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Query: UMLS:C0022116 (
ischemia
)
91,303
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Management of glaucoma is directed at the control of intraocular pressure (IOP), yet it is recognized now that increased IOP isjust an important risk factor in glaucoma. Therapy that prevents the death of ganglion cells is the main goal of treatment, but an understanding of the causes of ganglion cell death and precisely how it occurs remains speculative. Present information supports the working hypothesis that ganglion cell death may result from a particular form of
ischemia
. Support for this view comes from the fact that not all types of retinal
ischemia
lead to the pathologic findings seen in glaucomatous retinas or to cupping in the optic disk area. Moreover, in animal experiments in which
ischemia
is caused by elevated IOP, a retinal abnormality similar to that seen in true glaucoma is produced, whereas after occlusion of the carotid arteries a different pattern of damage is found. In
ischemia
, glutamate is released, and this initiates the death of neurons that contain
ionotropic
glutamate (NMDA) receptors. Elevated glutamate levels exist in the vitreous humor of patients with glaucoma, and NMDA receptors exist on ganglion cells and a subset of amacrine cells. Experimental studies have shown that a variety of agents can be used to prevent the death of retinal neurons (particularly ganglion cells) induced by
ischemia
. These agents are generally those that block NMDA receptors to prevent the action of the released glutamate or substances that interfere with the subsequent cycle of events that lead to cell death. The major causes of cell death after activation of NMDA receptors are the influx of calcium into cells and the generation of free radicals. Substances that prevent this cascade of events are, therefore, often found to act as neuroprotective agents. For a substance to have a role as a neuroprotective agent in glaucoma, it would ideally be delivered topically to the eye and used repeatedly. It is, therefore, of interest that betaxolol, a beta-blocker presently used to reduce IOP in humans, also has calcium channel-blocking functions. Moreover, experimental studies show that betaxolol is an efficient neuro protective agent against retinal
ischemia
in animals, when injected directly into the eye or intraperitoneally.
...
PMID:Neuroprotection in relation to retinal ischemia and relevance to glaucoma. 1041 54
Glutamate is the major excitatory neurotransmitter in the brain and plays a unique role in a variety of central nervous system (CNS) functions. The discovery of the metabotropic receptors (mGluRs), a family of G-protein coupled receptors than can be activated by glutamate, has led to an impressive number of studies in recent years aimed at understanding their biochemical, physiological and pharmacological characteristics. The eight mGluRs now known are divided into three groups according to their sequence homology, signal transduction mechanisms, and agonist selectivity. Group I mGluRs include mGluR1 and mGluR5, which are linked to the activation of phospholipase C; Groups II and III include all others and are negatively coupled to adenylyl cyclases. The availability in recent years of agents selective for Group I mGluRs has made possible the study of the physiological roles of these receptors in the CNS. In addition to mediating glutamatergic neurotransmission, Group I mGluRs can modulate other neurotransmitter receptors, including GABA and the
ionotropic
glutamate receptors. Group I mGluRs are involved in many CNS functions and may participate in a variety of disorders such as pain, epilepsy,
ischemia
, and chronic neurodegenerative diseases. This class of receptor may provide important pharmacological therapeutic targets and elucidating its functions will be relevant to develop new treatments for neurological and psychiatric disorders in which glutamatergic neurotransmission is abnormally regulated. In this review anatomical, physiological and pharmacological results are presented with a special emphasis on the role of Group I mGluRs in functional and pathological processes.
...
PMID:Group I metabotropic glutamate receptors: implications for brain diseases. 1041 61
The ability of a broad spectrum glutamatergic receptor antagonist, kynurenic acid (1 and 5 mM) to attenuate release of excitant and other amino acids from the ischemic cerebral cortex was examined in a four vessel occlusion rat model. Kynurenic acid, administered topically onto the cortex in artificial cerebrospinal fluid using bilateral cortical cups, failed to attenuate
ischemia
-evoked release of aspartate, glutamate, phosphoethanolamine, taurine and at 1 (but not 5) mM it depressed GABA release. There was no effect on basal, pre-ischemic, release. This result suggests that
ischemia
-evoked amino acid release is not a significant consequence of the activation of
ionotropic
receptors by synaptically released glutamate.
...
PMID:Failure of kynurenic acid to inhibit amino acid release from the ischemic rat cerebral cortex. 1050 42
The release of preloaded [3H]taurine from cultured cerebral cortical astrocytes was studied under various cell-damaging conditions, including hypoxia,
ischemia
, aglycemia and oxidative stress, and in the presence of free radicals. Astrocytic taurine release was enhanced by K+ (50 mM), veratridine (0.1 mM) and the
ionotropic
glutamate receptor agonist kainate (1.0 mM). Metabotropic glutamate receptor agonists had only weak effects on taurine release. Similarly to the swelling-induced taurine release the efflux in normoxia seems to be mediated mainly by DIDS-(diisothiocyanostilbene-2,2'-disulphonate) and SITS-(4-acetamido-4'-isothiocyanostilbene-2,2'-disulphonate) sensitive CI- channels, since these blockers were able to reduce both basal and K+ -stimulated release. The basal release of taurine was moderately enhanced in hypoxia and
ischemia
, whereas the potentiation in the presence of free radicals was marked. The small basal release from astrocytes signifies that taurine release from brain tissue in
ischemia
may originate from neurons rather than glial cells. On the other hand, the release evoked by K+ in hypoxia and
ischemia
was greater than in normoxia, with a very slow time-course. The enhanced release of the inhibitory amino acid taurine from astrocytes in
ischemia
may be beneficial to surrounding neurons, outlasting the initial stimulus and counteracting overexcitation.
...
PMID:Taurine release is enhanced in cell-damaging conditions in cultured cerebral cortical astrocytes. 1059 1
The release of taurine from cultured cerebellar granule neurons was studied in different cell-damaging conditions, including hypoxia, hypoglycemia,
ischemia
, oxidative stress and in the presence of free radicals. The effects of both
ionotropic
and metabotropic glutamate receptor agonists on the release were likewise investigated. The release of [3H]taurine from the glutamatergic granule cells was increased by K+ (50 mM) and veratridine (0.1 mM), the effect of veratridine being the greater. Hypoxia and
ischemia
produced an initial increase in release compared to normoxia but resulted in a diminished response to K+. Hypoglycemia, oxidative stress and free radicals enhanced taurine release, and subsequent K+ treatment exhibited a correspondingly greater stimulation. A common feature of taurine release in all the above conditions was a slow response to the stimulus evoked by K+ and particularly to that evoked by veratridine. All
ionotropic
glutamate receptor agonists potentiated taurine release, but only the action of kainate seemed to be receptor-mediated. Metabotropic receptor agonists of group I slightly stimulated the release. The prolonged taurine release seen in both normoxia and cell-damaging conditions may be of importance in maintaining homeostasis in the cerebellum and reducing excitability for a longer period than other neuroprotective mechanisms.
...
PMID:Enhanced taurine release in cultured cerebellar granule cells in cell-damaging conditions. 1070 62
NMDA or AMPA/kainate receptor antagonists have been shown to provide neuroprotection following in vitro spinal cord injury, but the mechanisms by which these agents improve behavioral recovery and protect axonal function remains unclear. We hypothesized that treatment of spinal cord injury with these drugs would attenuate glutamate excitatory transmission by blocking the effects of glutamate receptors at the injury site or would improve spinal cord blood flow. To test these hypotheses, we observed the effects of locally administered MK-801 (30 nmol) or NBQX (5 or 15 nmol) into the injured spinal cord on axonal conduction and post-traumatic
ischemia
of the cord. The outcome measures were multimodality evoked potentials and blood flow in an acute compression injury model in rats. We found that locally administered MK-801 or NBQX 15 min after spinal cord injury attenuated the amplitude, delayed the latency of sensory evoked potentials and increased the sensory conduction time across the injury site, but did not improve blood flow during the 4-h period of observation. These results demonstrate that the NMDA and non-NMDA receptor antagonists produced a blockade of glutamate excitatory transmission in the afferent pathways at the injury site. It is suggested that the neuroprotection provided by these agents following spinal cord injury is mediated through blockade of glutamate
ionotropic
receptors in the injured spinal cord, but is not related to improvement of SCBF.
...
PMID:Action of locally administered NMDA and AMPA/kainate receptor antagonists in spinal cord injury. 1076 5
Whole cell recordings of fura-2 dialyzed vagal neurons of brain stem slices were used to monitor interstitial glutamate accumulation within the dorsal vagal complex. Anoxia produced a sustained outward current (60 pA) and a moderate [Ca(2+)](i) rise (40 nM). These responses were neither mimicked by [1S,3R]-1-aminocyclo-pentane-1, 3-dicarboxylic acid nor affected by Ca(2+)-free solution, 6-cyano-7-nitroquino-xaline-2,3-dione (CNQX), 2-amino-5-phosphonovalerate (APV), or tetrodotoxin. Anoxia or cyanide in glucose-free saline (in vitro
ischemia
) as well as ouabain or iodoacetate elicited an initial anoxia-like [Ca(2+)](i) increase that turned after several minutes into a prominent Ca(2+) transient (0.9 microM) and inward current (-1.8 nA). APV plus CNQX (plus methoxyverapamil) inhibited this inward current as well as accompanying spontaneous synaptic activity, and reduced the secondary [Ca(2+)](i) rise to values similar to those during anoxia. Each of the latter drugs delayed onset of both ischemic current and prominent [Ca(2+)](i) rise by several minutes and attenuated their magnitudes by up to 40%. Ca(2+)-free solution induced a twofold delay of the ischemic inward current and suppressed the prominent Ca(2+) increase but not the initial moderate [Ca(2+)](i) rise. Cyclopiazonic acid or arachidonic acid in Ca(2+)-free saline delayed further the ischemic current, whereas neither inhibitors of glutamate uptake (dihydrokainate, D,L-threo-beta-hydroxyaspartate, L-transpyrrolidone-2,4-dicarboxylate) nor the Cl(-) channel blocker 5-nitro-2-(3-phenylpropyl-amino) benzoic acid had any effect. In summary, the response to metabolic arrest is due to activation of
ionotropic
glutamate receptors causing Ca(2+) entry via N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors and voltage-activated Ca(2+) channels. An early Ca(2+)-dependent exocytotic phase of ischemic glutamate release is followed by nonvesicular release, not mediated by reversed glutamate uptake or Cl(-) channels. The results also show that glycolysis prevents glutamate release during anoxia.
...
PMID:Ischemia but not anoxia evokes vesicular and Ca(2+)-independent glutamate release in the dorsal vagal complex in vitro. 1080 87
Taurine is held to function as a modulator and osmoregulator in the central nervous system, being of particular importance in the immature brain. In view of the possible involvement of excitatory pathways in the regulation of taurine function in the brain, the interference of glutamate receptors with taurine release from different tissue preparations in vitro and from the brain in vivo is of special interest. The release of taurine from the brain is enhanced by glutamate receptor agonists. This enhancement is inhibited by the respective receptor antagonists both in vitro and in vivo. The
ionotropic
N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) and 2-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionate (AMPA) receptor agonists appear to be the most effective in enhancing taurine release, their effects being receptor-mediated. Kainate is less effective, particularly in adults. Of the glutamate receptors, the NMDA class seems to be the most susceptible to modulation by nitric oxide. Nitric oxide also modulates taurine release, enhancing the basal release in both immature and mature hippocampus, whereas the K(+)-stimulated release is generally inhibited. Metabotropic glutamate receptors also participate in the regulation of taurine release, group I metabotropic glutamate receptors potentiating the release in the developing hippocampus, while group III receptors may be involved in the adult. Under various cell-damaging conditions, including
ischemia
, hypoxia and hypoglycemia, taurine release is enhanced, together with an enhanced release of excitatory amino acids. The increase in extracellular taurine upon excessive stimulation of glutamate receptors and under cell-damaging conditions may serve as an important protective mechanism against excitotoxicity, being particularly effective in the immature brain.
...
PMID:Modulation of taurine release by glutamate receptors and nitric oxide. 1085 11
We explored L-DOPA esters with chemically bulky structures to find a potent stable competitive antagonist against L-DOPA, compared to DOPA methyl ester (DOPA ME). In anesthetized rats, DOPA cyclohexyl ester (DOPA CHE), DOPA cyclopentyl ester (DOPA CPE) and DOPA cyclopentyldimethyl ester (DOPA CPDME) at 1 microgram microinjected into depressor sites of the nucleus tractus solitarii elicited or tended to elicit more marked antagonism against depressor responses to 60 ng L-DOPA, compared to DOPA ME. At 100 ng, DOPA CHE elicited the most potent antagonism. At 1 microgram, duration of the antagonistic activity of DOPA CHE was approximately three times longer than that of DOPA ME. During microdialysis of the nucleus accumbens, conversion from DOPA CHE at 1 microM perfused via probes to extracellular L-DOPA was the lowest among these compounds and less than one half of that from DOPA ME. Binding studies showed that the recognition site for L-DOPA differs from
ionotropic
glutamatergic, dopaminergic D1 and D2 receptors. We recently found that L-DOPA evoked by transient
ischemia
may act as a DOPA CHE-sensitive causal factor for glutamate release and resultant neuronal cell death. DOPA CHE is the most potent, relatively stable competitive antagonist against L-DOPA and is a useful mother compound to develop neuroprotective drugs.
...
PMID:L-DOPA cyclohexyl ester is a novel potent and relatively stable competitive antagonist against L-DOPA among several L-DOPA ester compounds. 1087 87
The inhibitory amino acid taurine is an osmoregulator and neuromodulator, also exerting neuroprotective actions in neural tissue. We review now the involvement of taurine in neuron-damaging conditions, including hypoxia, hypoglycemia,
ischemia
, oxidative stress, and the presence of free radicals, metabolic poisons and an excess of ammonia. The brain concentration of taurine is increased in several models of ischemic injury in vivo. Cell-damaging conditions which perturb the oxidative metabolism needed for active transport across cell membranes generally reduce taurine uptake in vitro, immature brain tissue being more tolerant to the lack of oxygen. In
ischemia
nonsaturable diffusion increases considerably. Both basal and K+-stimulated release of taurine in the hippocampus in vitro is markedly enhanced under cell-damaging conditions,
ischemia
, free radicals and metabolic poisons being the most potent. Hypoxia, hypoglycemia,
ischemia
, free radicals and oxidative stress also increase the initial basal release of taurine in cerebellar granule neurons, while the release is only moderately enhanced in hypoxia and
ischemia
in cerebral cortical astrocytes. The taurine release induced by
ischemia
is for the most part Ca2+-independent, a Ca2+-dependent mechanism being discernible only in hippocampal slices from developing mice. Moreover, a considerable portion of hippocampal taurine release in
ischemia
is mediated by the reversal of Na+-dependent transporters. The enhanced release in adults may comprise a swelling-induced component through Cl- channels, which is not discernible in developing mice. Excitotoxic concentrations of glutamate also potentiate taurine release in mouse hippocampal slices. The ability of
ionotropic
glutamate receptor agonists to evoke taurine release varies under different cell-damaging conditions, the N-methyl-D-aspartate-evoked release being clearly receptor-mediated in
ischemia
. Neurotoxic ammonia has been shown to provoke taurine release from different brain preparations, indicating that the ammonia-induced release may modify neuronal excitability in hyperammonic conditions. Taurine released simultane ously with an excess of excitatory amino acids in the hippocampus under ischemic and other neuron-damaging conditions may constitute an important protective mechanism against excitotoxicity, counteracting the harmful effects which lead to neuronal death. The release of taurine may prevent excitation from reaching neurotoxic levels.
...
PMID:Taurine and neural cell damage. 1114 Mar 56
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