Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0022116 (ischemia)
91,303 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Estradiol protects against brain injury, neurodegeneration, and cognitive decline. Our previous work demonstrates that physiological levels of estradiol protect against stroke injury and that this protection may be mediated through receptor-dependent alterations of gene expression. In this report, we tested the hypothesis that estrogen receptors play a pivotal role in mediating neuroprotective actions of estradiol and dissected the potential biological roles of each estrogen receptor (ER) subtype, ER alpha and ER beta, in the injured brain. To investigate and delineate these mechanisms, we used ER alpha-knockout (ER alpha KO) and ER beta-knockout (ER beta KO) mice in an animal model of stroke. We performed our studies by using a controlled endocrine paradigm, because endogenous levels of estradiol differ dramatically among ER alpha KO, ER beta KO, and wild-type mice. We ovariectomized ER alpha KO, ER beta KO, and the respective wild-type mice and implanted them with capsules filled with oil (vehicle) or a dose of 17 beta-estradiol that produces physiological hormone levels in serum. One week later, mice underwent ischemia. Our results demonstrate that deletion of ER alpha completely abolishes the protective actions of estradiol in all regions of the brain; whereas the ability of estradiol to protect against brain injury is totally preserved in the absence of ER beta. Thus, our results clearly establish that the ER alpha subtype is a critical mechanistic link in mediating the protective effects of physiological levels of estradiol in brain injury. Our discovery that ER alpha mediates protection of the brain carries far-reaching implications for the selective targeting of ERs in the treatment and prevention of neural dysfunction associated with normal aging or brain injury.
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PMID:Estrogen receptor alpha, not beta, is a critical link in estradiol-mediated protection against brain injury. 1117 57

We conducted this study to determine whether high physiological levels of estradiol (proestrus) could protect the hippocampal CA1 neurons following transient global ischemia. Ovariectomized or ovary-intact female rats were subjected to 20 min of ischemia and allowed to survive for 96 h. Estradiol was administered subcutaneously in a group of ovariectomized rats 24 h before ischemia induction. Ending serum estrogen levels were correlated to cerebral blood flow (CBF), histologic assessment and immunofluorescent caspase-3 active peptide (C-3AP) positive cell count. Estradiol administration significantly improved CBF in the hippocampus (compared with intact or ovariectomized rats) but not in the parietal cortex. No significant differences in CBF between intact or ovariectomized rats were noted. Estradiol administration maintained serum levels of the steroid in estradiol-treated rats-about 10 times that of intact animals and more than 20 times that of ovariectomized animals. Morphologically, live cell counts in estradiol-treated rats were significantly higher than in intact or ovariectomized rats. Live cell counts were also significantly higher in intact than ovariectomized rats. C-3AP positive cell counts were much higher in ovariectomized rats than in intact and estradiol-treated rats. In conclusion, proestrus levels of 17beta-estradiol protect hippocampal CA1 neurons against transient global ischemia, through mechanisms that appear to involve improvement of perfusion and inhibition of caspase-3 activity.
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PMID:Proestrus levels of estradiol during transient global cerebral ischemia improves the histological outcome of the hippocampal CA1 region: perfusion-dependent and-independent mechanisms. 1179 Mar 87

Estradiol reduces brain injury from many diseases, including stroke and trauma. To investigate the molecular mechanisms of this protection, the effects of 17-beta-estradiol on heat shock protein (HSP) expression were studied in normal male and female rats and in male gerbils after global ischemia. 17-beta-estradiol was given intraperitoneally (46 or 460 ng/kg, or 4.6 microg/kg) and Western blots performed for HSPs. 17-beta-estradiol increased hemeoxygenase-1, HSP25/27, and HSP70 in the brain of male and female rats. Six hours after the administration of 17-beta-estradiol, hemeoxygenase-1 increased 3.9-fold (460 ng/kg) and 5.4-fold (4.6 microg/kg), HSP25/27 increased 2.1-fold (4.6 microg/kg), and Hsp70 increased 2.3-fold (460 ng/kg). Immunocytochemistry showed that hemeoxygenase-1, HSP25/27,and HSP70 induction was localized to cerebral arteries in male rats, possibly in vascular smooth muscle cells. 17-beta-estradiol was injected intraperitoneally 20 minutes before transient occlusion of both carotids in adult gerbils. Six hours after global cerebral ischemia, 17-beta-estradiol (460 ng/kg) increased levels of hemeoxygenase-1 protein 2.4-fold compared with ischemia alone, and HSP25/27 levels increased 1.8-fold compared with ischemia alone. Hemeoxygenase-1 was induced in striatal oligodendrocytes and hippocampal neurons, and HSP25/27 levels increased in striatal astrocytes and hippocampal neurons. Finally, Western blot analysis confirmed that estrogen induced heat shock factor-1, providing a possible mechanism by which estrogen induces HSPs in brain and other tissues. The induction of HSPs may be an important mechanism for estrogen protection against cerebral ischemia and other types of injury.
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PMID:17-beta-estradiol induces heat shock proteins in brain arteries and potentiates ischemic heat shock protein induction in glia and neurons. 1182 16

We have previously demonstrated that estradiol reduces cell death in cortical explant cultures following injury induced by metabolic inhibition in a receptor-dependent fashion. In this study, we examined whether cell death involves apoptosis and assessed the potential mediators of estradiol's actions. Cortical explant cultures were generated from postnatal day 3 rat pups. On day 7 in vitro, explants were injured by exposure to 1 mM 2-DG/2 mM KCN for 2 h to model the metabolic inhibition observed during ischemia. Explants were fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde at 2, 6, 10 and 24 h following the injury period and 18-microm thick sections were cut on a cryostat and stained with cresyl violet to assess cell death. The same sections were also labeled by TUNEL to determine whether cell death occurred by apoptosis. Other sections were used for immunohistochemistry to determine whether cells that stained positive for activated caspase 3 were also immunopositive for NeuN, a neuronal marker, or GFAP, an astrocyte marker. Protein was extracted for Western blot analysis from a separate set of explants collected at 0, 0.5, 1, 2 and 4 h following the conclusion of the injury. Estradiol treatment significantly reduced the number of cells undergoing apoptotic cell death as indicated by nuclear condensation visualized by cresyl violet staining (P<0.05). TUNEL staining revealed that the majority of pyknotic and fragmented nuclei were also TUNEL positive. Furthermore, caspase 3 activation appeared to be restricted to neurons. To examine a possible mechanism by which estradiol prevents apoptosis, we examined the level of activation of Akt kinase, which mediates antiapoptotic signals. Potential activation was measured by phosphorylation of Akt at Ser473 by Western blot analysis. In the absence of estradiol, pAkt levels were significantly increased at 2 h following the termination of injury. Explants that were pretreated with estradiol exhibited elevated levels of pAkt at 1 h following injury. Treatment with ICI 182,780 prevented the effect of estradiol. These studies suggest that estradiol prevents injury-induced apoptosis and that Akt activation may mediate these protective effects.
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PMID:Estradiol enhances Akt activation in cortical explant cultures following neuronal injury. 1219 93

Premature and full-term human infants are at considerable risk of excitotoxic-mediated brain damage due to hypoxia-ischemia, infection or other trauma. Glutamate receptor activation is a major source of excitoxicity in the adult and developing brain, and the hippocampus is particularly vulnerable to damage. The seven-day-old rat is a widely used model of pediatric brain damage, in large part due to the relative insensitivity of the brain to exogenous glutamate treatment prior to this age. We have reexamined the possible role of glutamate in pediatric brain damage in the newborn rat using kainic acid treatment and attending to the sex of the animal as well as the effects of pretreatment with the gonadal steroid estradiol. Consistent with previous studies, we found no evidence of damage 7 days posttreatment in the CA1 region of the hippocampus in males or females. There was also little to no damage in the CA2/3 or dentate gyrus of males. In females, however, kainic-acid treatment induced substantial damage in the dentate gyrus and moderate damage in CA2/3, as assessed by neuron number and regional volume. Pretreatment with estradiol was protective against kainic acid-induced damage in females but was permissive for damage in the dentate gyrus of males. Estradiol treatment in the absence of kainic acid treatment was also neuroprotective in females in that it increased neuron number and volume throughout the hippocampal formation, suggesting that the basis of the sex difference observed in hippocampal volume was hormonally mediated. There was no effect of exogenous estradiol given to males in the absence of kainic acid. We conclude that the newborn female rat brain, but not the male, is sensitive to glutamate-mediated toxicity and that gonadal steroids play a complex role in both naturally occurring sex differences in hippocampal volume and response to injury.
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PMID:Sex differences in response to kainic acid and estradiol in the hippocampus of newborn rats. 1255 94

The development of new therapies for treatment of chronic wounds has not matched the availability of treatment modalities forecast by the pharmaceutical industry. This is attributable in large part to difficulties encountered in clinical trials as well as in isolating study design variables. Our hypothesis attempts to address this shortcoming. We are proposing that chronic wound pathogenesis is based on 3 fundamental factors: the cellular and systemic changes of aging, repeated ischemia-reperfusion injury, and bacterial colonization with resulting inflammatory host response. The derivation of this hypothesis is founded on the observation that the 3 primary categories of chronic wounds--pressure ulcers, diabetic ulcers, and venous ulcers, which are the overwhelming majority of chronic wounds--have these common causative factors. Our hypothesis incorporates major implications for treatment modalities based on these factors. Addressing the first issue, the cellular and systemic changes of aging, Regranex (Ortho-McNeil Pharmaceutical, Inc, Raritan, NJ), a platelet-derived growth factor drug, has shown great promise. Additional treatment modalities that address the second and third problems, repeated ischemia-reperfusion injury and bacterial colonization, include vacuum-assisted closure, warming of local tissue, and water irrigation using pulsed lavage. Additionally, treatment comprising a combination of these approaches has demonstrated success.
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PMID:Understanding chronic wounds: a unifying hypothesis on their pathogenesis and implications for therapy. 1514 94

Estrogen is neuroprotective in adult animals. We wished to determine if estrogen protects against brain injury in the newborn. Four-day-old rat pups were treated with subcutaneously implanted pellets containing 0.05 mg (2.4 microg/day) of 17beta-estradiol or vehicle, designed to release the estrogen over 21 days. At 7 days old the pups had the right carotid artery ligated followed by 2.5 h of 8% oxygen. Brain damage was evaluated by weight deficit of the right hemisphere at 22 days following hypoxia. Estradiol treatments reduced brain weight loss from -17.4+/-2.8% S.E.M. in the vehicle group (n=32) to -9.3+/-2.7% in the treated group (n=32, P<0.05). Brain cortex thiobarbituric acid reacting substances and caspase activities were assessed 24 h after reoxygenation. Estradiol significantly reduced a hypoxia-induced increase in brain thiobarbituric acid reactive substances (P<0.05). Levels of caspase-3, -8 and -9 activity increased due to hypoxia-ischemia. Estradiol had no effect on caspase activity. Estradiol reduced brain injury in the neonatal rat.
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PMID:Estrogen attenuates hypoxic-ischemic brain injury in neonatal rats. 1565 97

A growing body of evidence indicates that heme degradation products may counteract the deleterious consequences of hypoxia and/or ischemia-reperfusion injury. Because heme oxygenase (HO)-1 induction after adverse circulatory conditions is known to be protective, and because females in the proestrus cycle (with high estrogen) have better hepatic function and less hepatic damage than males after trauma-hemorrhage, we hypothesized that estrogen administration in males after trauma-hemorrhage will upregulate HO activity and protect the organs against dysfunction and injury. To test this hypothesis, male Sprague-Dawley rats underwent 5-cm laparotomy and hemorrhagic shock (35-40 mmHg for 93 +/- 2 min), followed by resuscitation with four times the shed blood volume in the form of Ringer lactate. 17beta-Estradiol and/or the specific HO enzyme inhibitor chromium mesoporphyrin (CrMP) were administered at the end of resuscitation, and the animals were killed 24 h thereafter. Trauma-hemorrhage reduced cardiac output, myocardial contractility, and serum albumin levels. Portal pressure and serum alanine aminotransferase levels were markedly increased under those conditions. These parameters were significantly improved in the 17beta-estradiol-treated rats. Estradiol treatment also induced increased HO-1 mRNA expression, HO-1 protein levels, and HO enzymatic activity in cardiac and hepatic tissue compared with vehicle-treated trauma-hemorrhage rats. Administration of the HO inhibitor CrMP prevented the estradiol-induced attenuation of shock-induced organ dysfunction and damage. Thus the salutary effects of estradiol administration on organ function after trauma-hemorrhage are mediated in part via upregulation of HO-1 expression and activity.
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PMID:Mechanism of salutary effects of estradiol on organ function after trauma-hemorrhage: upregulation of heme oxygenase. 1573 76

Estradiol at physiological concentrations intervenes in apoptotic death cascades and ameliorates neuronal death in experimental models of focal and global ischemia. The cellular targets that mediate estradiol protection of hippocampal neurons in global ischemia are, however, unclear. The present study examined the hypothesis that estradiol protects hippocampal neurons in ovariectomized rats via estrogen receptor (ER)alpha and/or beta. Estradiol (14 d pretreatment) afforded robust protection of CA1 neurons against global ischemia-induced death. The broad-spectrum ER antagonist ICI 182,780 (intracerebroventricularly, 0 and 12 h after ischemia) abolished estrogen protection, consistent with a role for ERs. To evaluate the potential roles of ERalpha vs. ERbeta in estrogen protection, we administered subtype-selective agonists for 14 d before and 7 d after ischemia. The ERalpha-selective agonist propyl pyrazole triol (PPT, 10 mg/kg) and ERbeta-selective agonist WAY 200070-3 (1 mg/kg) produced nearly complete protection of CA1 neurons in approximately 50% of the animals. PPT, but not WAY 200070-3, at doses used for protection, elicited lordosis, induced negative feedback inhibition of LH release, and reduced weight gain. These findings establish the efficacy of the PPT dose in neuroendocrine assays and specificity of WAY 200070-3 for ERbeta. We also examined the ability of estradiol and neuronal injury to regulate ERalpha and ERbeta expression. Both estradiol and global ischemia markedly increased ERalpha, but not ERbeta, protein in CA1. These data indicate that estradiol can act via ERalpha and ERbeta to protect CA1 neurons from global ischemia-induced death and that both estradiol and global ischemia modulate ERalpha expression in hippocampal CA1.
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PMID:Estrogen can act via estrogen receptor alpha and beta to protect hippocampal neurons against global ischemia-induced cell death. 1581 65

The present study tested the hypothesis that estradiol reduces tissue infarction after middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAO) in estradiol-deficient females by augmenting glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD) expression and thus activity, leading to increases in gamma-amino-butyric acid (GABA) tissue levels. Glutamic acid decarboxylase is the principal enzyme for GABA synthesis and has two isoforms, GAD65 and GAD67, which differ in size and cellular distribution. Rats were ovariectomized 7 to 8 days before receiving no hormone, placebo, or 25 microg estradiol via subcutaneous implant 7 to 10 days before harvesting tissue in either ischemic cohorts after 2 h of MCAO (end-ischemia) or in nonischemic cohorts. Selected cortical and striatal regions were microdissected from harvested brains. GAD65/67 mRNA levels were determined by microlysate ribonuclease protection assay. End-ischemic GABA concentrations were determined by HPLC. Steroid treatment selectively decreased ischemic cortical GAD67 mRNA levels. In most brain regions evaluated, regional GABA concentrations increased with ischemia regardless of treatment. Estradiol blocked MCAO-induced increases in GABA concentration only in dorsomedial cortex. These data suggest that estradiol repletion in ischemic rat brain selectively decreases GAD67 mRNA levels but does not alter steady-state GABA concentrations. It may be that estradiol under ischemic conditions is attenuating GABA metabolism rather than enhancing synthesis or is augmenting other aspects of GABAergic transmission such as GABA transporters and receptors.
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PMID:Estradiol alters only GAD67 mRNA levels in ischemic rat brain with no consequent effects on GABA. 1609 13


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