrial Ca(2+) uptake activates
PARP
which in turn depletes NADH, promoting the initial collapse of Deltapsi(m). After > approximately 20 min, buffering Ca(2+) or substrate addition failed to restore Deltapsi(m). In neurons from cyclophilin D-/- (cypD-/-) mice or in cells treated with cyclosporine A, removal of Ca(2+) restored Deltapsi(m) even after 20 min of glutamate exposure, suggesting involvement of the mPTP in the irreversible depolarisation seen in WT cells. Thus, mitochondrial depolarisation represents two consecutive but distinct processes driving cell death, the first of which is reversible while the second is not.
...
PMID:Mechanisms underlying the loss of mitochondrial membrane potential in glutamate excitotoxicity. 1847 31
Poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase-1 (
PARP-1
) is a ubiquitous nuclear enzyme involved in genomic stability. Excessive oxidative DNA strand breaks lead to
PARP-1
-induced depletion of cellular NAD(+), glycolytic rate, ATP levels, and eventual cell death.
Glutamate
neurotransmission is tightly controlled by ATP-dependent astrocytic glutamate transporters, and thus we hypothesized that astrocytic
PARP-1
activation by DNA damage leads to bioenergetic depletion and compromised glutamate uptake.
PARP-1
activation by the DNA alkylating agent, N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine (MNNG), caused a significant reduction of cultured cortical astrocyte survival (EC(50) = 78.2 +/- 2.7 microM). HPLC revealed MNNG-induced time-dependent reductions in NAD(+) (98%, 4 h), ATP (71%, 4 h), ADP (63%, 4 h), and AMP (66%, 4 h). The maximal [(3)H]glutamate uptake rate (V(max)) also declined in a manner that corresponded temporally with ATP depletion, falling from 19.3 +/- 2.8 in control cells to 2.1 +/- 0.8 nmol/min/mg protein 4 h post-MNNG. Both bioenergetic depletion and loss of glutamate uptake capacity were attenuated by genetic deletion of
PARP-1
, directly indicating
PARP-1
involvement, and by adding exogenous NAD(+) (10 mM). In mixed neurons/astrocyte cultures, MNNG neurotoxicity was partially mediated by extracellular glutamate and was reduced by co-culture with
PARP-1
(-/-) astrocytes, suggesting that impairment of astrocytic glutamate uptake by
PARP-1
can raise glutamate levels sufficiently to have receptor-mediated effects at neighboring neurons. Taken together, these experiments showed that
PARP-1
activation leads to depletion of the total adenine nucleotide pool in astrocytes and severe reduction in neuroprotective glutamate uptake capacity.
...
PMID:Astrocytic poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase-1 activation leads to bioenergetic depletion and inhibition of glutamate uptake capacity. 1979
Glutamate
acting on N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptors induces neuronal injury following stroke, through activation of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase-1 (
PARP-1
) and generation of the death molecule poly(ADP-ribose) (PAR) polymer. Here we identify Iduna, a previously undescribed NMDA receptor-induced survival protein that is neuroprotective against glutamate NMDA receptor-mediated excitotoxicity both in vitro and in vivo and against stroke through interfering with PAR polymer-induced cell death (parthanatos). Iduna's protective effects are independent and downstream of
PARP-1
activity. Iduna is a PAR polymer-binding protein, and mutation at the PAR polymer binding site abolishes the PAR binding activity of Iduna and attenuates its protective actions. Iduna is protective in vivo against NMDA-induced excitotoxicity and middle cerebral artery occlusion-induced stroke in mice. To our knowledge, these results define Iduna as the first known endogenous inhibitor of parthanatos. Interfering with PAR polymer signaling could be a new therapeutic strategy for the treatment of neurologic disorders.
...
PMID:Iduna protects the brain from glutamate excitotoxicity and stroke by interfering with poly(ADP-ribose) polymer-induced cell death. 2160 3
Diabetes associated hyperglycemia results in generation of reactive oxygen species which induces oxidative stress and initiate massive DNA damage leading to overactivation of poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase (
PARP
). In this study, we have elucidated the involvement of oxidative stress-
PARP
pathway using pharmacological interventions (melatonin, as an anti-oxidant and nicotinamide, as a
PARP
inhibitor) in diabetes-induced neurobehavioral and neurochemical alterations. Sprague-Dawley rats were rendered diabetic by a single intraperitoneal injection of streptozotocin. Behavioral and cognitive deficits were assessed after 8weeks of diabetes induction using a functional observation battery, passive avoidance and rotarod test. Acetylcholinesterase activity was significantly decreased in hippocampus of diabetic rats as compared to control rats. Diabetic animals showed significant increase in malondialdehyde levels and reduction in NAD levels in hippocampus.
Glutamate
and GABA levels were also altered in hippocampus of the diabetic animals. Two week treatment with melatonin (3 and 10mg/kg) and nicotinamide (300 and 1000mg/kg) alone and in combination significantly improved the neurobehavioral parameters which were altered in diabetes. Neurotransmitter (glutamate and GABA) levels were improved by these interventions. Our results emphasize that simultaneous inhibition of oxidative stress-
PARP
overactivation cascade can be beneficial in treatment of diabetes associated CNS changes.
...
PMID:Amelioration of diabetes-induced neurobehavioral and neurochemical changes by melatonin and nicotinamide: implication of oxidative stress-PARP pathway. 2420 Oct 44
Glutamate
-induced excitotoxicity due to over-activation of glutamate receptors and associated energy depletion (phosphorylation and activation of AMPK) results in neuronal cell death in various neurological disorders. Restoration of energy balance during an excitotoxic insult is critical for neuronal survival. Ascorbic acid (vitamin C), an essential nutrient with well-known antioxidant potential, protects the brain from oxidative damage in various models of neurodegeneration. In this study, we reported the therapeutic efficacy of vitamin C in response to glutamate-induced excitation, resulting in energy depletion and apoptosis in the hippocampus of the developing rat brain. A single subcutaneous injection of glutamate at two different concentrations (5 and 10 mg/kg) in postnatal day 7 rat pups increased brain glutamate levels and increased the protein expression of neuronal apoptotic markers. Both doses of glutamate upregulated the ratio of pro-apoptotic Bax to anti-apoptotic Bcl-2, cytochrome-c release, caspase-3 activation and the expression of
PARP-1
. However, co-treatment of vitamin C (250 mg/kg) with glutamate decreased brain glutamate levels and reversed the changes induced by glutamate in the developing hippocampus. Interestingly, only a high dose of glutamate caused the phosphorylation and activation of AMPK and induced neuronal cell death, whereas a low dose of glutamate failed to mediate these effects. Vitamin C supplementation reduced the glutamate-induced phosphorylation of AMPK and attenuated neuronal cell death, as assessed morphologically by Fluoro Jade B in the hippocampal CA1 region of the developing brain. Taken together, our results indicated that glutamate in both concentrations is toxic to the immature rat brain, whereas vitamin C is pharmacologically effective against glutamate-induced neurodegeneration.
...
PMID:Vitamin C neuroprotection against dose-dependent glutamate-induced neurodegeneration in the postnatal brain. 2570 Oct 25
Glutamate
excitotoxicity is caused by sustained activation of neuronal NMDA receptors causing a large Ca(2+) and Na(+) influx, activation of poly(ADP ribose) polymerase-1 (
PARP-1
), and delayed Ca(2+) deregulation. Mitochondria undergo early changes in membrane potential during excitotoxicity, but their precise role in these events is still controversial. Using primary cortical neurons derived from mice, we show that NMDA exposure results in a rapid fall in mitochondrial ATP in neurons deficient in SCaMC-3/Slc25a23, a Ca(2+)-regulated mitochondrial ATP-Mg/Pi carrier. This fall is associated with blunted increases in respiration and a delayed decrease in cytosolic ATP levels, which are prevented by
PARP-1
inhibitors or by SCaMC-3 activity promoting adenine nucleotide uptake into mitochondria. SCaMC-3 KO neurons show an earlier delayed Ca(2+) deregulation, and SCaMC-3-deficient mitochondria incubated with ADP or ATP-Mg had reduced Ca(2+) retention capacity, suggesting a failure to maintain matrix adenine nucleotides as a cause for premature delayed Ca(2+) deregulation. SCaMC-3 KO neurons have higher vulnerability to in vitro excitotoxicity, and SCaMC-3 KO mice are more susceptible to kainate-induced seizures, showing that early
PARP-1
-dependent fall in mitochondrial ATP levels, counteracted by SCaMC-3, is an early step in the excitotoxic cascade.
...
PMID:Mitochondrial ATP-Mg/Pi carrier SCaMC-3/Slc25a23 counteracts PARP-1-dependent fall in mitochondrial ATP caused by excitotoxic insults in neurons. 2571 55
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