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Query: UMLS:C0022116 (
ischemia
)
91,303
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The patterns of expression of the bcl-2, bax, and bci-X genes were examined immunohistochemically in neurons of the adult rat brain before and after 10 min of global
ischemia
induced by transient cardiac arrest. High levels of the cell death promoting protein Bax and concomitant low levels of the apoptosis-blocking protein
Bcl-2
were found in some populations of neurons that are particularly sensitive to cell death induced by transient global
ischemia
, such as the CA1 sector of the hippocampus and the Purkinje cells of the cerebellum. Moreover, within 0.5 to 3 hr after an ischemic episode, immunostaining for Bax was markedly increased within neurons with morphological features of degeneration in many regions of the brain. Use of a two-color staining method for simultaneous analysis of Bax protein and in situ detection of DNA-strand breaks revealed high levels of Bax immunoreactivity in many neurons undergoing apoptosis. Postischemic elevations in Bax protein levels in the hippocampus, cortex, and cerebellum were also demonstrated by immunoblotting. At early times after transient
ischemia
, regulation of
Bcl-2
and Bcl-x protein levels varied among neuronal subpopulations, but from 3 hr on, those neurons with morphological evidence of degeneration uniformly contained reduced levels of Bci-2 and particularly Bci-X immunoreactivity. The findings suggest that differential expression of some members of the bcl-2 gene family may play an important role in determining the relative sensitivity of neuronal subpopulations to
ischemia
and that postischemic alterations in the expression of bax, bcl-2, and bcl-x may contribute to the delayed neuronal cell death that occurs during the repurfusion phase after a transient ischemic episode.
...
PMID:Upregulation of bax protein levels in neurons following cerebral ischemia. 747 1
The protooncogene bcl-2 rescues cells from a wide variety of insults. Recent evidence suggests that the mechanism of action of
Bcl-2
involves antioxidant activity. The involvement of free radicals in
ischemia
/reperfusion injury to neural cells has led us to investigate the effect of
Bcl-2
in a model of delayed neural cell death. We have examined the survival of control and bcl-2 transfectants of a hypothalamic tumor cell line, GT1-7, exposed to potassium cyanide in the absence of glucose (chemical hypoxia/aglycemia). After 30 min of treatment, no loss of viability was evident in control or bcl-2 transfectants; however,
Bcl-2
-expressing cells were protected from delayed cell death measured following 24-72 h of reoxygenation. Under these conditions, the rate and extent of ATP depletion in response to treatment with cyanide in the absence of glucose and the rate of recovery of ATP during reenergization were similar in control and
Bcl-2
-expressing cells.
Bcl-2
-expressing cells were protected from oxidative damage resulting from this treatment, as indicated by significantly lower levels of oxidized lipids. Mitochondrial respiration in control but not
Bcl-2
-expressing cells was compromised immediately following hypoxic treatment. These results indicate that
Bcl-2
can protect neural cells from delayed death resulting from chemical hypoxia and reenergization, and may do so by an antioxidant mechanism. The results thereby provide evidence that
Bcl-2
or a
Bcl-2
mimetic has potential therapeutic application in the treatment of neuropathologies involving oxidative stress, including focal and global cerebral ischemia.
...
PMID:Bcl-2 protects neural cells from cyanide/aglycemia-induced lipid oxidation, mitochondrial injury, and loss of viability. 759 37
Previous studies have demonstrated that overexpression of the proto-oncogene bcl-2 can protect neuron and neuron-like cell lines from growth factor deprivation, calcium ionophores, glutamate excitotoxicity, hypoglycemia, free radicals, and lipid peroxidation. To determine whether
Bcl-2
exhibits a similar protective effect in CNS neurons, we generated defective herpes simplex virus (HSV) vectors capable of overexpressing
Bcl-2
in primary cultures and in the intact brain. Infection of hippocampal cultures with
Bcl-2
vectors enhanced neuron survivorship after exposure to adriamycin, a potent oxygen radical generator. Furthermore, dichlorofluorescein measurements indicated that there was a significant reduction in the accumulation of oxygen radicals associated with this insult.
Bcl-2
vectors also enhanced survival in cultured neurons after exposure to glutamate and hypoglycemia. Most significantly, the in vivo delivery of the vector protected neurons against adriamycin toxicity in the dorsal horn of the dentate gyrus and focal
ischemia
in the striatum.
...
PMID:Overexpression of Bcl-2 with herpes simplex virus vectors protects CNS neurons against neurological insults in vitro and in vivo. 855 33
Programmed cell death in the myocardium has been linked to
ischemia
reperfusion injury as well as to excessive mechanical forces associated with increases in ventricular loading. Moreover, hypoxia activates the suicide program of cardiac myocytes in vitro. Because the supplied portion of the ventricular wall is ischemic and subjected to high levels of systolic and diastolic stresses (acutely after coronary artery occlusion), apoptosis and necrosis may contribute independently to myocyte cell death after infarction. Therefore, myocardial infarction was produced in rats, and, after the determination of ventricular hemodynamics, the contribution of apoptotic and/or necrotic myocyte cell death to infarct size was measured quantitatively from 20 minutes to 7 days after coronary artery occlusion. Programmed cell death was assessed by the terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase assay and by the electrophoretic detection of DNA laddering. Myocyte necrosis was evaluated by myosin monoclonal Ab labeling. Moreover, the expression of
Bcl-2
, Bax, and Fas proteins in myocytes was examined by immunocytochemistry. Myocyte cell death by apoptosis and necrosis comprised nearly 3 million myocytes at 2 hours. Apoptotic cell death involved 2.8 million cells and necrotic cell death only 90,000 myocytes. Apoptosis continued to represent the major independent form of myocyte cell death, affecting 6.6 million myocytes at 4.5 hours. Myocyte necrosis peaked at 1 day, including 1.1 million myocytes. DNA electrophoretic analysis confirmed these observations by showing nucleosomal ladders at 2-3 hours, 4.5 hours, 1 day, and 2 days after coronary artery occlusion. Myocytes showing both DNA strand breaks and myosin labeling were a prominent aspect of myocardial damage only after 6 hours. Finally, the expression of
Bcl-2
and Fas in myocytes increased 18-fold and 131-fold, respectively. In conclusion, programmed myocyte cell death is the major form of myocardial damage produced by occlusion of a major epicardial coronary artery, whereas necrotic myocyte cell death follows apoptosis and contributes to the progressive loss of cells with time after infarction. The enhanced expression of Fas may be implicated in the activation of apoptosis in spite of the increase in
Bcl-2
, which tends to preserve cell survival.
...
PMID:Apoptotic and necrotic myocyte cell deaths are independent contributing variables of infarct size in rats. 856 1
The observation that delayed death of CA1 neurons after global
ischemia
is inhibited by protein synthesis inhibitors suggests that the delayed death of these neurons is an active process that requires new gene expression. Delayed death in CA1 has some of the characteristics of apoptotic death; however, candidate proapoptotic proteins have not been identified in the CA1 after
ischemia
. We studied the expression of Bax protein and mRNA, a member of the bcl-2 family that is an effector of apoptotic cell death, after global
ischemia
in the four-vessel global
ischemia
model in the rat and compared these results with the expression of the antiapoptotic gene bcl-2. Bax mRNA and protein are both expressed in CA1 before delayed death, whereas bcl-2 protein is not expressed.
Bcl-2
protein expression, but not that of Bax, is increased in CA3, a region that is ischemic but less susceptible to ischemic injury. In the dentate gyrus, both Bax and bcl-2 proteins are expressed. The selective expression of Bax in Ca1 supports the hypothesis that Bax could contribute to delayed neuronal death in these vulnerable neurons by an independent mechanism or by forming heterodimers with gene family members other than bcl-2.
...
PMID:Expression of the apoptosis-effector gene, Bax, is up-regulated in vulnerable hippocampal CA1 neurons following global ischemia. 866 27
Time-course expression of Bax and
Bcl-2
proteins, identified as apoptosis-regulating molecules, was assessed in gerbil hippocampus following transient forebrain
ischemia
. Brain sections from animals sacrificed at 48, 72, 96 h and 7 days following 5 min
ischemia
were immunohistochemically evaluated using polyclonal antibodies specific for Bax and
Bcl-2
proteins, respectively. The intensity of Bax expression in CA1 neurons increased with time and peaked at 72 h, and immediately disappeared at 96 h following 5 min
ischemia
. No expression of
Bcl-2
in the CA1 neurons was recognized in all the time evaluated.
...
PMID:Immunohistochemical detection of Bax and Bcl-2 proteins in gerbil hippocampus following transient forebrain ischemia. 868 Aug 70
Expression of the human protooncogene bcl-2 protects neural cells from death induced by many forms of stress, including conditions that greatly elevate intracellular Ca2+. Considering that
Bcl-2
is partially localized to mitochondrial membranes and that excessive mitochondrial Ca2+ uptake can impair electron transport and oxidative phosphorylation, the present study tested the hypothesis that mitochondria from
Bcl-2
-expressing cells have a higher capacity for energy-dependent Ca2+ uptake and a greater resistance to Ca(2+)-induced respiratory injury than mitochondria from cells that do not express this protein. The overexpression of bcl-2 enhanced the mitochondrial Ca2+ uptake capacity using either digitonin-permeabilized GT1-7 neural cells or isolated GT1-7 mitochondria by 1.7 and 3.9 fold, respectively, when glutamate and malate were used as respiratory substrates. This difference was less apparent when respiration was driven by the oxidation of succinate in the presence of the respiratory complex I inhibitor rotenone. Mitochondria from
Bcl-2
expressors were also much more resistant to inhibition of NADH-dependent respiration caused by sequestration of large Ca2+ loads. The enhanced ability of mitochondria within
Bcl-2
-expressing cells to sequester large quantities of Ca2+ without undergoing profound respiratory impairment provides a plausible mechanism by which
Bcl-2
inhibits certain forms of delayed cell death, including neuronal death associated with
ischemia
and excitotoxicity.
...
PMID:Bcl-2 potentiates the maximal calcium uptake capacity of neural cell mitochondria. 879 Apr 27
Permanent occlusion of the middle cerebral artery in rats was used to assess the effects of focal
ischemia
on the expression of members of the bcl-2 family which have been implicated in the regulation of programmed cell death. Intraluminal occlusion of one middle cerebral artery for 6 h resulted in histologically detectable brain damage within the ipsilateral caudate putamen, basolateral cortex and parts of the thalamus. In the infarcted basolateral cortex and thalamus fragmentation of DNA was detected in many nuclei using in-situ end-labeling of DNA breaks by terminal transferase, whereas only scattered labeled nuclei were visible in the infarcted caudate putamen. Immunohistochemical analysis revealed activation of c-Fos in the infarcted cortex and thalamus and in the non-infarcted cingulate cortex as has been shown by others. A decrease in immunoreactivity for
Bcl-2
, and Bcl-X and an increase in immunostaining for Bax was observed exclusively in neurons within the ischemic cortex and thalamus. Within the infarcted caudate putamen, however, protein levels of all bcl-2 family members declined and c-Fos remained absent. By reverse transcription and polymerase chain reaction it was demonstrated that levels of bcl-2 mRNA markedly decreased in the ipsilateral hemisphere, whereas the amount of bax mRNA was elevated. These findings suggest that a shift in the ratio of cell death repressor
Bcl-2
to cell death effector Bax and a concomitant activation of c-Fos may contribute to neuronal apoptosis in the infarcted thalamus and cortex.
...
PMID:Altered expression of Bcl-2, Bcl-X, Bax, and c-Fos colocalizes with DNA fragmentation and ischemic cell damage following middle cerebral artery occlusion in rats. 887 9
Using in situ hybridization, Northern blotting and RT-PCR we studied the post-ischemic expression of bcl-2, bcl-x, bax and ICE. One day following 5 min or 10 min of global
ischemia
bcl-2 and bcl-x mRNAs were induced in CA1 hippocampal pyramidal neurons while bax was unchanged. By 72 h after
ischemia
the expression of bcl-2, bcl-x and bax mRNAs decreased in CA1. The large isoform of bcl-x (bcl-xL), detected using RT-PCR, decreased in whole hippocampus by 24-72 h after
ischemia
relative to the putative short (bcl-xS) and transmembrane deleted (bcl-x delta TM) forms. Oligonucleotides to interleukin-1 beta convertase (ICE), which detected the expected 2-kb transcript and two lesser 1.5- and 3-kb hybridizing species, demonstrated slight mRNA induction in the CA1 region at 72 h following
ischemia
. DNA nick end-labeling at 3 days following
ischemia
showed DNA fragmentation in neurons limited to the CA1 region of hippocampus following 5 min
ischemia
, while DNA fragmentation was detected in CA1, CA3, dentate gyrus and cortical neurons following 10 min
ischemia
. The data support the view that hippocampal neurons might undergo an apoptosis-like death after global
ischemia
. Since global
ischemia
decreases total protein synthesis especially in the CA1 region, the increases in bcl-2 mRNA levels may not necessarily lead to increased
Bcl-2
protein levels. This may explain why the CA1 neurons die despite the prominent induction of the protective bcl-2 gene. The observed decrease by 24 h in the bcl-xL/bcl-xS ratio which preceded DNA fragmentation may participate in the cell death produced by
ischemia
. However, because of the
ischemia
-induced decrease in total protein synthesis, the decreased bcl-xL/bcl-xS ratio does not necessarily lead to a changed ratio in the amount of the appropriate proteins. Since ICE-like mRNA was induced at 72 h when the CA1 neurons were dead, the significance of this ICE-like mRNA induction remains unclear.
...
PMID:Global ischemia induces apoptosis-associated genes in hippocampus. 891 83
The
Bcl-2
protein blocks a distal step in an evolutionarily conserved pathway for programmed cell death and apoptosis. The gene encoding this protein was first discovered because of its involvement in the t(14;18) chromosomal translocations commonly found in B-cell lymphomas, where it contributes to neoplastic cell expansion by preventing cell turnover due to programmed cell death. Overexpression of BCL-2 also occurs in many other types of human tumors, including cancers of the prostate, colon, and lung, and has been associated with chemoresistance and radioresistance in some types of malignancy. Conversely, expression of BCL-2 is frequently reduced in the circulating lymphocytes of persons infected with Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV), which are prone to apoptotic cell death. Since the discovery of
Bcl-2
a decade ago, several other cellular and viral genes encoding homologous proteins have been identified, some of which suppress cell death akin to
Bcl-2
(Bcl-XL, Mcl-1, A1/Bfl-1, Nr13, Ced-9, BHRF-1) and others which promote apoptosis (Bax, Bcl-Xs, Bak, Bik, Bad). Several of these
Bcl-2
family proteins are capable of physically interacting with each other through a complex network of homo- and heterodimers. The expression of some of these other BCL-2 family genes becomes altered in human cancers, as well as in the setting of
ischemia
and some other pathological conditions, suggesting a potentially important role for these
Bcl-2
homologs in human diseases characterized by either insufficient or excessive cell death. Despite intensive investigation, the mechanisms by which
Bcl-2
and its homologs control cell life and death largely remain enigmatic. Knowledge about the specific domains in
Bcl-2
family proteins that are required for interactions with other proteins and for function however is beginning to provide insights into the molecular mechanisms through which these proteins regulate the programmed cell death pathway in normalcy and disease.
...
PMID:Mechanisms of Bcl-2 family protein function and dysfunction in health and disease. 895 Apr 68
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