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Query: UMLS:C0022116 (
ischemia
)
91,303
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Many cases of early-onset inherited Alzheimer's disease (AD) are caused by mutations in the presenilin-1 (PS1) gene. Studies of cultured neural cells suggest that PS1 mutations result in perturbed cellular calcium homeostasis and may thereby render neurons vulnerable to apoptosis. In light of evidence that metabolic impairment plays a role in AD, that cerebral ischemia may be a risk factor for AD, and that individuals with AD have increased morbidity and mortality after stroke, we examined the impact of a PS1 mutation on neuronal vulnerability to ischemic injury. We report that the extent of brain injury after focal cerebral ischemia reperfusion is increased, and behavioral outcome is worsened, in PS1 mutant knock-in mice compared to wild-type mice. Cultured cortical neurons from PS1 mutant mice exhibit increased vulnerability to glucose deprivation and chemical hypoxia compared to their wild-type counterparts. Calcium imaging studies demonstrated enhanced elevation of intracellular calcium levels after glucose deprivation and chemical hypoxia in neurons from PS1 mutant mice. Agents that block calcium release from IP(3)- and ryanodine-sensitive stores (xestospongin and dantrolene, respectively) protected against the endangering action of the PS1 mutation. Our data suggest that presenilin mutations may promote neuronal degeneration in AD by increasing the sensitivity of neurons to age-related
ischemia
-like conditions. The data further suggest that drugs that stabilize
endoplasmic reticulum
calcium homeostasis may prove effective in suppressing the neurodegenerative process in AD patients.
...
PMID:Presenilin-1 mutation increases neuronal vulnerability to focal ischemia in vivo and to hypoxia and glucose deprivation in cell culture: involvement of perturbed calcium homeostasis. 1066 26
It has been suggested that nitric oxide (NO) may contribute to
ischemia
-induced cell injury. However, the mechanisms underlying NO toxicity have not yet been fully elucidated. In the present study, we investigated the effect of NO on the level of
endoplasmic reticulum
(ER) calcium stores, on ER Ca2+ pump activity, on protein synthesis, on concentrations of high-energy phosphates, and on gadd153 mRNA levels. Primary neuronal cells were exposed to the NO-donor (+/-)-S-Nitroso-N-acetylpenicillamine (SNAP) for 1 h, 2 h, 6 h or 24 h. The level of ER calcium stores was evaluated by measuring the increase in cytoplasmic calcium activity induced by exposing cells to thapsigargin, an irreversible inhibitor of ER Ca(2+)-ATPase; the activity of ER Ca(2+)-ATPase was determined by measuring a phosphorylated intermediate; SNAP-induced changes in gadd153 expression were evaluated by quantitative PCR; SNAP-induced changes in protein synthesis were investigated by measuring the incorporation of L-[4,5-3H]leucine into proteins, and changes in the levels of ATP, ADP, AMP were measured by HPLC. Exposing cells to SNAP for 1 h to 2 h induced a marked depletion of ER calcium stores through an inhibition of ER Ca(2+)-ATPase (to 58% of control), and a concentration-dependent suppression of protein synthesis which was reversed in the presence of hemoglobin, suggesting NO-related effects. ATP levels and adenylate energy charge were significantly decreased only when cells were exposed to the highest SNAP concentration for 6 h or 24 h, excluding significant effects of NO on the energy state of cells in the acute state, i.e. when ER calcium stores were already completely depleted and protein synthesis severely suppressed. In light of the regulatory role of ER calcium homeostasis in the control of protein synthesis, the results imply that the suppression of protein synthesis resulted from NO-induced inhibition of ER Ca(2+)-ATPase and depletion of ER calcium stores, and that NO-induced disturbances of energy metabolism are secondary to the effect of NO on ER calcium homeostasis. It is, therefore, concluded that ER calcium stores are a primary target of NO-toxicity.
...
PMID:Effect of nitric oxide on endoplasmic reticulum calcium homeostasis, protein synthesis and energy metabolism. 1075 77
The excessive increase in intracellular Ca2+ concentration is associated with events linking cerebral blood flow reduction to neuronal cell damage. We have investigated the possible effect of
ischemia
and
ischemia
-reperfusion injury on
endoplasmic reticulum
(ER) Ca2+ transport. Two different models of
ischemia
as well as two different anesthetics were used. 5 min and 15 min of global forebrain
ischemia
caused significant depression of the rate of microsomal Ca2+ accumulation in pentobarbital anesthetised gerbils. The Ca2+ uptake activity recovered partially after 1 hour of reperfusion. Unlike pentobarbital anesthetised gerbils, no significant changes were detected in the active microsomal Ca(2+)-transport after 10 min of global forebrain
ischemia
in gerbil forebrain and hippocampus under halothane anesthesia. In addition, using the model of decapitation
ischemia
, we observed significant changes of the Ca2+ uptake in both halothane and pentobarbital anesthetised gerbils. These findings indicate that ischemic insult alters the brain microsomal Ca2+ transport which is not due to inhibition of the Ca(2+)-ATPase activity. However, the effect of
ischemia
on this transport system is dependent on the model of
ischemia
and on the type of anesthetics.
...
PMID:Ischemia-induced inhibition of active calcium transport into gerbil brain microsomes: effect of anesthetics and models of ischemia. 1078 14
The mechanisms for neurodegeneration after hypoxia-
ischemia
(HI) in newborns are not understood. We tested the hypothesis that striatal neuron death is necrosis and evolves with oxidative stress and selective organelle damage. Piglets ( approximately 1 week old) were used in a model of hypoxia-asphyxia and survived for 3, 6, 12, or 24 h. Neuronal death was progressive over 3-24 h recovery, with approximately 80% of putaminal neurons dead at 24 h. Striatal DNA was digested randomly at 6-12 h. Ultrastructurally, dying neurons were necrotic. Damage to the Golgi apparatus and rough
endoplasmic reticulum
occurred at 3-12 h, while most mitochondria appeared intact until 12 h. Mitochondria showed early suppression of activity, then a transient burst of activity at 6 h, followed by mitochondrial failure (determined by cytochrome c oxidase assay). Cytochrome c was depleted at 6 h after HI and thereafter. Damage to lysosomes occurred within 3-6 h. By 3 h recovery, glutathione levels were reduced, and peroxynitrite-mediated oxidative damage to membrane proteins, determined by immunoblots for nitrotyrosine, occurred at 3-12 h. The Golgi apparatus and cytoskeleton were early targets for extensive tyrosine nitration. Striatal neurons also sustained hydroxyl radical damage to DNA and RNA within 6 h after HI. We conclude that early glutathione depletion and oxidative stress between 3 and 6 h reperfusion promote damage to membrane and cytoskeletal proteins, DNA and RNA, as well as damage to most organelles, thereby causing neuronal necrosis in the striatum of newborns after HI.
...
PMID:Neuronal death in newborn striatum after hypoxia-ischemia is necrosis and evolves with oxidative stress. 1086 Jul 83
Morphological changes of CA1 and CA3 pyramidal neurons in rat hippocampus at different intervals following transient forebrain
ischemia
were examined to determine the nature of post-ischemic cell death in these regions. In the CA1 region, swelling of small dendrites occurred at approximately 24 h reperfusion. At approximately 48 h reperfusion, swelling was found in large dendrites of many CA1 neurons and the mitochondria and
endoplasmic reticulum
(ER) were dilated. A small portion of neurons showed chromatin aggregation and nuclear indentation without swelling signs. At approximately 60 h reperfusion, swelling of somata was evident in many neurons. Large dense chromatin clumps with round or ovoid contour were found in other neurons. At 72 and 96 h after
ischemia
, many large vacuoles and glias with active phagocytosis were observed. At 7 days after
ischemia
, the tissue was compact and many glias were found in the region. Most of the CA3 neurons had normal appearance after
ischemia
. A total of 5-10% CA3 neurons exhibited shrinking nuclei and chromatin aggregation at approximately 24 h reperfusion. The number of these neurons decreased overtime and disappeared at 72 h after
ischemia
. These results demonstrate the co-existence of necrosis and apoptosis in the CA1 region after transient forebrain
ischemia
. Most CA3 neurons remained intact after
ischemia
while a small portion of them showed apoptotic cell death.
...
PMID:Co-existence of necrosis and apoptosis in rat hippocampus following transient forebrain ischemia. 1086 74
Recent epidemiological studies have shown that vascular risk factors may be involved in Alzheimer's disease (AD) as well as dementia in general. To investigate the relation between a vascular disorder and AD pathology, current criteria are defective because most depend on exclusion of a cerebrovascular disorder. Epidemiological studies have indicated the possibilities that arteriosclerosis, abnormal blood pressure, diabetes mellitus and smoking may be related to the pathogenesis of AD. As for the mechanism that vascular disorders influence AD, it is presumed that amyloid deposition may be caused by a vascular disorder. Alternatively, a vascular event may cause progression of subclinical AD to a clinical stage. Insulin resistance and apolipoprotein E may also be involved in these mechanisms. Our studies show that
ischemia
-induced the Alzheimer-associated gene presenilin 1 (PS1) and
endoplasmic reticulum
-stress, generated from a vascular disorder, may unmask clinical AD symptoms caused by presenilin mutation, suggesting that a vascular factor might be involved in the onset of familial AD.
...
PMID:Are cerebrovascular factors involved in Alzheimer's disease? 1086 6
The ability of full and partial benzodiazepine receptor agonists to prevent DNA fragmentation and neuronal death after transient cerebral ischemia was investigated in the Mongolian gerbil. Diazepam (10mg/kg, i.p.) or the partial agonist imidazenil (3mg/kg, i.p.) was administered 30 and 90min after transient forebrain
ischemia
produced by occlusion of the carotid arteries for 5min. Treatment with diazepam completely protected CA1b hippocampal pyramidal neurons in 94% of the animals and partially protected pyramidal neurons in 6% of the animals, as assessed with a standard Nissl stain three and four days after
ischemia
. DNA fragmentation was examined by the terminal dUTP nick-end labeling (TUNEL) reaction. Prior to cell death, there were no TUNEL-positive neurons in area CA1b. By three days after
ischemia
, when neuronal degeneration was nearly complete, 14 out of 16 gerbils exhibited a positive TUNEL reaction throughout area CA1b stratum pyramidale. In 13 out of 14 gerbils treated with diazepam, no TUNEL-positive neurons were observed in this region. Imidazenil was less effective than diazepam with respect to both neuroprotection and prevention of DNA fragmentation. Three days after
ischemia
, six out of eight gerbils treated with imidazenil showed partial to complete neuroprotection. Imidazenil completely prevented DNA fragmentation in only one of the animals; varying degrees of TUNEL reaction persisted in the remainder. To determine whether the neurons protected by diazepam had a normal ultrastructure, gerbils were killed two to 30 days after
ischemia
and the hippocampal neurons in area CA1b were examined by electron microscopy. Within the first 48h after
ischemia
, early cytoplasmic changes of varying degrees (e.g., vacuolation, rough
endoplasmic reticulum
stacking, swollen mitochondria) and electron-dense dendrites were observed in gerbils not treated with diazepam. Degeneration was nearly complete by three days after
ischemia
. In contrast, pyramidal neuron ultrastructure appeared normal in gerbils that exhibited complete area CA1b neuroprotection (defined at the light microscope level) by diazepam when studied two, seven or 30 days after
ischemia
. In gerbils with partial protection of area CA1b, most of the remaining neurons exhibited varying degrees of necrosis when studied 30 days after
ischemia
. No apoptotic bodies were observed. We conclude that: (i) diazepam can fully protect CA1 pyramidal cells from the toxic effects of transient cerebral ischemia; (ii) when diazepam affords only partial neuroprotection, the residual CA1 pyramidal cells exhibit ultrastructural abnormalities consistent with necrotic damage; and (iii) diazepam is a more efficacious neuroprotectant than the partial benzodiazepine receptor agonist, imidazenil.
...
PMID:Benzodiazepines protect hippocampal neurons from degeneration after transient cerebral ischemia: an ultrastructural study. 1086 41
The heat shock or stress response is one of the most highly conserved adaptive responses in nature. In single cell organisms, the stress response confers tolerance to a variety of stresses including hyperthermia, hyperoxia, hypoxia, and other perturbations, which alter protein synthesis. This tolerance phenomenon is also extremely important in the multicellular organism, resulting in not only thermal tolerance, but also resistance to stresses of the whole organism such as
ischemia
-reperfusion injury. Moreover, recent data indicates that these stress proteins have the ability to modulate the cellular immune response. Although the terms heat shock proteins (HSPs) and stress proteins are often used interchangeably, the term stress proteins includes the HSPs, the glucose-regulated proteins (GRPs) and ubiquitin. The stress proteins may be grouped by molecular weight ranging from the large 110 kDa HSP110 to ubiquitin at 8 kDa. These proteins serve as cellular chaperones, participating in protein synthesis and transport through the various cellular compartments. Because these proteins have unique cellular localizations, the chaperone function of the stress proteins often involves a transfer of peptides between stress proteins as the peptide is moved between cellular compartments. For example, HSP70 is a cytosolic and nuclear chaperone, which is critical for the transfer of cellular peptides in the mitochondrion through a hand-off that involves mitochondrial HSP60 at the inner mitochondrial membrane. Similarly, cytosolic proteins are transferred from HSP70 to gp96 as they move into the
endoplasmic reticulum
. The central role of the stress proteins in the transfer of peptides through the cell may be responsible for the recently recognized importance of the stress proteins in the modulation of the immune system [Feder, M.E., Hofmann, G.E., 1999. Heat-shock proteins, molecular chaperones, and the stress response: evolutionary and ecological physiology. Annu. Rev. Physiol. 61, 243-282.]. This importance in immune regulation is best addressed using Matzinger's model of the immune response - The Danger Theory of Immunity [Matzinger, P., Fuchs, E.J., 1996. Beyond self and non-self: immunity is a conversation, not a war. J. NIH Res. 8, 35-39.]. Matzinger suggests that an immune system model based on the differentiation between "self and non-self" does not easily account for the changes that occur in the organism with growth and development. Why, for example does an organism not self-destruct when the immune system encounters the myriad of new peptides generated at puberty? Instead, she proposes a model of immune function based on the ability to detect and address dangers. This model states that the basic function of all cells of the organism is appropriately timed death "from natural causes". This type of cell death, or apoptosis, generates no stress signals. If, on the other hand, a cell is "murdered" by an infectious agent or dies an untimely death due to necrosis or
ischemia
, the cell undergoes a stress response with the liberation of stress protein-peptide complexes into the extracellular environment upon cell lysis. Not only do they serve as a "danger signal" to alert the immune system to the death of a cell under stress, but their role as protein carriers allows the immune effector cells to survey the peptides released by this stressed cell and to activate against new or unrecognized peptides carried by the stress protein. Matzinger bases the Danger Theory of Immunity on three "Laws of Lymphotics". These laws state that: (1) resting T lymphocytes require both antigen stimulation by an antigen-presenting cell (APC) and co-stimulation with a danger signal to become activated; (2) the co-stimulatory signal must be received through the APC; and (3) T cells receiving only antigen stimulation without the co-stimulatory signal undergo apoptosis. The Danger Theory gives a simple model for both tolerance and activation. (ABSTRACT TRUNCATED)
...
PMID:Stress proteins and the immune response. 1096 Jun 71
A number of clinical conditions are known to result in the induction of heat shock proteins, but detailed studies on stress response have focused mostly on heat shock as a model. We have analyzed the induction and intracellular distribution of heat shock proteins in a reversible adenosine triphosphate (ATP) depletion model of renal ischemia. Two Hsp70 homologues, Hsp70 in the cytoplasm and BiP in the
endoplasmic reticulum
(ER) lumen, were found significantly induced during the recovery phase of ATP depletion. Other members of the heat shock protein family, such as Hsp90, constitutive Hsc70, and a related protein Hop60, were not induced. The induction of stress proteins on ATP depletion differed from that after heat shock in the kinds of proteins elaborated, their induction kinetics, and their intracellular distributions. Biochemical fractionation and indirect immunofluorescence experiments indicated that Hsp70 was predominantly cytoplasmic in the recovery phase of
ischemia
-like stress. Velocity sedimentation on sucrose gradients showed that induced Hsp70 sedimented as small, soluble complexes, ranging in size from 4S20,w to 8S20,w. The results suggest a role for induced Hsp70 that may be different from one of protecting aggregated proteins as under heat shock and emphasize the need for their characterization in other clinical conditions that result in stress response.
...
PMID:Induced hsp70 is in small, cytoplasmic complexes in a cell culture model of renal ischemia: a comparative study with heat shock. 1104 54
An in vitro model of
ischemia
was obtained by subjecting PC12 cells differentiated with nerve growth factor to a combination of glucose deprivation plus anoxia. Immediately after the ischemic period, the protein synthesis rate was significantly inhibited (80%) and western blots of cell extracts revealed a significant accumulation of phosphorylated eukaryotic initiation factor 2, alpha subunit, eIF2(alphaP) (42%). Upon recovery, eIF2(alphaP) levels returned to control values after 30 min, whereas protein synthesis was still partially inhibited (33%) and reached almost control values within 2 h. The activities of the mammalian eIF2alpha kinases, double-stranded RNA-activated protein kinase, mammalian GCN2 homologue, and
endoplasmic reticulum
-resident kinase, were determined. None of the eIF2alpha kinases studied showed increased activity in ischemic cells as compared with controls. Exposure of cells to cell-permeable inhibitors of protein phosphatases 1 and 2A, calyculin A or tautomycin, induced dose- and time-dependent accumulation of eIF2(alphaP), mimicking an ischemic effect. Protein phosphatase activity, as measured with [(32)P]phosphorylase a as a substrate, diminished during
ischemia
and returned to control levels upon 30-min recovery. In addition, the rate of eIF2(alphaP) dephosphorylation was significantly lower in ischemic cells, paralleling both the greatest translational inhibition and the highest eIF2(alphaP) levels. The endogenous phosphatase activity from control and ischemic extracts showed different sensitivity to inhibitor 2 and fostriecin in in vitro assays, inhibitor-2 effect in ischemic cells being lower than in control cells. Together these results indicate that an eIF2alpha phosphatase, probably protein phosphatase 1, is implicated in the
ischemia
-induced eIF2(alphaP) accumulation in PC12 cells.
...
PMID:Ischemia-induced phosphorylation of initiation factor 2 in differentiated PC12 cells: role for initiation factor 2 phosphatase. 1108 Jan 85
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