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Query: UMLS:C0022116 (ischemia)
91,303 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In histological studies using retinas, eyes are commonly fixed with aldehyde derivatives administered by immersion or perfusion. However, the histology of rat retinas chemically fixed as a whole eye is typically inferior to the histology of retinas that are immediately fixed after acute dissection from the rest of the eye. Chemical fixation without dissection often results in neuronal swelling resembling excitotoxic damage induced by ischemia because the retina is protected by the sclera and is thus poorly accessible to immersion or perfusion fixation techniques. In order for the acute dissection technique to work properly, it must be completed in a timely manner, which may be difficult under some circumstances. Microwave irradiation is an alternative method for fixing tissues that are inaccessable to chemicals. We examined the effectiveness of microwave irradiation of the whole eye as a substitute for acute retinal dissection. To study the feasibility of microwave methods, we compared retinal morphology using microwave irradiation to morphology using conventional immersion fixation methods. Eyes were removed from rats, placed in a container with 2 or 20 ml artificial cerebrospinal fluid (aCSF) and irradiated with a household microwave oven. For morphological comparison, control eyes were immersed in a chemical fixative containing 1% paraformaldehyde and 1.5% glutaraldehyde. All eyes were embedded in araldite for evaluation by light microscopy. Retinal segments acutely isolated before immersion fixation revealed intact histology whereas retinal segments exposed to 60 min of simulated ischemia showed severe neuronal degeneration. Using an immersion technique, the retinas of chemically fixed whole eyes showed neuronal swelling similar to excitotoxic ischemic damage, suggesting that conventional immersion methods provide poor whole eye fixation. The neuronal degeneration observed with conventional immersion fixation was not found in retinas of whole eyes fixed with 20 sec of microwave irradiation. During microwave irradiation the temperature in the bathing aCSF rose to 55-72 degrees C. In some eyes, overcooking produced chromatin clumping and a small loss of contrast in staining. Although nuclear clumping and diminished staining occasionally result from overcooking, ischemic damage is well controlled with microwave fixation of enucleated eyes. When the optimal conditions are defined, microwave fixation may be preferable for retinal histology if chemical fixation following acute dissection is not feasible.
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PMID:Comparison of rat retinal fixation techniques: chemical fixation and microwave irradiation. 1065 44

Xanthine oxidase (XO)-catalyzed nitrite reduction with nitric oxide (NO) production has been reported to occur under anaerobic conditions, but questions remain regarding the magnitude, kinetics, and biological importance of this process. To characterize this mechanism and its quantitative importance in biological systems, electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy, chemiluminescence NO analyzer, and NO electrode studies were performed. The XO reducing substrates xanthine, NADH, and 2,3-dihydroxybenz-aldehyde triggered nitrite reduction to NO, and the molybdenum-binding XO inhibitor oxypurinol inhibited this NO formation, indicating that nitrite reduction occurs at the molybdenum site. However, at higher xanthine concentrations, partial inhibition was seen, suggesting the formation of a substrate-bound reduced enzyme complex with xanthine blocking the molybdenum site. Studies of the pH dependence of NO formation indicated that XO-mediated nitrite reduction occurred via an acid-catalyzed mechanism. Nitrite and reducing substrate concentrations were important regulators of XO-catalyzed NO generation. The substrate dependence of anaerobic XO-catalyzed nitrite reduction followed Michaelis-Menten kinetics, enabling prediction of the magnitude of NO formation and delineation of the quantitative importance of this process in biological systems. It was determined that under conditions occurring during no-flow ischemia, myocardial XO and nitrite levels are sufficient to generate NO levels comparable to those produced from nitric oxide synthase. Thus, XO-catalyzed nitrite reduction can be an important source of NO generation under ischemic conditions.
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PMID:Characterization of the magnitude and kinetics of xanthine oxidase-catalyzed nitrite reduction. Evaluation of its role in nitric oxide generation in anoxic tissues. 1131 67

Mitochondrial dysfunction is a characteristic of ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) injury in the heart. While oxidative stress has been implicated in mitochondrial damage in I/R injury, the underlying mechanisms are unclear. 4-Hydroxynonenal (HNE) is a toxic aldehyde generated by lipid peroxidation. The purpose of the present study was to assess the role of HNE in I/R-induced damage of a crucial component of the mitochondrial electron transport chain, cytochrome c oxidase (COX). I/R was induced in male WKY rats by 15 mins of ischemia followed by reperfusion for up to 3 h. COX activity was measured spectrophotometrically at 550 nm. HNE adducts with COX subunits were detected by Western Blot using an HNE-histidine antibody. HNE and reduced glutathione (GSH) contents were measured in mitochondria by HPLC. Following 3 h of reperfusion, COX activity was reduced to 59% of control, accompanied by increases in HNE adducts with COX (P<0.05). Mitochondrial HNE content in reperfused hearts was increased to 165% of control, whereas GSH was decreased to 62% of control (P<0.05). After purified COX was incubated with HNE in vitro, COX activity was decreased progressively with increasing concentrations of HNE, accompanied by concentration-dependent formation of HNE adducts with COX. GSH prevented HNE adduct formation as well as COX inhibition by HNE. These results suggest that HNE, via adduct formation with COX subunits, plays an important role in COX dysfunction caused by reperfusion. The findings also indicate that decreases in mitochondrial GSH stores in reperfused myocardium could potentiate HNE-mediated COX damage.
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PMID:Role of 4-hydroxynonenal in modification of cytochrome c oxidase in ischemia/reperfused rat heart. 1170 37

Previously, in monkeys undergoing 20 min whole brain ischemia we demonstrated that the activated calpain-induced lysosomal disruption with the resultant leakage of cathepsins B and L, causes neuronal death in the cornu Ammonis (CA) 1 sector on day 5. Selective cathepsin inhibitors significantly protected ischemic CA1 neurons from delayed necrosis. Recently, pyridoxal phosphate (PLP) and pyridoxal (hydrochloride) (PL) were demonstrated to inhibit cathepsins B and L in vitro, because the active aldehyde at position 4 of the pyridine ring has an affinity for the active site -SH of cysteine residues of cathepsins. Here, we studied whether PLP and PL can, in vivo, protect monkey CA1 neurons from ischemic insult. In monkeys undergoing 20 min whole brain ischemia, 15 mg/kg body weight/day of drugs were intravenously injected for 10 days before and after the ischemic insult. Histological analysis of the surviving CA1 neurons was done using the hippocampus resected on day 5 after ischemia. For PLP or PL, approximately 17% (P = 0.0639) or 54% (P < 0.0001) of the total population (100%) of control CA1 neurons were, respectively, saved from the ischemia-induced neuronal death, showing a remarkable contrast to the surviving neurons (approximately 3.9%) in non-treated monkeys. These data suggested that PL (perhaps PLP intracellularly) is useful as a novel neuroprotectant in primates.
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PMID:Neuroprotective effects of pyridoxal phosphate and pyridoxal against ischemia in monkeys. 1184 15

Cerebral ischemia stimulates increased activity of polyamine oxidase, a ubiquitous enzyme that catabolizes polyamines to produce 3-aminopropanal. 3-Aminopropanal is a reactive aldehyde that mediates progressive neuronal necrosis and glial apoptosis. Here we report that increased levels of 3-aminopropanal-modified protein levels in humans after aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage correlate with the degree of cerebral injury as measured by admission Hunt/Hess grade. In vitro screening of clinically approved drugs reveals that N-2-mercaptopropionyl glycine (N-2-MPG), an agent clinically approved for prevention of renal stones in patients with cysteinuria, significantly inhibits the cytotoxicity of 3-aminopropanal. N-2-MPG reacts with 3-aminopropanal to yield a nontoxic thioacetal adduct, as confirmed by electrospray ionization mass spectroscopy. Administration of N-2-MPG in clinically relevant doses to rats significantly reduces cerebral 3-aminopropanal-modified protein immunoreactivity and infarct volume in a standardized model of middle cerebral artery occlusion, even when the agent is administered after the onset of ischemia. These results implicate 3-aminopropanal as a therapeutic target for cerebral ischemia.
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PMID:Neuroprotection in cerebral ischemia by neutralization of 3-aminopropanal. 1194 72

Small heat shock proteins (sHsps) are a large family of proteins with monomeric molecular weight of 12-43 kDa, present within the prokaryotic and eukariotic cell as large oligomeric complexes, ranging in size from 200-800 kDa. Unlike the high molecular weight Hsps, which are involved in protein folding in vivo, under normal conditions, sHsps play an important role in protecting organism from stress. SHsps share an evolutionarily conserved sequence of 80-100 amino acids, located in the C-terminal region, and called "alpha-crystallin domain"; its role in subunits interactions has been recently underlined by site-directed spin labeling studies and by fluorescence resonance energy transfer data. The N-terminal region, preceding the alpha-crystallin domain, is variable in length and amino acid sequence, contributing to structural diversity between different sHsps and having a role in multimerization. The alpha-Crystallin domain is followed by C-terminal extension, a polar structure, involved in protein solubility, which share no sequence homology. Expression of sHsps is induced in response to various kinds of stress including heat shock, oxidative stress, osmostress, or ischemia, but some sHsps are expressed constitutively under physiological conditions. In vitro, sHsps selectively bind and stabilize proteins and prevent their aggregation at elevated temperatures in an ATP-independent way and protect enzymes against heat-induced inactivation. Our own studies focused on the chaperone-like activity of alpha-crystallin, the major protein component of vertebrate lens, using another system than heat-induced aggregation. Our data demonstrated that alpha-crystallin specifically protects enzymes against inactivation by different posttranslational modifications such as glycation, carbamylation and aldehyde binding, and also reactivates GuHCl-denatured enzymes. Complex formation between alpha-crystallin and the denatured enzymes, was suggested as a mechanism of protection.
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PMID:Chaperone-like activity of alpha-crystallin and other small heat shock proteins. 1236 33

Increasing evidence indicates that protein-aldehyde adducts involving mostly 4-hydroxynonenal could be causally involved in both pathophysiological and adaptive events following an oxidative stress insult such as ischemia/reperfusion. The goal of this study was to assess if isotope dilution chromatography-mass spectrometry can be used to quantitate changes in the cardiac levels of 4-hydroxynonenal and 1,4-dihydroxynonene, one of its major metabolites, bound to thiol proteins during ischemia/reperfusion. For this purpose, we modified a previously published method to include treatment with Raney Nickel, which specifically cleaves thioether linkages. Our study model was the isolated Langendorff-perfused rat heart subjected to various ischemia/reperfusion protocols. Hearts perfused under normoxia contained small amounts of protein-bound 4-hydroxynonenal and 1,4-dihydroxynonene (1.38 +/- 0.29 and 2.69 +/- 0.17 nmol/g wet weight, respectively). The accumulation of these adducts after global ischemia depended on the severity of the ischemic insult up to a plateau and was not exacerbated by reperfusion. In conclusion, our method allows the quantification of time-dependent changes in 4-hydroxynonenal and 1,4-dihydroxynonene bound to proteins via thioether linkage in ischemic/reperfused heart tissues. The presence of protein-bound 1,4-dihydroxynonene in heart tissues suggests that this organ can detoxify protein-bound 4-hydroxynonenal.
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PMID:Quantitative gas chromatographic-mass spectrometric assay of 4-hydroxynonenal bound to thiol proteins in ischemic/reperfused rat hearts. 1241 70

In addition to nitric oxide (NO) generation from specific NO synthases, NO is also formed during anoxia from nitrite reduction, and xanthine oxidase (XO) catalyzes this process. While in tissues and blood high nitrate levels are present, questions remain regarding whether nitrate is also a source of NO and if XO-mediated nitrate reduction can be an important source of NO in biological systems. To characterize the kinetics, magnitude, and mechanism of XO-mediated nitrate reduction under anaerobic conditions, EPR, chemiluminescence NO-analyzer, and NO-electrode studies were performed. Typical XO reducing substrates, xanthine, NADH, and 2,3-dihydroxybenz-aldehyde, triggered nitrate reduction to nitrite and NO. The rate of nitrite production followed Michaelis-Menten kinetics, while NO generation rates increased linearly following the accumulation of nitrite, suggesting stepwise-reduction of nitrate to nitrite then to NO. The molybdenum-binding XO inhibitor, oxypurinol, inhibited both nitrite and NO production, indicating that nitrate reduction occurs at the molybdenum site. At higher xanthine concentrations, partial inhibition was seen, suggesting formation of a substrate-bound reduced enzyme complex with xanthine blocking the molybdenum site. The pH dependence of nitrite and NO formation indicate that XO-mediated nitrate reduction occurs via an acid-catalyzed mechanism. With conditions occurring during ischemia, myocardial xanthine oxidoreductase and nitrate levels were determined to generate up to 20 microM nitrite within 10-20 min that can be further reduced to NO with rates comparable to those of maximally activated NOS. Thus, XOR catalyzed nitrate reduction to nitrite and NO occurs and can be an important source of NO production in ischemic tissues.
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PMID:Characterization of the magnitude and kinetics of xanthine oxidase-catalyzed nitrate reduction: evaluation of its role in nitrite and nitric oxide generation in anoxic tissues. 1254 37

A transient, sublethal ischemic interval confers resistance to a subsequent, otherwise lethal ischemic insult, in a process termed ischemic preconditioning. Poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase-1 (PARP-1) normally functions in DNA repair, but extensive PARP-1 activation is a major cause of ischemic cell death. Because PARP-1 can be cleaved and inactivated by caspases, we investigated the possibility that caspase cleavage of PARP-1 could contribute to ischemic preconditioning. Murine cortical cultures were treated with glucose deprivation combined with 0.5 mm 2-deoxyglucose and 5 mm azide ("chemical ischemia") to model the reversible energy failure that occurs during transient ischemia in vivo. Cortical cultures preconditioned with 15 min of chemical ischemia showed increased resistance to subsequent, longer periods of chemical ischemia. These cultures were also more resistant to the PARP-1 activating agent, N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine, suggesting reduced capacity for PARP-1 activation after preconditioning. Immunostaining for the 89 kDa PARP-1 cleavage fragment and for poly(ADP-ribose) formation confirmed that PARP-1 was cleaved and PARP-1 activity was attenuated in the preconditioned neurons. Preconditioning also produced an increase in activated caspase-3 peptide and an increase in caspase-3 activity in the cortical cultures. A cause-effect relationship between caspase activation, PARP-1 cleavage, and ischemic preconditioning was supported by studies using the caspase inhibitor Ac-Asp-Glu-Val-Asp-aldehyde (DEVD-CHO). Cultures treated with DEVD-CHO after preconditioning showed reduced PARP-1 cleavage and reduced resistance to subsequent ischemia. These findings suggest a novel interaction between the caspase- and PARP-1-mediated cell death pathways in which sublethal caspase activation leads to PARP-1 cleavage, thereby increasing resistance to subsequent ischemic stress.
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PMID:Ischemic preconditioning by caspase cleavage of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase-1. 1295 57

Despite a detailed understanding of their metabolism, mitochondria often behave anomalously. In particular, global suppression of mitochondrial metabolism and metabolite exchange occurs in apoptosis, ischemia and anoxia, cytopathic hypoxia of sepsis and multiple organ failure, alcoholic liver disease, aerobic glycolysis in cancer cells (Warburg effect) and unstimulated pancreatic beta cells. Here, we propose that closure of voltage-dependent anion channels (VDAC) in the mitochondrial outer membrane accounts for global mitochondrial suppression. In anoxia, cytopathic hypoxia and ethanol treatment, reactive oxygen and nitrogen species, cytokines, kinase cascades and increased NADH act to inhibit VDAC conductance and promote selective oxidation of membrane-permeable respiratory substrates like short chain fatty acids and acetaldehyde. In cancer cells, highly expressed hexokinase binds to and inhibits VDAC to suppress mitochondrial function while stimulating glycolysis, but an escape mechanism intervenes when glucose-6-phosphate accumulates and dissociates hexokinase from VDAC. Similarly, glucokinase binds mitochondria of insulin-secreting beta cells, possibly blocking VDAC and suppressing mitochondrial function. We propose that glucose metabolism leads to glucose-6-phosphate-dependent unbinding of glucokinase, relief of VDAC inhibition, release of ATP from mitochondria and ATP-dependent insulin release. In support of the overall proposal, ethanol treatment of isolated rat hepatocytes inhibited mitochondrial respiration and accessibility to adenylate kinase in the intermembrane space, effects that were overcome by digitonin permeabilization of the outer membrane. Overall, these considerations suggest that VDAC is a dynamic regulator, or governator, of global mitochondrial function both in health and disease.
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PMID:Voltage-dependent anion channel (VDAC) as mitochondrial governator--thinking outside the box. 1630 70


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