Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.4.22.56 (caspase-3)
35,750 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In vivo, neuronal over-expression of the anti-apoptotic protein Bcl-2 prevents axotomy-induced motoneuron death and prolongs life in a mouse model of familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. The mechanism of these protective effects is still unknown. We have examined, in situ, the influence of Bcl-2 over-expression on the messenger RNA level of two pro-apoptotic, bax and cpp32, and one anti-apoptotic, bcl-xl, regulators of neuronal death. In neonates wild-type mice, cpp32 mRNA was increased in axotomized, dying motoneurons. No changes in bax and bcl-xl messenger RNAs expression were detected. A similar course was observed in protected axotomized neonate motoneurons of transgenic mice over-expressing Bcl-2. In adult wild-type mice no motoneuron death was detected one week after axotomy: bax and cpp32 messenger RNAs were increased and bcl-xl messenger RNA was decreased. Four weeks after the lesion, 60% of the lesioned facial motoneurons had disappeared. In the remaining motoneurons only cpp32 messenger RNA expression was superior to control level. In Bcl-2 transgenic mice, no axotomy-induced facial motoneurons death was detected but the course of the neosynthesis of cell death genes messenger RNAs was similar to wild-type mice. Bax, Bcl-x and CPP32 immunoreactivity were increased in facial motoneurons after axotomy. Thus, fatal axotomy induces cell death genes bax and cpp32 messenger RNAs neosynthesis which is not prevented by athanatal Bcl-2 over-expression. This suggests that the protective effect of Bcl-2 results from interactions with Bax and CPP32 at the post-translation level without repercussion at the messenger RNA level. Axotomy induces cell death messenger RNA neosynthesis potentially harmful at long-term despite Bcl-2 over-expression.
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PMID:cpp32 messenger RNA neosynthesis is induced by fatal axotomy and is not regulated by athanatal Bcl-2 over-expression. 1021 67

The mechanisms for neurodegeneration in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) are not understood. We found that motor neuron degeneration in ALS structurally resembles apoptosis. The progression of neuronal death is divisible into 3 sequential stages: chromatolysis, somatodendritic attrition, and apoptosis. In ALS spinal cord anterior horn and motor cortex, DNA fragmentation is detectable in situ and in gels and is internucleosomal, occurring in the presence of DNA fragmentation factor-45/40 activation and increased caspase-3 activity. By immunoblotting, changes occur in the subcellular distribution of cell death proteins that would promote apoptosis. In selectively vulnerable CNS regions in ALS compared with controls, the proapoptotic proteins Bax and Bak are elevated in the mitochondrial-enriched membrane compartment, but are reduced or unchanged in the cytosol. In contrast, the antiapoptotic protein Bcl-2 is decreased in the mitochondrial-enriched membrane compartment of vulnerable regions in ALS, but is increased in the cytosol, whereas Bcl-xL levels are unchanged in both subcellular compartments. Coimmunoprecipitation experiments showed that Bax-Bax interactions are greater in the mitochondrial-enriched membrane compartment of ALS motor cortex compared with controls, whereas Bax-Bcl-2 interactions are lower in the membrane compartment of ALS motor cortex compared with controls. We conclude that a PCD mechanism, involving cytosol-to-membrane and membrane-to-cytosol redistribution of cell death proteins and caspase-3 activation, participates in the pathogenesis of ALS.
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PMID:Neuronal death in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis is apoptosis: possible contribution of a programmed cell death mechanism. 1033 34

Mutations in the copper/zinc superoxide dismutase (SOD1) gene produce an animal model of familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), a fatal neurodegenerative disorder. To test a new therapeutic strategy for ALS, we examined the effect of caspase inhibition in transgenic mice expressing mutant human SOD1 with a substitution of glycine to alanine in position 93 (mSOD1(G93A)). Intracerebroventricular administration of zVAD-fmk, a broad caspase inhibitor, delays disease onset and mortality. Moreover, zVAD-fmk inhibits caspase-1 activity as well as caspase-1 and caspase-3 mRNA up-regulation, providing evidence for a non-cell-autonomous pathway regulating caspase expression. Caspases play an instrumental role in neurodegeneration in transgenic mSOD1(G93A) mice, which suggests that caspase inhibition may have a protective role in ALS.
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PMID:Functional role of caspase-1 and caspase-3 in an ALS transgenic mouse model. 1077 10

Familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis-linked mutations in copper-zinc superoxide dismutase cause motor neuron death through one or more acquired toxic properties. An early event in the mechanism of toxicity from such mutants is now demonstrated to be activation of caspase-1. Neuronal death, however, follows only after months of chronic caspase-1 activation concomitantly with activation of the executioner caspase-3 as the final step in the toxic cascade. Thus, a common toxicity of mutant SOD1 is a sequential activation of at least two caspases, caspase-1 that acts slowly as a chronic initiator and caspase-3 acting as the final effector of cell death.
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PMID:Caspase-1 and -3 are sequentially activated in motor neuron death in Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase-mediated familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. 1109 9

Molecular mechanisms of apoptosis may participate in motor neuron degeneration produced by mutant copper/zinc superoxide dismutase (mSOD1), the only proven cause of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). Consistent with this, herein we show that the spinal cord of transgenic mSOD1 mice is the site of the sequential activation of caspase-1 and caspase-3. Activated caspase-3 and its produced beta-actin cleavage fragments are found in apoptotic neurons in the anterior horn of the spinal cord of affected transgenic mSOD1 mice; although such neurons are few, their scarcity should not undermine the potential importance of apoptosis in the overall mSOD1-related neurodegeneration. Overexpression of the anti-apoptotic protein Bcl-2 attenuates neurodegeneration and delays activation of the caspases and fragmentation of beta-actin. These data demonstrate that caspase activation occurs in this mouse model of ALS during neurodegeneration. Our study also suggests that modulation of caspase activity may provide protective benefit in the treatment of ALS, a view that is consistent with our recent demonstration of caspase inhibition extending the survival of transgenic mSOD1 mice.
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PMID:Delaying caspase activation by Bcl-2: A clue to disease retardation in a transgenic mouse model of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. 1112 89

Sporadic amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (sALS) is a neurodegenerative disorder of unknown cause characterized by selective loss of both upper and lower motor neurons. Whether neuronal death in sALS is due to apoptosis has so far not been clarified. In this study, the expression and distribution patterns of pro- and anti-apoptotic bcl-2 family members as well as the executioner caspase-3 were investigated in post-mortem CNS tissue of eight sALS patients and seven age-matched controls. Sparse motor neurons were immunoreactive for bcl-2, bax, bak, and CM1 on serial sections through the spinal cord and motor cortex of individual sALS patients and controls. However, there was no obvious difference in the numbers of immunoreactive (IR) neurons between the two groups. The study did not find evidence for apoptosis as a major mechanism of motor neuronal cell death in sALS.
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PMID:Apoptosis signals in sporadic amyotrophic lateral sclerosis: an immunocytochemical study. 1169 54

Recent studies have demonstrated the activation of caspase-1 and caspase-3 in mice expressing mutant superoxide dismutase 1 (SOD1), models of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. Caspase-1 converts the prointerleukin-1beta into a potent proinflammatory molecule involved in the innate immune response and in neurodegenerative diseases. We report on the chronic expression of interleukin-1beta mRNA in the spinal cord of SOD1G37R mice, together with robust mRNA expression for the nuclear factor-kappaB (NF-kappaB) inhibitor IkappaBalpha, for other proinflammatory cytokines and chemokines (interleukin-6, tumor necrosis factor-alpha, monocyte chemoattractant protein-1) and for the toll-like receptor TLR2 involved in innate immunity. To further assess the interleukin-1beta contribution to neurodegeneration, we generated mice expressing SOD1G37R in a context of interleukin-1beta gene knockout. Surprisingly, the absence of interleukin-1beta had no effect on the life span of SOD1G37R mice, nor on the extent of motor axon degeneration at age 7 and 10 months. Whereas neither compensatory induction of the interleukin-1alpha mRNA nor increases in mRNA levels for IkappaBalpha, tumor necrosis factor-alpha and macrophage chemoattractant protein-1 occurred as a result of interleukin-1beta gene disruption, enhanced levels of TLR2 mRNA were detected in SOD1G37R mice lacking interleukin-1beta. We conclude that interleukin-1beta does not directly contribute to motor neuron degeneration in SOD1G37R mice, but it may act as a modulator of the innate immune response.
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PMID:Induction of proinflammatory molecules in mice with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis: no requirement for proapoptotic interleukin-1beta in neurodegeneration. 1170 69

Oxidative stress mediated by nitric oxide (NO) and its toxic metabolite peroxynitrite has previously been associated with motor neuron degeneration in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). Degenerating spinal motor neurons in familial and sporadic ALS are typically surrounded by reactive astrocytes expressing the inducible form of NO synthase (iNOS), suggesting that astroglia may have a pathogenic role in ALS. We report here that a brief exposure of spinal cord astrocyte monolayers to peroxynitrite (0.25-1 mM) provoked long-lasting reactive morphological changes characterized by process-bearing cells displaying intense glial fibrillary acidic protein and iNOS immunoreactivity. Furthermore, peroxynitrite caused astrocytes to promote apoptosis of embryonic motor neurons subsequently plated on the monolayers. Neuronal death occurred within 24 hr after plating, as evidenced by the presence of degenerating motor neurons positively stained for activated caspase-3 and nitrotyrosine. Motor neuron death was largely prevented by NOS inhibitors and peroxynitrite scavengers but not by trophic factors that otherwise will support motor neuron survival in the absence of astrocytes. The bacterial lipopolysaccharide, a well-known inflammatory stimulus that induces iNOS expression in astrocytes, provoked the same effects on astrocytes as peroxynitrite. Thus, spinal cord astrocytes respond to extracellular peroxynitrite by adopting a phenotype that is cytotoxic to motor neurons through peroxynitrite-dependent mechanisms.
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PMID:Peroxynitrite triggers a phenotypic transformation in spinal cord astrocytes that induces motor neuron apoptosis. 1175 77

Animal model of the motor neuron disease amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), has implicated apoptotis in the neuronal degeneration evident in this disease. Mice showing ALS-like symptoms, as well as several human families with ALS, have a missense mutation in the gene coding for DOD-1. A defective enzyme enhances neuronal cell death by activating interleukin converting enzyme (ICE), an initia of apoptosis. The role of caspase-1 and caspase-3 in the apoptotic process is apparent and the use of the caspase inhibitor zVAD-fink demonstrated some promise in slowing neural death by apoptosis and prolonging life in mice with ALS-like symptoms. We discuss the possible mechanisms of caspase enzymes cascade activation and their central role in apoptosis and possibly in neural death.
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PMID:[Role of caspases in neural degeneration in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis]. 1175 91

Minocycline mediates neuroprotection in experimental models of neurodegeneration. It inhibits the activity of caspase-1, caspase-3, inducible form of nitric oxide synthetase (iNOS) and p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK). Although minocycline does not directly inhibit these enzymes, the effects may result from interference with upstream mechanisms resulting in their secondary activation. Because the above-mentioned factors are important in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), we tested minocycline in mice with ALS. Here we report that minocycline delays disease onset and extends survival in ALS mice. Given the broad efficacy of minocycline, understanding its mechanisms of action is of great importance. We find that minocycline inhibits mitochondrial permeability-transition-mediated cytochrome c release. Minocycline-mediated inhibition of cytochrome c release is demonstrated in vivo, in cells, and in isolated mitochondria. Understanding the mechanism of action of minocycline will assist in the development and testing of more powerful and effective analogues. Because of the safety record of minocycline, and its ability to penetrate the blood-brain barrier, this drug may be a novel therapy for ALS.
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PMID:Minocycline inhibits cytochrome c release and delays progression of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis in mice. 1198 68


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