Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0020672 (hypothermia)
17,327 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

When cultured hepatocytes were incubated in cell culture medium at 4 degreesC for up to 30 h and then returned to 37 degreesC, blebbing of the plasma membrane, cell detachment, chromatin condensation and margination, enhanced nuclear stainability with Hoechst 33342, ruffling of the nuclear membrane, and DNA fragmentation occurred. Similar to hepatocytes, cultured liver endothelial cells exhibited blebbing, chromatin condensation and margination, marked nuclear condensation, and increased stainability with Hoechst 33342 when exposed to hypothermia/rewarming. In both cell types, the occurrence and extent of these alterations were dependent on the duration of the cold incubation period. This cold-induced apoptosis was inhibited by hypoxia, by an array of free radical scavengers/antioxidants, and by iron chelators. However, the extent of the protection by the different antioxidants was different in the two cell types: iron chelators provided complete protection in liver endothelial cells but only partial protection in hepatocytes, whereas lipophilic antioxidants such as alpha-tocopherol provided complete protection in both cell types. During cold incubation, and especially during rewarming, lipid peroxidation occurred. These results suggest that the formation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) is a key mediator of cold-induced apoptosis, with ROS formation being completely iron-mediated in liver endothelial cells and partially iron-mediated in hepatocytes.
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PMID:Cold-induced apoptosis in cultured hepatocytes and liver endothelial cells: mediation by reactive oxygen species. 987 40

The effects of hypothermia on ischemia-reperfusion injury of the cochlea were studied in gerbils. Hearing was assessed by sequentially recording compound action potentials before, during and after the ischemia. The degree of hair cell loss in the organ of Corti was evaluated in specimens stained with rhodamine-phalloidin and the dye Hoechst 33342. Ischemic insult was applied to the animals by occluding the bilateral vertebral arteries for 15 min under normothermic or hypothermic (rectal temperature 32 degrees C) conditions. Interruption of the blood supply to the cochlea caused a tremendous increase in the compound action potential threshold, which usually recovered to some extent with reperfusion. In the ischemia/normothermic group, the threshold did not return to the pre-ischemic level. The average increase in the threshold seven days after ischemia was 20.0 dB. Histologically, the hair cell loss increased gradually until four days after the ischemic insult. On the seventh day, the mean loss of inner and outer hair cells at the basal turn was 31.1 % and 2.4 %, respectively. In the ischemia/hypothermic group, the threshold returned to the pre-ischemic level within 30 min after reperfusion and remained stable thereafter. The mean loss of inner and outer hair cells on the seventh day was 0.1 % and 0.2 %, respectively. These results indicate that hypothermia can prevent inner ear damage, which otherwise occurs after transient ischemia of the cochlea.
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PMID:Hypothermia prevents hearing loss and progressive hair cell loss after transient cochlear ischemia in gerbils. 1122

Cold ischemia--warm reperfusion (CI/WR) injury of liver transplantation involves hepatocyte cell death, the nature and underlying mechanisms of which remain unclear. Isolated hepatocytes and isolated perfused livers were used to determine the prevalence of necrosis and apoptosis as well as mitochondrial dysfunction. In isolated cells, propidium iodide and Hoechst 33342 staining showed a cold-storage, time-dependent increase in necrosis, whereas apoptosis was minimal even after 48 h of hypothermia. Nonetheless, a progressive loss of mitochondrial membrane potential was observed. Translocation of mitochondrial cytochrome c toward microsomes occurred within 24 h of CI/WR, with cytochrome c reaching the cytosol later. Mitochondria isolated from whole livers subjected to CI/WR also display reduced metabolic parameters and increased susceptibility to swelling. These events are associated with increased activity of major initiator (caspase 9) and effector (caspase 3) caspases. The results demonstrate that CI/WR induces mitochondrial dysfunction in isolated cells and in the whole organ; only in the latter is that sufficient to trigger the classical mitochondrial pathway of apoptosis. Our study also provides evidence for the involvement of endoplasmic reticulum stress in CI/WR hepatocyte injury. Combined protection of mitochondria and endoplasmic reticulum may thus represent an innovative therapeutic avenue to enhance liver graft viability and functional integrity.
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PMID:Implication of mitochondrial dysfunction and cell death in cold preservation--warm reperfusion-induced hepatocyte injury. 1690