Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Enzyme
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Query: EC:3.4.22.56 (
caspase-3
)
35,750
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Inducible head shock protein 70 kD (HSP-70i) has been shown to protect cells, tissues, and organs from harmful assaults in vivo and in vitro experimental models. Hemorrhagic shock followed by resuscitation is the principal cause of death among trauma patients and soldiers in the battlefield. Although the underlying mechanisms are still not fully understood, it has been shown that nitric oxide (NO) overproduction and
inducible nitric oxide synthase
(
iNOS
) overexpression play important roles in producing injury caused by hemorrhagic shock including increases in polymorphonuclear neutrophils (PMN) infiltration to injured tissues and leukotriene B(4) (LTB(4)) generation. Moreover, transcription factors responsible for
iNOS
expression are also altered by hemorrhage and resuscitation. It has been evident that either up-regulation of HSP-70i or down-regulation of
iNOS
can limit tissue injury caused by ischemia/reperfusion or hemorrhage/resuscitation. In our laboratory, geldanamycin, a member of ansamycin family, has been shown to induce HSP- 70i overexpression and then subsequently to inhibit
iNOS
expression, to reduce cellular
caspase-3
activity, and to preserve cellular ATP levels. HSP-70i is found to couple to
iNOS
and its transcription factor. Therefore, the complex formation between HSP-70i and
iNOS
may be a novel mechanism for protection from hemorrhage/resuscitation-induced injury.
...
PMID:Inducible heat shock protein 70 kD and inducible nitric oxide synthase in hemorrhage/resuscitation-induced injury. 1562 11
Elevated LPS and elevated cytochrome P-450 2E1 (CYP2E1) in liver are two major independent risk factors in alcoholic liver disease. We investigated possible synergistic effects of the two risk factors in causing oxidative stress and liver injury. Sprague-Dawley rats were injected intraperitoneally with pyrazole (inducer of CYP2E1) for 2 days, and then LPS was injected via tail vein. Other rats were treated with pyrazole alone or LPS alone or saline. Eight hours later, blood was collected and livers were excised. Pathological evaluation showed severe inflammatory responses and necroses only in liver sections from rats in the pyrazole plus LPS group; blood transaminase levels were significantly elevated only in the combination group. Activities of
caspase-3
and -9 and positive terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated deoxyuridine triphosphate nick-end labeling staining were highest in the LPS alone and the LPS plus pyrazole group, with no significant difference between the two groups. Lipid peroxidation and protein carbonyls in liver homogenate as well as in situ superoxide production were maximally elevated in the LPS plus pyrazole group. Levels of nitrite plus nitrate and inducible nitric oxide (NO) synthase (
iNOS
) content were comparably elevated in LPS alone and the LPS plus pyrazole group; however, 3-nitrotyrosine adducts were elevated in the combined group but not the LPS group. It is likely that LPS induction of
iNOS
, which produces NO, coupled to pyrazole induction of CYP2E1 which produces superoxide, sets up conditions for maximal peroxynitrite formation and production of 3-nitrotyrosine adducts. CYP2E1 activity and content were elevated in the pyrazole and the LPS plus pyrazole groups. Immunohistochemical staining indicated that distribution of CYP2E1 was in agreement with that of necrosis and production of superoxide. These results show that pyrazole treatment enhanced LPS-induced necrosis, not apoptosis. The enhanced liver necrosis appears to involve an increase in oxidative and nitrosative stress generated by the combination of LPS plus elevated CYP2E1 levels.
...
PMID:Lipopolysaccharide-induced liver injury in rats treated with the CYP2E1 inducer pyrazole. 1584 71
The effects of the peripheral benzodiazepine receptor (PBR) ligand, PK11195, were investigated in the rat striatum following the administration of quinolinic acid (QUIN). Intrastriatal QUIN injection caused an increase of PBR expression in the lesioned striatum as demonstrated by immunohistochemical analysis. Double immunofluorescent staining indicated PBR was primarily expressed in ED1-immunoreactive microglia but not in GFAP-immunoreactive astrocytes or NeuN-immunoreactive neurons. PK11195 treatment significantly reduced the level of microglial activation and the expression of pro-inflammatory cytokines and
iNOS
in QUIN-injected striatum. Oxidative-mediated striatal QUIN damage, characterized by increased expression of markers for lipid peroxidation (4-HNE) and oxidative DNA damage (8-OHdG), was significantly diminished by PK11195 administration. Furthermore, intrastriatal injection of PK11195 with QUIN significantly reduced striatal lesions induced by the excitatory amino acid and diminished QUIN-mediated
caspase-3
activation in striatal neurons. These results suggest that inflammatory responses from activated microglia are damaging to striatal neurons and pharmacological targeting of PBR in microglia may be an effective strategy in protecting neurons in neurological disorders such as Huntington's disease.
...
PMID:Peripheral benzodiazepine receptor ligand PK11195 reduces microglial activation and neuronal death in quinolinic acid-injected rat striatum. 1591 99
Little is known about the underlying mechanisms responsible for the death of activated microglia and the functional consequences of the death of these cells, especially in vivo. We show here that intracortical injection of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) led to upregulation of interleukin-4 (IL-4) immunoreactivity, followed by a substantial loss of microglia 3 days later, as visualized by complement receptor type 3 (OX-42) immunostaining and tomato lectin staining. Cells positive for
caspase-3
and terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase mediated fluorescein-dUTP nick-end labeling (TUNEL) were also localized within LPS-activated microglia. IL-4 immunoreactivity was detected as early as 12 hr post-LPS, disappearing at 72 hr. Surprisingly, IL-4 immunoreactivity was detected exclusively in microglia, but not in astrocytes or neurons. In addition, IL-4-neutralizing antibodies markedly increased the survival of activated microglia at 3 days post-LPS. The expression of
inducible nitric oxide synthase
(
iNOS
) and tumor-necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha was sustained in parallel in activated microglia, consequently increasing neuronal cell death. To our knowledge, this study is the first to show the endogenous expression of IL-4 in LPS-activated microglia in vivo. Our findings suggest that IL-4 may regulate brain inflammation by inducing the death of activated microglia in vivo and increasing neuronal survival.
...
PMID:Neuroprotective role of microglia expressing interleukin-4. 1594 89
This study evaluated the hypothesis that the repertoire of cellular events that underlie circulatory fatality during endotoxemia may entail mitochondrial respiratory enzyme dysfunction, followed by the release of cytochrome c to the cytosol that triggers the activation of caspase cascades, leading to apoptotic cell death in the rostral ventrolateral medulla (RVLM) where sympathetic premotor neurons responsible for maintaining vasomotor tone are located. In adult Sprague-Dawley rats maintained under propofol anesthesia, nucleosomal DNA fragmentation was detected in the RVLM in a temporal profile that coincided positively with the progression of cardiovascular depression during experimental endotoxemia induced by Escherichia coli lipopolysaccharide (LPS). LPS also induced nitric oxide (NO) and superoxide (O(2)(-)) production, depressed mitochondrial Complex I and IV activity, promoted the release of cytochrome c from mitochondria to cytosol, upregulated the cytosolic expression of activated caspase-9 and -3, or increased
caspase-3
enzyme activity in the RVLM. Microinjection bilaterally into the RVLM of an
inducible nitric oxide synthase
(
iNOS
) blocker, S-methylisothiourea, or a superoxide dismutase mimetic, Tempol, significantly blunted these apoptotic cellular events and antagonized the cardiovascular depression during endotoxemia. We conclude that caspase-dependent apoptotic cell death that results from NO- and O(2)(-)-associated mitochondrial signaling in the RVLM may underlie fatal cardiovascular depression during endotoxemia.
...
PMID:Nitric oxide- and superoxide-dependent mitochondrial signaling in endotoxin-induced apoptosis in the rostral ventrolateral medulla of rats. 1608 79
In vivo studies showed that tissue-plasminogen activator (t-PA) may aggravate neuronal injury after focal cerebral ischemia. We hypothesized that t-PA impairs survival-promoting cell signaling in the ischemic brain, which may be reversed by a neuroprotectant, i.e. melatonin. We examined the effects of t-PA (10 mg/kg, i.v.), administered alone or in combination with melatonin (4 mg/kg, i.p.), on ischemic injury,
inducible nitric oxide synthase
(
iNOS
) expression as well as Akt, Bcl-X(L) and
caspase-3
signaling following 90 min of intraluminal middle cerebral artery (MCA) occlusion in mice. t-PA, delivered immediately after reperfusion onset, increased infarct volume at 24 hr after MCA occlusion, in accordance with previous findings. Melatonin reduced infarct size when administered alone and reversed the t-PA-induced brain injury. Immunohistochemical studies showed that t-PA treatment was associated with an accumulation of
iNOS
positive cells in ischemic brain areas, which was abolished after co-delivery of melatonin. Western blots revealed that t-PA decreased phosphorylated Akt levels, but did not influence Bcl-X(L) expression and
caspase-3
activity in ischemic brain lysates. Co-treatment with melatonin restored phosphorylated Akt levels, increased Bcl-X(L) expression and reduced
caspase-3
activity. We provide evidence that t-PA-induced brain injury is accompanied by an activation of
iNOS
and inhibition of phosphatidylinositol-3 kinase/Akt. That melatonin reversed these signaling changes and the t-PA-induced brain injury makes this indole attractive as an add-on treatment with thrombolytics.
...
PMID:Tissue-plasminogen activator-induced ischemic brain injury is reversed by melatonin: role of iNOS and Akt. 1609 92
In this study we investigated the mechanisms of neuronal cell death induced by lipoteichoic acid (LTA) and muramyl dipeptide (MDP) from Gram-positive bacterial cell walls using primary cultures of rat cerebellum granule cells (CGCs) and rat cortical glial cells (astrocytes and microglia). LTA (+/- MDP) from Staphylococcus aureus induced a strong inflammatory response of both types of glial cells (release of interleukin-1beta, tumour necrosis factor-alpha and nitric oxide). The death of CGCs was caused by activated glia because in the absence of glia (treatment with 7.5 microm cytosine-d-arabinoside to inhibit non-neuronal cell proliferation) LTA + MDP did not cause significant cell death (less than 20%). In addition, staining with rhodamine-labelled LTA confirmed that LTA was bound only to microglia and astrocytes (not neurones). Neuronal cell death induced by LTA (+/- MDP)-activated glia was partially blocked by an
inducible nitric oxide synthase
inhibitor (1400 W; 100 microm), and completely blocked by a superoxide dismutase mimetic [manganese (III) tetrakis (4-benzoic acid)porphyrin chloride; 50 microm] and a peroxynitrite scavenger [5,10,15,20-tetrakis (4-sulfonatophenyl) porphyrinato iron (III); 100 microm] suggesting that nitric oxide and peroxynitrite contributed to LTA-induced cell death. Moreover, neuronal cell death was inhibited by selective inhibitors of
caspase-3
(z-DEVD-fmk; 50 microm) and caspase-8 (z-Ile-Glu(O-Me)-Thr-Asp(O-Me) fluoromethyl ketone; 50 microm) indicating that they were involved in LTA-induced neuronal cell death.
...
PMID:Inflammatory neurodegeneration induced by lipoteichoic acid from Staphylococcus aureus is mediated by glia activation, nitrosative and oxidative stress, and caspase activation. 1614 39
Pathogenic microorganisms invading the mammary gland induce an inflammatory reaction which includes an increase of somatic cells in milk and activation of bacteriostatic enzymes and proteins in milk. During spontaneously occurring subclinical mastitis the somatic milk cells, mainly macrophages, secrete cytokines, eicosanoids, acute phase proteins and other immunomediators. In contrast, the bacteriostatic protein lactoferrin is mainly secreted by mammary epithelial tissue, while major milk proteins like alpha-lactalbumin and kappa-casein are down-regulated already during subclinical infection. Changes of the mRNA expression of various immunomediators in the mammary tissue of cows during 12 h after induction of mastitis via intramammary administration of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) in several studies are reported. Six healthy lactating cows were injected in one quarter with 100 microg Escherichia coli-LPS (O26: B6) and the contralateral quarter with saline (9 g/l) serving as control. mRNA expression in mammary biopsy samples of various inflammatory factors and milk proteins at 0, 3, 6, 9 and 12 h after LPS administration was quantified by real-time reverse transcription-PCR. In LPS-challenged quarters tumour necrosis factor alpha and cyclooxygenase-2 mRNA expression increased to their highest values (P<0.05) at 3 h after LPS-challenge. Expression of lactoferrin, lysozyme,
inducible nitric oxide synthase
, and of the apoptotic factors
caspase-3
, caspase-7 and FAS was elevated (P<0.05) and peaked at 6 h after challenge. No significant increase in mRNA expression of platelet-activating factor acethylhydrolase, 5-lipoxygenase, and insulin-like growth factor 1 was found. None of the parameters tested did change significantly in the control quarters. mRNA expression of major milk proteins did not change significantly in response to the LPS challenge (alphaS1-casein, alphaS2-CN, beta-CN and beta-lactoglobulin) except for alpha-lactalbumin which decreased (P<0.05) in LPS-treated and control quarters and for kappa-CN which decreased in the LPS-treated quarters. In conclusion, mRNA expression of the majority albeit not all inflammatory factors changed within hours of LPS challenge. Decreased gene expression of alpha-lactalbumin and kappa-CN may reduce milk yield and suitability for cheese production.
...
PMID:Gene expression of factors related to the immune reaction in response to intramammary Escherichia coli lipopolysaccharide challenge. 1618 Jul 30
Heat stroke-induced death is a major killer worldwide. Mice were subjected to acute heat stress by exposing them to whole-body hyperthermia (WBH) treatment and were used as a model to study heat stroke. Administration of L-arginine (L-arg, 120 mg/kg, i.p) 2 h after the cessation of WBH rescued the mice from heat-induced death and reduced the hypothermia. Heat shock protein 70 levels in the liver were increased significantly in heat-stressed mice administered L-arg compared with the heat-stressed group. WBH induced apoptosis, as indicated by DNA fragmentation, and increased levels of p53 and
caspase-3
activity, which were significantly reduced by the administration of L-arg. The levels of
inducible nitric oxide synthase
in the liver, nitrite, and inflammatory cytokines like interleukin 1beta and tumor necrosis factor-alpha in the serum increased in WBH-treated mice. The levels of the above markers of heat stress significantly decreased in L-arg-treated mice. Kinin-B1 receptor (kinin-B1R) in cardiac tissue that is upregulated in heat stressed mice was significantly lower in L-arg-administered mice. These data suggest the potential use of L-arg, a nonessential amino acid that is used as an enteral diet supplement, to treat heat stroke-related injury when administered at the appropriate dose and time.
...
PMID:Therapeutic treatment with L-arginine rescues mice from heat stroke-induced death: physiological and molecular mechanisms. 1620 19
Experimental and clinical studies support the view that the semisynthetic tetracycline minocycline exhibits neuroprotective roles in several models of neurodegenerative diseases, including ischemia, Huntington, Parkinson diseases, and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. However, recent evidence indicates that minocycline does not always present beneficial actions. For instance, in an in vivo model of Huntington's disease, it fails to afford protection after malonate intrastriatal injection. Moreover, it reverses the neuroprotective effect of creatine in nigrostriatal dopaminergic neurons. This apparent contradiction prompted us to analyze the effect of this antibiotic on malonate-induced cell death. We show that, in rat cerebellar granular cells, the succinate dehydrogenase inhibitor malonate induces cell death in a concentration-dependent manner. By using DFCA, monochlorobimane and 10-N-nonyl-Acridin Orange to measure, respectively, H2O2-derived oxidant species and reduced forms of GSH and cardiolipin, we observed that malonate induced reactive oxygen species (ROS) production to an extent that surpasses the antioxidant defense capacity of the cells, resulting in GSH depletion and cardiolipin oxidation. The pre-treatment for 4 h with minocycline (10-100 microM) did not present cytoprotective actions. Moreover, minocycline failed to block ROS production and to abrogate malonate-induced oxidation of GSH and cardiolipin. Additional experiments revealed that minocycline was also unsuccessful to prevent the mitochondrial swelling induced by malonate. Furthermore, malonate did not induce the expression of the
iNOS
,
caspase-3
, -8, and -9 genes which have been shown to be up-regulated in several models where minocycline resulted cytoprotective. In addition, malonate-induced down-regulation of the antiapoptotic gene Bcl-2 was not prevented by minocycline, controversially the mechanism previously proposed to explain minocycline protective action. These results suggest that the minocycline protection observed in several neurodegenerative disease models is selective, since it is absent from cultured cerebellar granular cells challenged with malonate.
...
PMID:Minocycline fails to protect cerebellar granular cell cultures against malonate-induced cell death. 1624 43
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