Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0027819 (neuroblastoma)
27,800 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

N-bromosuccinimide-cytochromes c (Myer, Y. P. (1972), Biochemistry 11, 4195) and formyl-cytochrome c (Aviram, I and Schejter, A. (1971), Biochim. Biophys. Acta 229, 113) have been chromatographically purified, and the resulting components have been characterized in terms of their structure, conformation, and function. The activity measurements are considered in terms of the oxidizability, as the transference of an electron to solubilized cytochrome c oxidase, and reducibility, as the tendency to accept an electron from NADH-cytochrome c reductase. Conformational characterization has been carried out by absorption measurements, pH-spectroscopic behavior, circular dichroism, thermal denaturation, ionization of phenolic hydroxyls, the tendency to form the CO complex, and autoxidation with molecular oxygen. NBS-cytochrome c yields two major components, the relative proportions of which, with increasing modification of the protein, exhibit a pattern typical of the formation of the two in a consecutive manner. The first product contains the modification of the Trp-59 and Met-65 side chains, and the second contains the added modification of Met-80. The former in both valence states of iron is more or less like the native protein, except for an apparently slightly loosened heme crevice; the latter, as in other modifications involving modification of centrally coordinated Met-80, was found to be in a conformational state characteristic of the native protein with a disrupted central coordination complex, a loosened heme crevice, and small, but finite derangement of the polypeptide conformation. Functionally, the first component reflected 55% of the reducibility property and an unimpaired oxidizability property, while the latter exhibited derangement of both aspects of cytochrome c activity. Formyl-cytochrome c yielded a single component with modification of Trp-59. Conformationally, in both valence states, it is a molecular form with a disrupted central coordination complex, a loosened heme crevice, and gross derangement of the overall protein conformation. It exhibits a minimal reducibility property, 12%, whereas it retains a native-like tendency to transfer an electron to cytochrome c oxidase. The data from the NBS-cytochrome c components are analyzed with reference to the two forms in the earlier studies of the unpurified preparations. The results are found to be in agreement with one another. The selectivity between the reducibility and the oxidizability exhibited by the first NBS component and formyl-cytochrome c, irrespective of significant differences in the conformational and coordinational configurations of the two, has been viewed in light of a two-path, two-function model for oxidoreduction, as well as with reference to conformational and structural requirements for the oxidizability and reducibility properties of the molecule.
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PMID:Conformational and functional studies of chemically modified cytochromes: N-bromosuccinimide- and formyl-cytochromes c. 16 5

With the electro-driven import of rhodamine 123, we used single cell fluorescence microscopy to single out the contribution of nitric oxide (NO) in controlling mitochondrial membrane potential expressed by (stationary growing) rhabdomyosarcoma and neuroblastoma cells in culture. The experimental design and the computer-aided image analysis detected and quantitated variations of fluorescence signals specific to mitochondria. We observed that 1) the two cell lines display changes of fluorescence dependent on mitochondrial energization states; 2) mitochondrial fluorescence decreases after exposure of the cells to a NO releaser; 4) the different fluorescence intensity measured under stationary growing conditions, or after activation and inhibition of constitutive NO synthase, is consistent with a steady-state production of NO. Direct comparison of single cell fluorescence with bulk cytofluorimetry proved that the results obtained by the latter method may be misleading because of the intrinsic-to-measure lack of information about distribution of fluorescence within different cell compartments. The kinetic parameters describing the reactions between cytochrome oxidase, NO, and O2 may account for the puzzling (20-fold) increase of the KM for O2 reported for cells and tissues as compared to purified cytochrome c oxidase, allowing an estimate of in vivo NO flux.
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PMID:Modulation of mitochondrial respiration by nitric oxide: investigation by single cell fluorescence microscopy. 987 43

Nitric oxide (NO) challenge to human neuroblastoma cells (SH-SY5Y) ultimately results in apoptosis. Tumor suppressor protein p53 and cell cycle inhibitor p21 accumulate as an early sign of S-nitrosoglutathione-mediated toxicity. Cytochrome c release from mitochondria and caspase 3 activation also occurred. Cells transfected with either wild type (WT) or mutant (G93A) Cu, Zn-superoxide dismutase (Cu,Zn-SOD) produced comparable amounts of nitrite/nitrate but showed different degree of apoptosis. G93A cells were the most affected and WT cells the most protected; however, Cu, Zn-SOD content of these two cell lines was 2-fold the SH-SY5Y cells under both resting and treated conditions. We linked decreased susceptibility of the WT cells to higher and more stable Bcl-2 and decreased reactive oxygen species. Conversely, we linked G93A susceptibility to increased reactive oxygen species production since simultaneous administration of S-nitrosoglutathione and copper chelators protects from apoptosis. Furthermore, G93A cells showed a significant decrease of Bcl-2 expression and, as target of NO-derived radicals, showed lower cytochrome c oxidase activity. These results demonstrate that resistance to NO-mediated apoptosis is strictly related to the level and integrity of Cu,Zn-SOD and that the balance between reactive nitrogen and reactive oxygen species regulates neuroblastoma apoptosis.
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PMID:Cu,Zn-superoxide dismutase-dependent apoptosis induced by nitric oxide in neuronal cells. 1067 49

Treatment of neuroblastoma cells with the copper chelator triethylene tetramine tetrahydrochloride induced intracellular decrease of copper content paralleled by diminished activity of the enzymes Cu, Zn superoxide dismutase, and cytochrome c oxidase. This effect appears to be specific for copper-enzymes and the treatment affects neither viability nor growth capability of cells. However, molecular markers of apoptosis Bcl-2, p53, and caspase-3 were slightly affected in these cells. When copper-deficient cells were challenged with oxidative stress generated by paraquat or puromycin, they underwent a higher degree of apoptosis with respect to copper-adequate control cells. The mechanism underlying paraquat-triggered apoptosis implies dramatic activation of caspase-3 and induction of the transcription factor p53. These results demonstrate that impairment of copper balance predisposes neuronal cells to apoptosis induced by oxidative stress. Overall findings represent a contribution to the comprehension of the link between copper-imbalance and neurodegeneration, which has recently been repeatedly suggested for the most invalidating pathologies of the central nervous system.
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PMID:Increased susceptibility of copper-deficient neuroblastoma cells to oxidative stress-mediated apoptosis. 1136 9

The pattern of cytochrome c oxidase inhibition by nitric oxide (NO) was investigated polarographically using Keilin-Hartree particles, mitochondria and human neuroblastoma cells. NO reacts with purified cytochrome c oxidase forming either a nitrosyl- or a nitrite-inhibited derivative, displaying distinct kinetics and light sensitivity of respiration recovery in the absence of free NO. Keilin-Hartree particles or cells, respiring either on endogenous substrates alone or in the presence of ascorbate, as well as state 3 and state 4 mitochondria respiring on glutamate and malate, displayed the rapid recovery characteristic of the nitrite derivative. All systems, when respiring in the presence of tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine, were characterised by the slower, light-sensitive recovery typical of the nitrosyl derivative. Together the results suggest that the reaction of NO with cytochrome c oxidase in situ follows two alternative inhibition pathways, depending on the electron flux through the respiratory chain.
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PMID:Control of respiration by nitric oxide in Keilin-Hartree particles, mitochondria and SH-SY5Y neuroblastoma cells. 1450 60

SH-SY5Y neuroblastoma cells were cultured for up to three serial passages in the presence of the copper chelator triethylene tetramine (Trien). The copper-depleted neuroblastoma cell line obtained showed decreased activities of the copper enzymes Cu, Zn super-oxide dismutase and cytochrome c oxidase with concomitant increases in reactive oxygen species. Mitochondrial antioxidants (Mn superoxide dismutase and Bcl-2)were up-regulated. Overexpression and activation of p53 were early responses, leading to an increase in p21. Eventually, copper-depleted cells detached from the monolayer and underwent apoptosis. Activation of upstream caspase-9, but not caspase-8, suggested that apoptosis proceeds via a mitochondrial pathway, followed by caspase-3 activation. The addition of copper sulfate to the copper-depleted cells restored copper enzymes, normalized antioxidant levels and improved cell viability. We conclude that prolonged copper starvation in these replicating cells leads to mitochondrial damage and oxidative stress and ultimately, apoptosis.
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PMID:Prolonged copper depletion induces expression of antioxidants and triggers apoptosis in SH-SY5Y neuroblastoma cells. 1451 38

Micromolar nitric oxide (NO) rapidly (ms) inhibits cytochrome c oxidase in turnover with physiological substrates. Two reaction mechanisms have been identified leading, respectively, to formation of a nitrosyl- [a3(2+) -NO] or a nitrite- [a3(3+) -NO2-] derivative of the enzyme. In the presence of O2, the nitrosyl adduct recovers activity slowly, following NO displacement at k' approximately equal to 0.01 s(-1) (37 degrees C); the recovery of the nitrite adduct is much faster. Relevant to pathophysiology, the enzyme does not degrade NO by following the first mechanism, whereas by following the second one it promotes NO oxidation and disposal as nitrite/nitrate. The reaction between NO and cytochrome c oxidase has been investigated at different integration levels of the enzyme, including the in situ state, such as in mouse liver mitochondria or cultured human SY5Y neuroblastoma cells. The respiratory chain is inhibited by NO, either supplied exogenously or produced endogenously via the NO synthase activation. Inhibition of respiration is reversible, although it remains to be clarified whether reversibility is always full and how it depends on concentration of and time of exposure to NO. Oxygraphic measurements show that cultured cells or isolated state 4 mitochondria exposed to micromolar (or less) NO recover from NO inhibition rapidly, as if the nitrite reaction was predominant. Mitochondria in state 3 display a slightly more persistent inhibition than in state 4, possibly due to a higher accumulation of the nitrosyl adduct. Among a number of parameters that appear to control the switch over between the two mechanisms, the concentration of reductants (reduced cytochrome c) at the cytochrome c oxidase site has been proved to be the most relevant one.
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PMID:Nitric oxide and mitochondrial complex IV. 1471 Oct 6

Children with hereditary severe hyperhomocysteinemia present with a variety of neurological impairment, and mild hyperhomocysteinemia has been associated with neurodegeneration in the elderly. The link of hyperhomocysteinemia to neurological dysfunction is unknown. We investigated mitochondrial mechanisms of homocysteine (HCys) neurotoxicity in rat dopaminergic pheochromocytoma cells, human neuroblastoma cells and primary rat cerebellar granule neurons. HCys dose dependently impaired cytochrome c oxidase (COX) activity as well as stability and induced reactive oxygen species and apoptotic cell death. We found that HCys binds the COX cofactor Cu(2+), and Cu(2+) supplementation prior to HCys treatment preserved COX activity and prevented cell death. The Cu(2+) chelating action of HCys and impairement of COX activity represent novel mechanisms of HCys neurotoxicity, which might be preventable by supplementation of Cu(2+).
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PMID:Binding of copper is a mechanism of homocysteine toxicity leading to COX deficiency and apoptosis in primary neurons, PC12 and SHSY-5Y cells. 1687 25

Mitochondrial dysfunction is an important cause of neurological disorder including Alzheimer's disease (AD). Mitochondria play a key role in the generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS), resulting in oxidative damage to neuronal cell and cellular compartments in the AD brain. Cytotoxicity induced by amyloid-beta (Abeta), a protein fragment of 25-35 amino acids in amyloid plaques has been shown to have neuro-toxic properties. They seem to involve mitochondrial dysfunction, but the underlying mechanisms are not clearly understood. The purpose of this study was to assess whether Abeta induced mitochondrial dysfunction involves changes in cytochrome c oxidase (COX) expression. We measured the activities of COX after expose of SK-N-SH cells (a human neuroblastoma cell line) to Abeta. We found that levels of mRNAs expressing mitochondrial COX subunits decreased significantly in Abeta-treated SK-N-SH cells in a dose-dependent manner. Human mitochondrial transcription factor-1 (TFAM) mRNA level also decreased after Abeta-treatment. These results suggest that Abeta modulates the mitochondrial gene expression through a decrease in TFAM.
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PMID:Amyloid-beta-peptide reduces the expression level of mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase subunits. 1751 22

Increasing evidence suggests that Alzheimer's disease is associated with mitochondrial dysfunction and oxidative damage. To develop a cellular model of Alzheimer's disease, we investigated the effects of thioredoxin (Trx) expression in the response to mitochondrial dysfunction-enhanced oxidative stress in the SH-SY5Y human neuroblastoma cells. Treatment of SH-SY5Y cells with 15 mM of NaN3, an inhibitor of cytochrome c oxidase (complex IV), led to alteration of mitochondrial membrane potential but no significant changes in cell viability. Therefore, cells were first treated with 15 mM NaN3 to induce mitochondrial dysfunction, then, exposed to different concentrations of H2O2. Cell susceptibility was assessed by 3-(4,5-dimethyl-2-thiazolyl)-2,5-diphenyl-2H-tetrazolium bromide assay and morphological observation. Expressions of Trx mRNA and protein were determined by RT-PCR; and Western-blot analysis, respectively. It was found that the SH-SY5Y cells with mitochondrial impairment had lower levels of Trx mRNA and protein, and were significantly more vulnerable than the normal cells after exposure to H2O2 while no significant changes of Trx mRNA and protein in SH-SY5Y cells exposed to H2O2 but without mitochondrial complex IV inhibition. These results, together with our previous study in primary cultured neurons, demonstrated that the increased susceptibility to oxidative stress is induced at least in part by the down-regulation of Trx in SH-SY5Y human neuroblastoma cells with mitochondrial impairment and also suggest the mitochondrial dysfunction-enhanced oxidative stress could be used as a cellular model to study the mechanisms of Alzheimer's disease and agents for prevention and treatment.
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PMID:Mitochondrial dysfunction enhances susceptibility to oxidative stress by down-regulation of thioredoxin in human neuroblastoma cells. 1761 13


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