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Enzyme
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Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Query: UMLS:C0020440 (
hypercapnia
)
7,939
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Babies are frequently exposed to cerebral hypoxia and ischemia (H/I) during the perinatal period as a result of stroke, problems with delivery, or postdelivery respiratory management. The sole approved treatment for acute stroke is tissue type plasminogen activator. H/I impairs pial artery dilation (PAD) induced by
hypercapnia
and hypotension, the impairment aggravated by type plasminogen activator and attenuated by the
plasminogen activator inhibitor-1
-derived peptide EEIIMD. Mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK), a family of at least three kinases, ERK, p38, and JNK, is upregulated after H/I and ERK contribute to impaired cerebrovasodilation. This study determined the roles of p38 and JNK MAPK in the impairment of dilation post-H/I in pigs equipped with a closed cranial window and the relationship between alterations in MAPK isoforms and EEIIMD-mediated cerebrovascular protection. Cerebrospinal fluid-phosphorylated (activated) p38 MAPK, but not JNK MAPK, was increased after H/I, an effect potentiated by intravenous EEIIMD administered 1 h postinjury. PAD in response to
hypercapnia
and hypotension was blunted by H/I, but dilation was maintained by EEIIMD. PAD was further impaired by the p38 antagonist SB-203580 but unchanged by the JNK antagonist SP-600125. Isoproterenol-induced PAD was unchanged by H/I, EEIIMD, SB-203580, and SP-600125. These data indicate that postinjury treatment with EEIIMD attenuated impaired cerebrovasodilation post-H/I by upregulating p38 but not JNK. These data suggest that
plasminogen activator inhibitor-1
-based peptides and other approaches to upregulate p38 may offer a novel approach to increase the benefit-to-risk ratio of thrombolytic therapy for diverse central nervous system disorders associated with H/I.
...
PMID:PAI-1-derived peptide EEIIMD prevents impairment of cerebrovasodilation by augmenting p38 MAPK upregulation after cerebral hypoxia/ischemia. 2043 43