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Query: UMLS:C0027819 (
neuroblastoma
)
27,800
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
C-6 glioma and C-1300
neuroblastoma
cells were cultured in thiamine deficient and control media. Thiamine levels, transketolase and pyruvate decarboxylase activities, and high energy phosphate metabolites were all measured in deficient and control cells. Thiamine levels in the deficient cells were found to be below the level of detectability. Pyruvate decarboxylase activity was more susceptible to
thiamine deficiency
in both cell lines than transketolase. In spite of the large decrease in pyruvate decarboxylase activity, high energy phosphate metabolites were not decreased in either cell line. These data indicate that C-6 glioma and C-1300
neuroblastoma
cells have the capacity to maintain normal energy metabolites in the presence of large changes in thiamine levels and thiamine dependent enzyme activity.
...
PMID:Glycolytic metabolism in cultured cells of the nervous system. IV. The effects of thiamine deficiency on thiamine levels, metabolites and thiamine-dependent enzymes on the C-6 glioma and C-1300 neuroblastoma cell lines. 100 96
The effects of
thiamine deficiency
and of the antithiamine drug pyrithiamine on the C-6 glioma and the C-1300
neuroblastoma
cell lines have been studied.
Thiamine deficiency
increased the doubling time of the
neuroblastoma
cells without affecting that of the glioma cells. Pyrithiamine prevented both cell lines from doubling even once. (hiamine deficiency had only slight effects on intracellular pyruvate and lactate levels or on efflux rates for the acids, but pyrithiamine treatment resulted in large increases in both the intracellular levels and the efflux in both cell lines. For comparison, the pyruvate and lactate levels in mouse brain were measured. The levels from thiamine-deficient mouse brain were essentially unchanged from controls while pyrithiamine treatment caused a significant elevation only of the pyruvate concentration.
...
PMID:Glycolytic metabolism in cultured cells of the nervous system. III. The effects of thiamine deficiency and pyrithiamine on the C-6 glioma and C-1300 neuroblastoma cell lines. 119 2
Culture of
neuroblastoma
cells in a medium of low-thiamine concentration (6 nM) and in the presence of the transport inhibitor amprolium leads to the appearance of overt signs of necrosis; i.e., the chromatin condenses in dark patches, the oxygen consumption decreases, mitochondria are uncoupled, and their cristae are disorganized. Glutamate formed from glutamine is no longer oxidized and accumulates, suggesting that the thiamine diphosphate-dependent alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase activity is impaired. When thiamine (10 microM) is added to the cells, the O2 consumption increases, respiratory control is restored, and normal cell and mitochondrial morphology is recovered within 1 h. Succinate, which is oxidized via the thiamine diphosphate-independent succinate dehydrogenase, is also able to restore a normal O2 consumption (with respiratory control) in digitonin-permeabilized thiamine-deficient cells. Our results therefore suggest that the slowing of the citric acid cycle is the main cause of the biochemical lesion induced by
thiamine deficiency
as observed in Wernicke's encephalopathy.
...
PMID:Thiamine deficiency--induced partial necrosis and mitochondrial uncoupling in neuroblastoma cells are rapidly reversed by addition of thiamine. 759 5
When
neuroblastoma
cells were transferred to a medium of low (6 nM) thiamine concentration, a 16-fold decrease in total intracellular thiamine content occurred within 8 days. Respiration and ATP levels were only slightly affected, but addition of a thiamine transport inhibitor (amprolium) decreased ATP content and increased lactate production. Oxygen consumption became low and insensitive to oligomycin and uncouplers. At least 25% of mitochondria were swollen and electron translucent. Cell mortality increased to 75% within 5 days. [3H]PK 11195, a specific ligand of peripheral benzodiazepine receptors (located in the outer mitochondrial membrane) binds to the cells with high affinity (KD = 1.4 +/- 0.2 nM).
Thiamine deficiency
leads to an increase in both Bmax and KD. Changes in binding parameters for peripheral benzodiazepine receptors may be related to structural or permeability changes in mitochondrial outer membranes. In addition to the high-affinity (nanomolar range) binding site for peripheral benzodiazepine ligands, there is a low-affinity (micromolar range) saturable binding for PK 11195. At micromolar concentrations, peripheral benzodiazepines inhibit thiamine uptake by the cells. Altogether, our results suggest that impairment of oxidative metabolism, followed by mitochondrial swelling and disorganization of cristae, is the main cause of cell mortality in severely thiamine-deficient
neuroblastoma
cells.
...
PMID:Thiamine deficiency in cultured neuroblastoma cells: effect on mitochondrial function and peripheral benzodiazepine receptors. 772 87
Nerve cells are particularly sensitive to
thiamine deficiency
. We studied thiamine transport in mouse
neuroblastoma
(Neuro 2a) cells. At low external concentration, [14C]thiamine was taken up through a saturable high affinity mechanism (Km = 35 nM). This was blocked by low concentrations of the Na+ channel activators veratridine (IC50 = 7 +/- 4 microM) and batrachotoxin (IC50 = 0.9 microM). These effects were not antagonized by tetrodotoxin and were also observed in cell lines devoid of Na+ channels, suggesting that these channels are not involved in the mechanism of inhibition. At high extracellular concentrations, thiamine uptake proceeds essentially via a low affinity carrier (Km = 0.8 mM), insensitive to veratridine but blocked by divalent cations. In both cases, the uptake was independent on external sodium, partially inhibited (10-35%) by depolarization and sensitive to metabolic inhibitors. A linear relationship between the rate of thiamine transport and intracellular ATP concentration was found. When cells grown in a medium of low thiamine concentration (6 nM) were exposed to 100 nM extracellular thiamine, a 3-fold increase in intracellular thiamine diphosphate was observed after 2 h while the concomitant increase in intracellular free thiamine was barely significant. These data suggest a secondary active transport of thiamine, the main driving force being thiamine phosphorylation rather than the sodium gradient.
...
PMID:Mechanism of thiamine transport in neuroblastoma cells. Inhibition of a high affinity carrier by sodium channel activators and dependence of thiamine uptake on membrane potential and intracellular ATP. 818 42
Thiamine diphosphate (TDP) is an important cofactor of pyruvate (PDH) and alpha-ketoglutarate (KGDH) dehydrogenases and transketolase.
Thiamine deficiency
leads to reversible and irreversible brain lesions due to impaired oxidative metabolism. A specific non-cofactor role for thiamine has also been proposed in excitable cells and thiamine triphosphate (TTP) might be involved in the regulation of ion channels. Thiamine is taken up by
neuroblastoma
cells through a high affinity transporter. Inside the cells, it is rapidly phosphorylated to TDP. This high turnover TDP pool is the precursor for TTP. Most of the TDP however has a low turnover and is associated with PDH and KGDH in mitochondria. In excised inside-out patches from
neuroblastoma
cells, TTP, at a concentration of 1 microM, activates chloride channels of large unitary conductance, the so-called maxi-Cl- channels. These channels are inhibited by oxythiamine from the outide. In addition to the role of TTP in the regulation of chloride channels, thiamine itself, or a presently unknown analog, may have trophic effects on neuronal cells.
...
PMID:A non-cofactor role of thiamine derivatives in excitable cells? 898 Jul 89
Culture of
neuroblastoma
cells in the presence of low thiamine concentration (16 nM) and of the transport inhibitor amprolium leads to the appearance of signs of necrosis: the chromatin condenses, the oxygen consumption decreases and is uncoupled, the mitochondrial cristae are disorganized, the thiamine diphosphate-dependent dehydrogenase activities are impaired. When 10 microM thiamine are added to these cells, the basal respiration increases, the coupled respiration is restored and mitochondrial morphology is recovered within 1 h. Addition of succinate, which is oxidized via a thiamine diphosphate-independent dehydrogenase, to digitonin-permeabilized cells immediately restores a coupled respiration. Our results suggest that the slowing of the citric acid cycle is the cause of the biochemical lesion induced by severe
thiamine deficiency
and that part of the mitochondria remain functional.
...
PMID:Reversibility of thiamine deficiency-induced partial necrosis and mitochondrial uncoupling by addition of thiamine to neuroblastoma cell suspensions. 930 75
Reductions in the levels and activities of enzymes that utilize thiamine diphosphate (ThDP) as a cofactor are thought to be responsible for the tissue damage suffered during
thiamine deficiency
. Although loss of cofactor can account in part for loss of enzyme activity, thiamine and its phosphorylated derivatives may also regulate the expression of the genes encoding these proteins. To examine this possibility, steady-state mRNA levels for three ThDP-dependent enzymes were measured in human fibroblasts, lymphoblasts and
neuroblastoma
cells cultured under conditions of thiamine sufficiency and deficiency. In all three cell types, the mRNA levels of transketolase and the E1beta subunit of pyruvate dehydrogenase complex were lower in thiamine-deficient cultures. In contrast, mRNA levels for a ThDP-binding subunit of alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase, the E1 subunit did not differ. These results indicate that thiamine or a thiamine metabolite regulates the expression in humans of some, but not all, genes encoding ThDP-utilizing enzymes.
...
PMID:Thiamine deficiency decreases steady-state transketolase and pyruvate dehydrogenase but not alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase mRNA levels in three human cell types. 952 28
Abnormalities in oxidative metabolism and inflammation accompany many neurodegenerative diseases.
Thiamine deficiency
(TD) is an animal model in which chronic oxidative stress and inflammation lead to selective neuronal death, whereas other cell types show an inflammatory response. Therefore, the current studies determined the response of different brain cell types to TD and/or inflammation in vitro and tested whether their responses reflect inherent properties of the cells. The cells that have been implicated in TD-induced neurotoxicity, including neurons, microglia, astrocytes, and brain endothelial cells, as well as
neuroblastoma
and BV-2 microglial cell lines, were cultured in either thiamine-depleted media or in normal culture media with amprolium, a thiamine transport inhibitor. The activity levels of a key mitochondrial enzyme, alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase complex (KGDHC), were uniquely distributed among different cell types: The highest activity was in the endothelial cells, and the lowest was in primary microglia and neurons. The unique distribution of the activity did not account for the selective response to TD. TD slightly inhibited general cellular dehydrogenases in all cell types, whereas it significantly reduced the activity of KGDHC exclusively in primary neurons and
neuroblastoma
cells. Among the cell types tested, only in neurons did TD induce apoptosis and cause the accumulation of 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal, a lipid peroxidation product. On the other hand, chronic lipopolysaccharide-induced inflammation significantly inhibited cellular dehydrogenase and KGDHC activities in microglia and astrocytes but not in neurons or endothelial cells. The results demonstrate that the selective cell changes during TD in vivo reflect inherent properties of the different brain cell types.
...
PMID:Metabolic impairment elicits brain cell type-selective changes in oxidative stress and cell death in culture. 1061 12
Thiamine deficiency
results in selective neuronal damage. A number of mechanisms have been proposed to account for brain damage associated with
thiamine deficiency
and to account for the focal nature of the loss of neurons. One proposed mechanism is programmed cell death. We found efficient induction of apoptosis in human
neuroblastoma
cells when the cells were deprived of thiamine. Although extensive mitochondrial damage was seen, the release of cytochrome c was not the triggering mechanism for
thiamine deficiency
-induced apoptosis. Instead, the activity of the cJun amino terminal kinase Jnk1 was lost, and this loss correlated temporally with induction of apoptosis. The loss was specific for Jnk1; Jnk2/3 activity remained unchanged. Loss of Jnk1 activity was not found in lymphoblasts, a cell type that did not undergo apoptosis when deprived of thiamine. These findings suggest that
thiamine deficiency
results in a cellular stress that brings about the loss of Jnk1 activity and the loss of its function of protecting cells from programmed cell death. We postulate that focal sensitivity to
thiamine deficiency
results, in part, from specific neuronal cell types being susceptible to the inactivation of Jnk1 in response to depletion of cellular thiamine.
...
PMID:JNK1 is inactivated during thiamine deficiency-induced apoptosis in human neuroblastoma cells. 1082 43
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