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

Eleven beta-carbolinium compounds (beta C+s) and MPP+ were stereotaxically injected (40-200 nmol in 5 microliter of vehicle) unilaterally into the substantia nigra of anesthetized adult male Sprague-Dawley rats. The rats were sacrificed after three weeks. The ipsilateral striatum was analyzed for dopamine and DOPAC levels with HPLC. The brainstem injection site was fixed and cut coronally. The largest lesion area in each animal was measured using NIH IMAGE. Three beta C+s produced lesions whose mean areas were nearly as large as that produced by MPP+ (defined as 100%): 2,9-Me2-harman (94%), 2-Me-harmol (74%), and 2,9-Me2-norharman (57%). Three other compounds produced somewhat smaller lesions: 2-Me-harmaline (34%), 6-MeO-2-Me-harman (29%), and 2-Me-harmine (25%). The remaining compounds were ineffective (< or = 12%): norharman, 2-Me-norharman, 2-Me-harman, harmine, and 2-Me-6-MeO-harmalan. A 40 nmol dose of MPP+ reduced ipsilateral striatal dopamine to 0.6% of control. None of the beta C+s approached this, although several did significantly reduce striatal dopamine at doses of either 40 nmol (2,9-Me2-harman (37%), 2,9-Me2-norharman (42%), and 2-Me-harman (63%)) or 200 nmol (2-Me-harmaline (23%), norharman (63%), and 2-Me-norharman (64%)). There was a moderate negative correlation between lesion size and dopamine level (r = -0.65). There were also moderately strong correlation between lesion size and dopamine level (r = -0.65). There were also moderately strong correlations (r = 0.39-0.78) between the beta C+ nigral lesion area or striatal dopamine level potencies and their previously described IC50 values for inhibiting mitochondrial respiration or their toxicity to PC12 cells in culture. Interestingly, our correlation analysis revealed a remarkably strong correlation between beta C+ Ki MAO-A values and their toxicity to PC12 LDH release (r = -0.84) or PC12 protein loss (r = 0.79). Although beta C+s appear to be less specific toxins than MPP+, their levels in human substantia nigra are 8-20-fold higher than in cortex, making their role as relatively selective nigral toxins in Parkinson's disease plausible.
...
PMID:Methyl-beta-carbolinium analogs of MPP+ cause nigrostriatal toxicity after substantia nigra injections in rats. 779 40

To elucidate the neuroprotective effect of nicotine, we investigated whether nicotine may attenuate dexamethasone potentiation of kainic acid-induced neurotoxicity. Primary hippocampal culture was pre-treated with nicotine for 24 h followed by dexamethasone (10(-4) M) for 24 h. Then, cultures were exposed with kainic acid (10(-4) M) and cellular viability was determined by LDH effluxmetry. Nicotine pre-treatment (10(-9)-10(-7) M) dose-dependently attenuated dexamethasone potentiation of kainic acid-induced neurotoxicity. These results may support the epidemiological data suggesting a neuroprotective effect of cigarette smoking on Alzheimer's disease or Parkinson's disease.
...
PMID:Nicotine protects against the dexamethasone potentiation of kainic acid-induced neurotoxicity in cultured hippocampal neurons. 891 75

Paraquat was taken up by PC12 cells in a carrier-mediated, saturable manner. When PC12 cells were permeabilized with digitonin (50 microg/ml) lipid peroxidation was observed after paraquat treatment in the presence of NADPH and chelated iron. The fact that lipid peroxidation preceded the appearance of LDH release provides positive evidence that lipid peroxidation may be one of the important factors leading to cytotoxicity of cells. Furthermore, the fact that addition of superoxide dismutase, catalase and promethazine efficiently blocked the malondialdehyde formation and attenuated the cell death indicated the involvement of reactive oxygen radicals in mediating the cytotoxicity induced by paraquat. Taken together the results present in vitro evidence that neurotoxicity of paraquat may be a consequence of cellular lipid peroxidation, which leads to cell death and may have great implications in assessing the risk of exposure to paraquat in Parkinson's disease.
...
PMID:Paraquat-induced cell death in PC12 cells. 981 49

Free radical formation is considered to be a major cause of dopaminergic (DAergic) cell death in the substantia nigra leading to Parkinson's disease (PD). In this study we employed several radical donors including iron and sodium nitroprusside to induce toxic effects on DAergic neurons cultured from the embryonic rat midbrain floor. Overall cell survival was assessed by assaying LDH, and DAergic neuron survival was monitored by counting tyrosine hydroxylase-positive cells. Our data suggest that the DAergic neuron population is about fourfold more susceptible to free-radical-mediated damage than the total population of midbrain neurons. Application of the neurotrophic factors GDNF and NT-4, for which DAergic neurons have specific receptors, prior to toxin administration protected these neurons from toxin-mediated death, which, fully or in part, occurs under the signs of apoptosis. These findings underscore the importance of GDNF and NT-4 in designing future therapeutical concepts for PD.
...
PMID:GDNF and NT-4 protect midbrain dopaminergic neurons from toxic damage by iron and nitric oxide. 1078 44

L-Deprenyl, an irreversible MAO-B (monoamine oxidase B, EC 1.4.3.4) inhibitor, is used for the treatment of Parkinson's disease and to delay the progression of Alzheimer's disease. L-Deprenyl also exhibits protective effects against neuronal apoptosis which are independent of its ability to inhibit MAO-B. The purpose of this study was to compare the antiapoptotic efficacy of L-deprenyl against different types of apoptotic inducers in three neuronal cell culture models. The level of apoptosis was quantified by measuring the activation of caspase-3 enzyme, which is the main apoptotic executioner in neuronal cells. MTT [3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2, 5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide] and LDH (lactate dehydrogenase, EC 1. 1.1.27) assays were used to demonstrate the cytotoxic response of apoptotic treatments. Our results showed that okadaic acid, an inhibitor of protein phosphatase 1 and 2A, induced a prominent increase in caspase-3 activity both in cultured hippocampal and cerebellar granule neurons as well as in Neuro-2a neuroblastoma cells. Interestingly, L-deprenyl offered a significant protection against the apoptotic response induced by okadaic acid in all three neuronal models. The best protection appeared at the concentration level of 10(-9) M. L-Deprenyl also provided a protection against apoptosis after AraC (cytosine beta-D-arabinoside) treatment in hippocampal neurons and Neuro-2a cells and after etoposide treatment in Neuro-2a cells. However, L-deprenyl did not offer any protection against apoptosis caused by serum withdrawal or potassium deprivation. Okadaic acid treatment in vivo is known to induce an Alzheimer's type of hyperphosphorylation of tau protein, formation of beta-amyloid plaques, and a severe memory impairment. Our results show that the okadaic acid model provides a promising tool to study the molecular basis of Alzheimer's disease and to screen the neuroprotective capacity of L-deprenyl derivatives.
...
PMID:Protective effect of L-deprenyl against apoptosis induced by okadaic acid in cultured neuronal cells. 1079 57

A lack of evidence supporting a role of heritability in the development of idiopathic Parkinson's disease (PD) has implicated exposures to environmental contaminants in the disease etiology. Epidemiological and clinical studies, as well as animal models of the PD phenotype, have consistently linked agrichemical exposure with dopaminergic (DAergic) damage, particularly through oxidative stress mechanisms. Maneb (MB) is a dithiocarbamate (DTC) fungicide that has specifically been implicated to have adverse effects on dopamine (DA) systems, but the role MB plays in modulating the oxidative state of DAergic cells has not previously been described. Since glutathione (GSH) is a major cellular antioxidant, it was hypothesized that exposure to MB would disrupt this system. The current study primarily utilized the PC12 cell line, which displays a catecholaminergic phenotype. Low concentrations of MB (50-1000 ng/ml) had little effect on cell viability, as measured by LDH release. These same concentrations, however, led to increases in GSH and its oxidized form, GSSG. Effects on viability and GSH were correlated to a primary mesencephalic culture system. Furthermore, these effects were markedly different from those observed with the classical oxidative stressor and pesticide, paraquat (PQ). To determine how MB would affect cells in which antioxidant systems were compromised, PC12 cells were treated with L-buthionine-(S,R)-sulfoximine (BSO) to deplete cellular GSH, followed by treatment with MB. Results suggest that following an insult to the GSH antioxidant system, MB can act as an additional insult to the system and prevent the normal recovery of those defenses. Altered protein levels of heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1) further indicated an oxidative stress response elicited by MB in PC12 cells. DAergic neurons, as a population, are inherently vulnerable to oxidative stress, and the disruption of antioxidant systems by the fungicide MB may contribute to the neurodegeneration of these cells, especially with concurrent exposures to other environmentally relevant oxidative stressors, such as PQ.
...
PMID:Modulation of antioxidant defense systems by the environmental pesticide maneb in dopaminergic cells. 1552 74

Oxidative stress plays an important role in neuronal cell death associated with many different neurodegenerative conditions such as cerebral ischemia and Parkinson's disease. Elevated levels of glutamate are thought to be responsible for CNS disorders through various mechanisms causing oxidative stress induced by a nonreceptor-mediated oxidative pathway which blocks cystine uptake and results in depletion of intracellular glutathione (GSH). The newly designed amide form of N-acetylcysteine (NAC), N-acetylcysteine amide (NACA), was assessed for its ability to protect PC12 cells against oxidative toxicity induced by glutamate. NACA was shown to protect PC12 cells from glutamate (Glu) toxicity, as evaluated by LDH and MTS assays. NACA prevented glutamate-induced intracellular GSH loss. In addition, NACA restored GSH synthesis in a Glu (10 mM) plus buthionine-sulfoximine (BSO) (0.2 mM)-treated group, indicating that the intracellular GSH increase is independent of gamma-GSC (gamma-glutamylcysteinyl synthetase). The increase in levels of reactive oxygen species (ROS) induced by glutamate was significantly decreased by NACA. Measurement of malondialdehyde (MDA) showed that NACA reduced glutamate-induced elevations in levels of lipid peroxidation by-products. These results demonstrate that NACA can protect PC12 cells against glutamate cytotoxicity by inhibiting lipid peroxidation, and scavenging ROS, thus preserving intracellular GSH.
...
PMID:Effects of N-acetylcysteine amide (NACA), a novel thiol antioxidant against glutamate-induced cytotoxicity in neuronal cell line PC12. 1612 Apr 36

Nerve growth factor (NGF) differentiated pheochromocytoma PC12 cells exposed to 1-methyl-4-phenylpyridinium (MPP+) toxin were used as an in vitro pharmacological model of Parkinson's disease to examine the neuroprotective effects of 4-hydroxy-2,2,6,6-tetramethyl piperidine-n-oxyl (Tempol), a free radical scavenger and a superoxide dismutase-mimetic compound. MPP+-induced PC12 cell death was measured 72 h after exposure to 1.5 mM MPP+ by the release of lactate dehydrogenease, caspase-3 activation and stimulation of survival and stress mitogen-activated protein kinases. Exposure of PC12 cells to MPP+ activated ERK1 and ERK2 (forty-fold over control after 72 h), JNK1 and JNK2 (fourfold after 48 h) and p-38alpha (tenfold after 24 h). Pretreatment of PC12 cells with 500 microM Tempol, 1 h before induction of the MPP+ insult, reduced by 70% the release of LDH into the medium, inhibited caspase-3 activity by 30% and improved by 33% mitochondrial function, effects correlated with a 70% reduction in ERK1 and ERK2 phosphorylation activity. These findings support the neuroprotective effect of Tempol in the MPP+-induced PC12 cell death model and its use as a potential drug for treatment of Parkinson's disease.
...
PMID:Neuroprotective effects of the stable nitroxide compound Tempol on 1-methyl-4-phenylpyridinium ion-induced neurotoxicity in the Nerve Growth Factor-differentiated model of pheochromocytoma PC12 cells. 1698 7

A possible link between Parkinson's disease and pesticide exposure has been suggested, and recently it was shown that the herbicide atrazine (ATR) modulates catecholamine metabolism in PC12 cells and affects basal ganglia function in vivo. Hence, the objectives of this study were to: (i) determine if ATR is capable of modulating dopamine (DA) metabolism in striatal tissue slices in vitro and (ii) explore possible mechanisms of its effects. Striatal tissues from adult male Sprague-Dawley rats were incubated with up to 500 microM ATR in a metabolic shaker bath at 37 degrees C and an atmosphere of 95% O(2) and 5% CO(2) for 4h. At the end of incubation, samples were collected for both tissue and media levels of DA and its metabolites (3,4-dihydroxyphenylacetic acid, DOPAC and homovanillic acid, HVA), which were determined by high-performance liquid chromatography with electrochemical detection (HPLC-ECD). To gain some mechanistic insight in to the way ATR affects DA metabolism, several pharmacological manipulations were performed. Striata exposed to ATR at concentrations of 100 microM and greater had a dose-dependent decrease of tissue levels of DA. At doses of ATR 50 microM and greater, the DOPAC+HVA/DA ratio was dose-dependently increased. Tyrosine hydroxylase (TH, the rate-limiting enzyme in DA synthesis) protein levels and activity were not affected by ATR treatment. However, high potassium-induced DA release into the medium was decreased, whereas the increase in media DA observed in the presence of the DA uptake inhibitor nomifensine was increased even further by ATR in a dose-dependent manner. All of these effects of ATR were observed at levels that were not toxic to the tissue, as LDH release into the medium (lactate dehydrogenase, an index of non-specific cytotoxicity) was not affected by ATR. Taken together, results from this study suggest that ATR decreases tissue DA levels not by affecting TH activity, but possibly by interfering with the vesicular storage and/or cellular uptake of DA.
...
PMID:Dopaminergic toxicity of the herbicide atrazine in rat striatal slices. 1721 51

One major pathogenesis in degenerative disorders of the central nervous system (CNS), including Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, and ischemia, is the oxidative stress induced by reactive oxygen species (ROS). The present study investigated the protective effect of colloidal silver, which is widely marketed as a dietary supplement for diseases like diabetes, AIDS, cancer, and various infections, upon the oxidative brain damage induced by H(2)O(2) or naphthazarin treatment. LDH release from primary cultured astrocytes was enhanced by naphthazarin treatment, and this elevation of the LDH concentration in medium was blocked by colloidal silver treatment. However, hydrogen peroxide was little affected by the colloidal silver. Fluorescence of DCF (peroxides) increased in astrocytes incubated with hydrogen peroxide or naphthazarin compared to the control. When exposed to naphthazarin-induced cells, ROS formation appeared to be reduced by colloidal silver. However, intracellular ROS formation in hydrogen peroxide-treated cells slightly reduced by colloidal silver. These results suggest that colloidal silver has a protective activity against the oxidative stress induced by naphthazarin, but not by hydrogen peroxide.
...
PMID:Effect of colloidal silver against the cytotoxicity of hydrogen peroxide and naphthazarin on primary cultured cortical astrocytes. 1736 22


1 2 3 4 5 Next >>