Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0030567 (Parkinson's disease)
63,064 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A very early event in the pathogenesis of idiopathic Parkinson's disease (PD) has been proposed to be an elevated translocation of L-cysteine (CySH) and/or glutathione (GSH) into pigmented dopaminergic cell bodies in the substantia nigra (SN) in which cytoplasmic dopamine (DA) is normally autoxidized to DA-o-quinone as the first step in a reaction leading to black neuromelanin polymer. Such an elevated influx of CySH and GSH would be expected to initially result in formation of 5-S-cysteinyldopamine (5-S-CyS-DA) and 5-S-glutathionyldopamine (5-S-Glu-DA), respectively, and might account for the massive irreversible loss of GSH and progressive depigmentation of SN cells that occurs in the Parkinsonian brain. However, 5-S-Glu-DA has not been detected in the Parkinsonian brain. Furthermore, although the 5-S-CyS-DA/DA and 5-S-CyS-DA/homovanillic acid concentration ratios increase significantly in the SN and cerebrospinal fluid, respectively, of PD patients, the absolute concentrations of 5-S-CyS-DA are extremely low and similar to those measured in age-matched control patients. One explanation for these observations is that 5-S-CyS-DA might be intraneuronally oxidized to more complex cysteinyldopamines and a number of dihydrobenzothiazines (DHBTs) and benzothiazines (BTs). Similarly, 5-S-Glu-DA might be intraneuronally oxidized to more complex glutathionyldopamines. In this investigation, however, it is demonstrated that 5-S-Glu-DA is rapidly metabolized in rat brain to 5-S-CyS-DA and 5-S-(N-acetylcysteinyl) dopamine (5) in reactions mediated by gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase (gamma-GT) and cysteine conjugate N-acetyltransferase. Similarly, 5-S-CyS-DA is metabolized to 5 in rat brain although more slowly than 5-S-Glu-DA. These reactions occur most rapidly in the midbrain, a region that contains the SN. Furthermore, 5, 2-S-(N-acetylcysteinyl)dopamine (6) and 2,5-di-S-(N-acetylcysteinyl)-dopamine (9) are toxic when administered into mouse brain having LD50 values of 14, 25, and 42 micrograms, respectively, and evoke a profound hyperactivity syndrome. These results suggest that the failure to detect 5-S-Glu-DA and the presence of only very low levels of 5-S-CyS-DA in Parkinsonian SN tissue and CSF might be related to both their intraneuronal oxidation and extraneuronal metabolism to N-acetylcysteinyl conjugates of DA. Furthermore, the toxic properties and neurobehavioral responses evoked by 5, 6, and 9 raise the possibility that these N-acetylcysteinyl conjugates of DA, in addition to certain cysteinyldopamines, DHBTs and BTs, might include endotoxins that contribute to SN cell death and other neuronal damage that occurs in PD. Methods are described for the synthesis of several N-acetylcysteinyl conjugates of DA, and their redox behaviors have been studied using cyclic voltammetry.
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PMID:Synthesis, redox properties, in vivo formation, and neurobehavioral effects of N-acetylcysteinyl conjugates of dopamine: possible metabolites of relevance to Parkinson's disease. 890 66

1. Several studies have demonstrated a deficiency in reduced glutathione (GSH) in the nigra of patients with Parkinson's Disease (PD). In particular, the magnitude of reduction in GSH seems to parallel the severity of the disease. This finding may indicate a means by which the nigra cells could be therapeutically supported. 2. The authors studied the effects of GSH in nine patients with early, untreated PD. GSH was administered intravenous, 600 mg twice daily, for 30 days, in an open label fashion. Then, the drug was discontinued and a follow-up examination carried-out at 1-month interval for 2-4 months. Thereafter, the patients were treated with carbidopa-levodopa. 3. The clinical disability was assessed by using two different rating scale and the Webster Step-Second Test at baseline and at 1-month interval for 4-6 months. All patients improved significantly after GSH therapy, with a 42% decline in disability. Once GSH was stopped the therapeutic effect lasted for 2-4 months. 4. Our data indicate that in untreated PD patients GSH has symptomatic efficacy and possibly retards the progression of the disease.
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PMID:Reduced intravenous glutathione in the treatment of early Parkinson's disease. 893 17

Current concepts of the pathogenesis of Parkinson's disease (PD) center on the formation of reactive oxygen species and the onset of oxidative stress leading to oxidative damage to substantia nigra pars compacta. Extensive postmortem studies have provided evidence to support the involvement of oxidative stress in the pathogenesis of PD; in particular, these include alterations in brain iron content, impaired mitochondrial function, alterations in the antioxidant protective systems (most notably superoxide dismutase [SOD] and reduced glutathione [GSH]), and evidence of oxidative damage to lipids, proteins, and DNA. Iron can induce oxidative stress, and intranigral injections have been shown to induce a model of progressive parkinsonism. A loss of GSH is associated with incidental Lewy body disease and may represent the earliest biochemical marker of nigral cell loss. GSH depletion alone may not result in damage to nigral neurons but may increase susceptibility to subsequent toxic or free radical exposure. The nature of the free radical species responsible for cell death in PD remains unknown, but there is evidence of involvement of hydroxyl radical (OH.), peroxynitrite, and nitric oxide. Indeed, OH. and peroxynitrite formation may be critically dependent on nitric oxide formation. Central to many of the processes involved in oxidative stress and oxidative damage in PD are the actions of monoamine oxidase-B (MAO-B). MAO-B is essential for the activation of 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine to 1-methyl-4-phenylpyridinium ion, for a component of the enzymatic conversion of dopamine to hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), and for the activation of other potential toxins such as isoquinolines and beta-carbolines. Thus, the inhibition of MAO-B by drugs such as selegiline may protect against activation of some toxins and free radicals formed from the MAO-B oxidation of dopamine. In addition, selegiline may act through a mechanism unrelated to MAO-B to increase neurotrophic factor activity and upregulate molecules such as glutathione, SOD, catalase, and BCL-2 protein, which protect against oxidant stress and apoptosis. Consequently, selegiline may be advantageous in the long-term treatment of PD.
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PMID:Oxidative stress and the pathogenesis of Parkinson's disease. 895 85

Repin is the principal sesquiterpene lactone isolated from Russian knapweed (Centaurea repens), a perennial weed found in many parts of the United States. Ingestion of Centaurea repens by horses has been reported to cause a movement disorder simulating Parkinson's disease (PD) and nigrostriatal degeneration, called equine nigrostriatal encephalomalacia (ENE). To understand the mechanisms whereby ingestion of Centaurea repens induces ENE and a PD-like disorder, repin cytotoxicity was examined to explore its pathogenetic relationship to ENE and to PD. Repin was highly cytotoxic to both PC12 cells and mouse astrocytes in a dose- and time-dependent manner. The cytotoxic effects were accompanied by depletion of glutathione (GSH), a rise in the level of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and damage to cellular membranes. Although repin is a highly reactive electrophile that can readily conjugate GSH, GSH depletion may not be the sole mechanism underlying repin cytotoxicity as shown by our study using buthionine sulfoximine, in which severe GSH depletion did not result in a parallel increase in cell death. However, pre-treatment with GSH-glycoside or with lipoic acid provided significant protection from repin-induced cell death. These data suggest that oxidative stress plays a major role in repin cytotoxicity. Since oxidative stress is considered to play a major role in neuronal degeneration accompanied by depletion of mitochondrial GSH and an increase in lipid peroxides in the substantia nigra of PD, further elucidation of mechanisms of repin neurotoxicity may generate clues regarding not only the mechanisms of neuronal degeneration but also the possible role of environmental factors in the pathogenesis of PD.
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PMID:Cytotoxic effects of repin, a principal sesquiterpene lactone of Russian knapweed. 898 Dec 42

In substantia nigra from patients with Parkinson's disease, there are decreased levels of reduced glutathione (GSH) and diminished activities of mitochondrial complex I and alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase (alpha-KGDH), along with increased activity of superoxide dismutase (SOD). However, the interrelationship among these events is uncertain. We now report the effect of decreased brain GSH levels on SOD and mitochondrial respiratory enzyme activity in rat brain. In addition, we have investigated the ability of thioctic acid, an endogenous antioxidant, to alter these parameters. Unilateral or bilateral intracerebroventricular (ICV) administration of buthionine sulphoximine (BSO; 1 x 3.2 mg or 2 x 1.6 mg) over a 48-hr period reduced cortical GSH by 55-70%. There was no change in the activity of complex I, II/III, or IV or of citrate synthase in cortex. Similarly, there was no alteration of mitochondrial or cytosolic SOD activity. Thioctic acid (50 or 100 mg/kg IP) alone had no effect on cortical GSH levels in control animals and did not reverse the decrease in GSH levels produced by unilateral or bilateral ICV BSO administration. Thioctic acid (50 or 100 mg/kg IP) had no overall effect on complex I, II/III, or IV or on citrate synthase activity in control animals. Thioctic acid also did not alter cortical mitochondrial respiratory enzyme activity in BSO-treated rats. At the lower dose, thioctic acid tended to increase mitochondrial and cytosolic SOD activity in control animals and in BSO-treated rats. However, at the higher dose, thioctic acid tended to decrease mitochondrial SOD activity. Overall, there was no consistent effect of thioctic acid (50 or 100 mg/kg IP) on SOD activity in control or BSO-treated animals. This study shows that BSO-induced glutathione deficiency does not lead to alterations in mitochondrial respiratory enzyme activity or to changes in SOD activity. GSH depletion in Parkinson's disease therefore may not account for the alterations occurring in complex I and mitochondrial SOD in substantia nigra. Thioctic acid did not alter brain GSH levels or mitochondrial function. Interestingly, however, it did produce some alterations in SOD activity, which may reflect either its antioxidant activity or its ability to act as a thiol-disulphide redox couple.
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PMID:Mitochondrial respiratory enzyme function and superoxide dismutase activity following brain glutathione depletion in the rat. 898 27

Nigral cell death in Parkinson's disease (PD) may involve oxidative stress and mitochondrial dysfunction initiated by a decrease in reduced glutathione (GSH) levels in substantia nigra. L-buthionine-(S,R)-sulphoximine (BSO; 4.8 and 9.6 mg/kg/day), an irreversible inhibitor of gamma-glutamyl cysteine synthetase, was chronically infused into the left lateral ventricle of rats over a period of 28 days and markedly reduced GSH concentrations in substantia nigra (approx. 59% and 65% in 4.8 and 9.6 mg/kg/d BSO respectively) and the striatum (approx. 63% and 80% in 4.8 and 9.6 mg/kg/d BSO respectively). However, the number of tyrosine hydroxylase (TH)-positive cells in substantia nigra was not altered by BSO-treatment compared to control animals. Similarly, there was no difference in specific [3H]-mazindol binding in the striatum and nucleus accumbens of BSO-treated rats compared to control rats. In conclusion, depletion of GSH following chronic administration of BSO in the rat brain does not cause damage to the nigrostriatal pathway and suggests that loss of GSH alone is not responsible for nigrostriatal damage in PD. Rather, GSH depletion may enhance the susceptibility of substantia nigra to destruction by endogenous or exogenous toxins.
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PMID:Glutathione depletion in rat brain does not cause nigrostriatal pathway degeneration. 908 94

o-Quinones are physiological oxidation products of catecholamines that contribute to redox cycling, toxicity and apoptosis, i.e. the neurodegenerative processes underlying Parkinson's disease and schizophrenia. The present study shows that the cyclized o-quinones aminochrome, dopachrome, adrenochrome and noradrenochrome, derived from dopamine, dopa, adrenaline and noradrenaline respectively, are efficiently conjugated with glutathione in the presence of human glutathione transferase (GST) M2-2. The oxidation product of adrenaline, adrenochrome, is less active as a substrate for GST M2-2, and more efficiently conjugated by GST M1-1. Evidence for expression of GST M2-2 in substantia nigra of human brain was obtained by identification of the corresponding PCR product in a cDNA library. Glutathione conjugation of these quinones is a detoxication reaction that prevents redox cycling, thus indicating that GSTs have a cytoprotective role involving elimination of reactive chemical species originating from the oxidative metabolism of catecholamines. In particular, GST M2-2 has the capacity to provide protection relevant to the prevention of neurodegenerative diseases.
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PMID:Glutathione transferases catalyse the detoxication of oxidized metabolites (o-quinones) of catecholamines and may serve as an antioxidant system preventing degenerative cellular processes. 916 36

Oxidative stress is believed to play important roles in neuronal cell death associated with many different neurodegenerative conditions (e.g., Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, and cerebral ischemia), and it is believed also that apoptosis is an important mode of cell death in these disorders. Membrane lipid peroxidation has been documented in the brain regions affected in these disorders as well as in cell culture and in vivo models. We now provide evidence that 4-hydroxynonenal (HNE), an aldehydic product of membrane lipid peroxidation, is a key mediator of neuronal apoptosis induced by oxidative stress. HNE induced apoptosis in PC12 cells and primary rat hippocampal neurons. Oxidative insults (FeSO4 and amyloid beta-peptide) induced lipid peroxidation, cellular accumulation of HNE, and apoptosis. Bcl-2 prevented apoptosis of PC12 cells induced by oxidative stress and HNE. Antioxidants that suppress lipid peroxidation protected against apoptosis induced by oxidative insults, but not that induced by HNE. Glutathione, which binds HNE, protected neurons against apoptosis induced by oxidative stress and HNE. PC12 cells expressing Bcl-2 exhibited higher levels of glutathione and lower levels of HNE after oxidative stress. Collectively, the data identify that HNE is a novel nonprotein mediator of oxidative stress-induced neuronal apoptosis and suggest that the antiapoptotic action of glutathione may involve detoxification of HNE.
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PMID:Evidence that 4-hydroxynonenal mediates oxidative stress-induced neuronal apoptosis. 918 46

The function of neuromelanin (NM), the oxidized dopamine (DA) polymer, within the DA-producing cells in the human and primate substantia nigra (SN), is still an enigma. Some studies show that the vulnerability of nigral neurons in Parkinson's disease is correlated to their toxic NM content, while others suggest that it contributes to cellular protection. We showed recently that DA, the endogenous nigral neurotransmitter, triggers apoptosis, an active program of cellular self-destruction, in neuronal cultures. In the present study, we exposed cells to synthetic dopamine-melanin (DA-M) and analysed the cellular and genetic changes. We found that exposure of PC12 cells to DA-M (0.5 mg/ml for 24 h) caused 50% cell death, as indicated by trypan blue exclusion assay and 3H-thymidine incorporation. Gel electrophoresis DNA analysis of PC12 cells treated with DA-M showed the typical apoptotic DNA ladder, indicating inter-nucleosomal DNA degradation. The DNA fragmentation also was visualized histochemically in situ by DNA end-labeling staining (the TUNEL method). The FeCl2 (0.05 mM) significantly increased DA-M toxicity, while desferrioxamine, an iron chelator, totally abolished the additive toxicity of iron. The contribution of oxidative stress in this model of DA-M-induced cell death was examined using various antioxidants. In contrast to DA, inhibition of DA-M toxicity antioxidants by reduced glutathione (GSH), N-acetyl cysteine, catalase and Zn/Cu superoxide dismutase (SOD) was very limited. In conclusion, we found that DA-M may induce typical apoptotic death in PC12 cells. Our findings support a possible role of NM in the vulnerability of the dopaminergic neural degeneration in Parkinson's disease. The differential protective effect by antioxidants against toxicity of DA and DA-M may have implications for future neuroprotective therapeutic approaches for this common neurological disorder.
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PMID:Dopamine-melanin induces apoptosis in PC12 cells; possible implications for the etiology of Parkinson's disease. 922 Apr 53

An early and highly specific decrease in glutathione (GSH) in the substantia nigra is associated with Parkinson's disease, and low levels of GSH lead to the degeneration of cultured dopaminergic neurons. Using immature cortical neurons and a clonal nerve cell line, it is shown that a decrease in GSH triggers the activation of neuronal 12-lipoxygenase (12-LOX), which leads to the production of peroxides, the influx of Ca2+, and ultimately to cell death. The supporting evidence includes: 1) inhibitors of arachidonate metabolism and 12-LOX block cell death induced by GSH depletion; 2) there is an increase in 12-LOX activity and a membrane translocation in HT22 cells, and an induction of the enzyme in primary cortical neurons following the reduction of GSH; 3) 12-LOX is directly inhibited by GSH; and 4) exogenous arachidonic acid potentiates cell death. These data show that the LOX pathway is a critical intermediate in at least some forms of neuronal degeneration.
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PMID:A role for 12-lipoxygenase in nerve cell death caused by glutathione depletion. 929 33


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