Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.4.25.1 (proteasome)
28,817 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Reactive oxygen and nitrogen species (ROS and RNS) have been extensively recognized as important signaling molecules implicated in physiological processes such as gene expression, cell differentiation and immune activation. Nevertheless, continuous production of these species may produce oxidative and/or nitrosative stress resulting in cell damage and ultimately leading to cell death. Due to the high oxygen consumption and relative poor antioxidant defense, the central nervous system is highly susceptible to ROS- and RNS-mediated toxicity. Actually, the oxidative and nitrosative stress have been implicated in the pathogenesis of neurodegeneration of a large variety of neurological disorders. This review will cover some aspects of the involvement of ROS- and RNS-mediated apoptotic processes occurring in cellular models of familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (FALS), in particular the cases associated with mutations in SOD1, the gene encoding Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase (Cu,Zn SOD). A possible role for proteasome in the inhibition of neurodegenerative process by balancing ROS and RNS species is envisaged on the basis of evidence provided by results obtained from studies on this experimental model.
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PMID:Interplay of Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase and nitric oxide synthase in neurodegenerative processes. 1471 Oct 10

Application of regurgitant from Leptinotarsa decemlineata Say on wound surfaces of one wounded leaf of intact bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) plants resulted in activation of ethylene biosynthesis followed by an increase of both peroxidase and polyphenol oxidase activity. The aim of the present investigation was to study the source of increased oxidative enzyme activities in regurgitant-treated bean leaves and to determine if hydrogen peroxide and ethylene biosynthesis is responsible for regurgitant-induced amplification of wound responses in bean plants. As the regurgitant contained relative high activities of both peroxidase and polyphenol oxidase, there is a possibility that increased enzyme activities in bean leaves following regurgitant treatment is an artifact of insect-derived enzymes. Localisation experiments and electrophoretic analysis revealed that only part of the increased enzyme activities could be attributed to regurgitant-derived enzymes. Both increase of ethylene production and oxidative enzyme activities depended on protein synthesis. To demonstrate if the increase of oxidative metabolism was ethylene-dependent, seedlings were pretreated with aminooxyacetic acid, an inhibitor of ethylene biosynthesis, and 1-methylcyclopropene (1-MCP), a competitive inhibitor of ethylene action. Increase of both peroxidase and polyphenol oxidase activity in wounded and subsequently regurgitant-treated leaf was abolished by both aminooxyacetic acid and 1-MCP. Inhibitor studies indicated that H2O2 generated through NADPH oxidase and superoxide dismutase is necessary for regurgitant-induced increase of ethylene production and oxidative enzyme activities.
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PMID:Reactive oxygen and ethylene are involved in the regulation of regurgitant-induced responses in bean plants. 1502 33

It has been shown that large doses of acetaminophen can result in increased degradation of the hepatic cytochrome P450 (CYP) enzymes in vivo; however, the proteolytic pathways have not been identified. We found that incubating transfected HepG2 cells that express CYP3A4 or a reconstituted microsomal model containing human liver microsomes and cytosol, high concentrations of acetaminophen could induce a dose- and time-dependent degradation of CYP3A4. In the microsomal model the degradation could be blocked and augmented by the presence of catalase and superoxide dismutase, respectively. Tocopherol could also protect against the acetaminophen-induced degradation. However, lipid peroxidation assays showed no significant increases in lipid peroxidation products nor was there any protection by propyl gallate. Protease and proteasome inhibitors showed that the proteolytic process was mainly (85%) mediated by the lysosomal pathway, whereas a minor portion (15%) of the degradation was mediated by the proteasomal pathway. Both pepstatin A and anti-cathepsin D neutralizing antibody decreased acetaminophen-induced degradation of CYP3A4 in microsomal model systems. Pepstatin A also blocked the acetaminophen-induced degradation of the CYP3A4 in a transfected HepG2 cell line. Incubating the 3A4 cells in the presence of acetaminophen also increased cathepsin D content and activity. The lysosomal pathway, mainly mediated by cathepsin D, appears to be the major proteolytic pathway involved in the degradation of the P450 enzymes induced by toxic doses of acetaminophen.
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PMID:Characterization of the acetaminophen-induced degradation of cytochrome P450-3A4 and the proteolytic pathway. 1507 44

A 46-year-old patient developed amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) characterized by rapid progression. She needed respiratory assistance after a course of 9 months. She died 4.5 years after onset. Autopsy showed dramatic atrophy of the spinal cord, sparing only the posterior tracts, associated with neuronal loss and astrogliosis in various areas including the anterior horns, motor cortex, striatum, thalamus, and substantia nigra. Ubiquitin immunohistochemistry showed rare skein-like inclusions in the surviving spinal and medullary motor neurons. Eosinophilic inclusions were found in the nuclei of pyramidal neurons in the hippocampus. These inclusions were immunoreactive to antibodies against ubiquitin, promyelocytic leukemia gene product, proteasome, and ataxin-3. They were not immunoreactive to antibodies against tau, cystatin C, neurofilament, alpha-synuclein, SOD-1, and polyglutamine (1C2), and were not stained by ethidium bromide. Similar inclusions were found in the motor cortex. The immunoreactivity of the inclusions was similar to that encountered in diseases associated with CAG repeats, except for the negativity of the immunolabelling with 1C2. At the ultrastructural level, the nuclear inclusions were made of straight filaments (10-12 nm in diameter) arranged at random, reminiscent of the polyglutamine intranuclear hyaline inclusions.
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PMID:Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis with neuronal intranuclear protein inclusions. 1511 87

Mutations in the Cu/Zn-superoxide dismutase (SOD-1) gene are responsible for a familial form of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (fALS). The present study demonstrated impaired proteasomal function in the lumbar spinal cord of transgenic mice expressing human SOD-1 with the ALS-causing mutation G93A (SOD-1(G93A)) compared to non-transgenic littermates (LM) and SOD-1(WT) transgenic mice. Chymotrypsin-like activity was decreased as early as 45 days of age. By 75 days, chymotrypsin-, trypsin-, and caspase-like activities of the proteasome were impaired, at about 50% of control activity in lumbar spinal cord, but unchanged in thoracic spinal cord and liver. Both total and specific activities of the proteasome were reduced to a similar extent, indicating that a change in proteasome function, rather than a decrease in proteasome levels, had occurred. Similar decreases of total and specific activities of the proteasome were observed in NIH 3T3 cell lines expressing fALS mutants SOD-1(G93A) and SOD-1(G41S), but not in SOD-1(WT) controls. Although overall levels of proteasome were maintained in spinal cord of SOD-1(G93A) transgenic mice, the level of 20S proteasome was substantially reduced in lumbar spinal motor neurons relative to the surrounding neuropil. It is concluded that impairment of the proteasome is an early event and contributes to ALS pathogenesis.
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PMID:Focal dysfunction of the proteasome: a pathogenic factor in a mouse model of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. 1518 35

Parkinson's disease (PD) is the second most common neurodegenerative disease after Alzheimer's disease. It is urgently needed to elucidate the cause of the disease and to establish neuroprotective treatment. We have been working on the etiology and pathogenesis of PD for many years and we found selective loss of mitochondrial complex I and the alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase complex in the nigral neurons of patients with PD. Our observation firmly established mitochondrial defects in PD. Mitochondrial respiratory failure induces oxidative damage in neurons, and we found increase in hydroxynonenal and 8-oxo-deoxyguanine, indices of oxidative damage, in the nigral neurons of PD. These abnormalities can trigger apoptotic cell death. The primary events which induce mitochondrial failure and oxidative damage are not known, however, it has been postulated that the interaction of genetic risk factors and environmental factors would initiate the degenerative process. Based on this assumption, we conducted genetic association studies by the candidate gene methods. We found that polymorphic mutations of superoxide dismutase-2 and 24-kDa subunit of mitochondrial complex I were associated increased risk of developing Parkinson's disease. While we were doing this genetic association study, we found a family, in which parkinsonian phenotype completely segregated with a polymorphic mutation of the superoxide dismutase-2 gene. In this family, 4 out of 6 siblings were affected with early onset parkinsonism and the parents were apparently normal. Thus the mode of inheritance appeared to be autosomal recessive and this type is now called as AR-JP or Park2. We confirmed the linkage of this type of familial Parkinson's disease to the superoxide dismutase loci that is located in the telomeric region of chromosome 6 by the linkage analysis using microsatellite markers in this region. Then we found another family, in which an affected patient showed lack of one of the microsatellite markers (D6S315), which we were using in the linkage analysis. This observation prompted us to initiate the molecular cloning of the disease gene utilizing D6S315 as the initial probe. The molecular cloning was done with the collaboration with Professor Nobuyoshi Shimizu of Keio University. We identified a novel gene and confirmed that mutations of this novel gene were found only in the patients with autosomal recessive Parkinson's disease. The novel gene was named parkin. We conducted mutational analysis on more than 700 families with Parkinson's disease. We also established a method to detect compound heterozygotes of parkin mutations. Mutinous of the parkin gene were found in approximately 50% of autosomal recessive families. Many kinds of exonic deletions and point mutations were found. This type of familial Parkinson's disease had been considered to be unique among Japanese, but since we started mutational analysis of the parkin gene, we confirmed the world wide distribution of parkin gene mutations. Then we analyzed functions of parkin protein with the collaboration with Dr. Keiji Tanaka of Tokyo Metropolitan Institute of Medical Sciences. We found that parkin protein was a ubiquitin-protein ligase of the ubiquitin system. Now we are working on the candidate substrates of parkin protein as a ubiquitin ligase. We found that CDCrel-1, a synaptic vesicle protein, was a candidate substrate of parkin protein. In addition, we found two additional candidate proteins, i.e., alpha-synuclein 22 and PAEL receptor, with the collaboration of Professor Denis Selkoe of Harvard Medical School and Dr. Ryosuke Takahashi of RIKEN, respectively. Accumulation of PAEL receptor in the endoplasmic reticulum causes endoplasmic reticulum stress and apoptotic cell death. We found evidence to indicate accumulation of PAEL receptor and the presence of endoplasmic reticulum stress in a patient with AR-JP (Park2). Thus our studies firmly established that a genetic defect of an enzyme in the ubiquitin-proteasome system induces selective nigral neuronal death. We indicated the important role of the ubiquitin-proteasome system in neurodegeneration in general. In many other neurodegenerative disorders, such as Alzheimer's disease, Huntington's disease, Machado-Joseph disease, dentatorubral-pallidoluysian atrophy, and ALS, ubiquitinated proteins are accumulated in neurons. Thus protein handling in the ubiquitin-proteasome system appears to be affected in these neurodegenerative disorders despite the difference in the primary defects. Our studies also suggest many potential approaches for the discovery of neuroprotective treatment for not only Parkinson's disease but also other neurodegenerative disorders.
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PMID:[Etiology and pathogenesis of Parkinson's disease: from mitochondrial dysfunctions to familial Parkinson's disease]. 1528 6

The effects of 1-MCP (1-methylcyclo-propene) at 0.5, 1 and 2 muL/L on senescence and quality attributes in edible podded pea (Pisum sativum L.var.Saccharatum) during cold storage at 1 degrees C were investigated. The results indicated that treatments with 1 and 2 microL/L 1-MCP significantly inhibited respiratory rate, ethylene production and superoxide production, maintained higher levels of SOD, AsA-POD activities and chlorophyll and AsA contents, reduced the increases in MDA and fiber contents and decay index, thereby delayed the senescence process and quality deterioration. Treatment with 0.5 microL/L 1-MCP showed no significant effects on senescence and quality changes in harvested edible podded pea.
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PMID:[Effect of 1-MCP on senescence and quality in cold-stored edible podded pea]. 1559 42

The ubiquitin-proteasome system (UPS) is a central component in the cellular defence against potentially toxic protein aggregates. UPS dysfunction is linked to the pathogenesis of both sporadic and inherited neurodegenerative diseases, including dominantly inherited familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (fALS). To investigate the role of the UPS in fALS pathogenesis, transgenic mice expressing mutant G9 3A Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase (SOD1) were crossed with transgenic mice expressing epitope tagged, wild-type or dominant-negative mutant ubiquitin (Ub(K48R)). RNase protection assays were used to confirm expression of the Ub transgenes in spinal cord and ubiquitin transgene levels were estimated to account for 9-12% of total ubiquitin. Mice expressing the G9 3A transgene exhibited neurological symptoms and histopathological changes typical of this model irrespective of ubiquitin transgene status. Impaired rotarod performance was observed in all G9 3A transgenics by 7 weeks of age irrespective of ubiquitin genotype. The presence of wild-type or mutant ubiquitin transgenes resulted in a small but significant delay in the onset of clinical symptoms and mild acceleration of disease progression, without influencing overall survival. These data suggest that relatively small changes in ubiquitin expression can influence the development of neurodegenerative disease and are consistent with a neuroprotective role for the UPS.
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PMID:Effect of ubiquitin expression on neuropathogenesis in a mouse model of familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. 1563 28

Either a single (acute) or repeated daily (chronic) injections (1 injection/day) of 20 mg/kg cocaine for 10 days to rats was found to increase reactive oxygen species production in two dopaminergic brain structures, the frontal cortex and the striatum. We found that the mitochondrial genome was down-regulated after acute cocaine injection. Hydroperoxide and lipid peroxide generation was correlated with an increase in mitochondrial hydrogen peroxide generation and with a reduced functioning of mitochondrial complex I in response to cocaine. As judged from the measurement of caspase-3 activity and TUNEL labeling, neither acute nor chronic cocaine treatment has been found to induce apoptosis in any of the structures examined. This differs dramatically from what has been described for methamphetamine. Cocaine-induced radical formation was accompanied by the induction of the antioxidant enzymes superoxide dismutase and glutathione peroxidase, after both acute and chronic cocaine treatment. In addition, proteasome chymotrypsin-like activity was enhanced following a single cocaine injection in both cortex and striatum. It is proposed that the compensatory mechanisms to oxidative stress occurring in response to cocaine were effective in scavenging reactive oxygen species and in preventing subsequent cellular damage, thus explaining why no significant cell death was found in these brain structures.
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PMID:Acute or repeated cocaine administration generates reactive oxygen species and induces antioxidant enzyme activity in dopaminergic rat brain structures. 1585 23

Insulin resistance may be modeled in H-411E liver cells in tissue culture with the use of the cytokine tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) and insulin. This tissue-culture model nicely mimics IR in human type 2 diabetes mellitus. After incubation of liver cells in tissue culture with INS alone, TNF-alpha alone, and TNF-alpha plus insulin, as well as a control sample, liver-cell extracts were separated on 2D polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis on the basis of isoelectric point and molecular weight. We analyzed the gel images with the use of PD Quest software (Bio-Rad Laboratories, Hercules, Calif) to identify differentially expressed protein spots (ie, up or down with insulin vs down or up with TNF-alpha plus insulin). In separate experiments, phosphorus-32 incorporation/autoradiography and phosphoprotein staining were used to characterize treatment-induced phosphorylations. Affected protein spots were identified with the use of peptide fingerprinting and matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization time of flight mass spectrometry. The first series of experiments identified 6 differentially expressed proteins: eukaryotic translation initiation factor-3, subunit 2, regulator of G-protein signaling-5, superoxide dismutase, protein disulfide isomerase A6, proteasome subunit-alpha type 3, and regucalcin. In addition, we observed changes in the phosphorylation of protein disulfide isomerase A6. A second series of experiments identified 7 additional proteins with significantly altered differential expression: cell-division protein kinase-4, kinogen heavy chain, carbonic anhydrase-7, E 3 ubiquitin protein ligase, URE-B1; Rab GDP dissociation inhibitor-beta, Rab GDP dissociation inhibitor-beta2, and MAWDBP. It can be seen that differentially expressed proteins, affected by treatment with insulin or with TNF-alpha plus insulin, include regulators of translation, protein degradation, cellular Ca ++ , G-proteins, and free-radical production. Although one cannot detail the mechanism or mechanisms of TNF-alpha induced IR from this data alone, it is easy to relate all of these proteins to a role in insulin signal transduction and, hence, insulin resistance.
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PMID:Proteome of H-411E (liver) cells exposed to insulin and tumor necrosis factor-alpha: analysis of proteins involved in insulin resistance. 1590 99


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