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Query: UMLS:C0038454 (
stroke
)
147,016
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Degeneration and death of neurons is the fundamental process responsible for the clinical manifestations of many different neurological disorders of aging, incuding Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease and
stroke
. The death of neurons in such disorders involves apoptotic biochemical cascades involving upstream effectors (Par-4,
p53
and pro-apoptotic Bcl-2 family members), mitochondrial alterations and caspase activation. Both genetic and environmental factors, and the aging process itself, contribute to intiation of such neuronal apoptosis. For example, mutations in the amyloid precursor protein and presenilin genes can cause Alzheimer's disease, while head injury is a risk factor for both Alzheimer's and Parkinson's diseases. At the cellular level, neuronal apoptosis in neurodegenerative disorders may be triggered by oxidative stress, metabolic compromise and disruption of calcium homeostasis. Neuroprotective (antiapoptotic) signaling pathways involving neurotrophic factors, cytokines and "conditioning responses" can counteract the effects of aging and genetic predisposition in experimental models of neurodegenerative disorders. A better understanding of the molecular underpinnings of neuronal death is leading directly to novel preventative and therapeutic approaches to neurodegenerative disorders.
...
PMID:Neurodegenerative disorders and ischemic brain diseases. 1132 Oct 43
Poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) is responsible for post-translational modification of proteins in the response to numerous endogenous and environmental genotoxic agents. PARP and poly(ADP-ribosyl)ation are proposed to be important for the regulation of many cellular processes such as DNA repair, cell death, chromatin functions and genomic stability. Activation of PARP is one of the early DNA damage responses, among other DNA sensing molecules, such as DNA-PK, ATM and
p53
. The generation and characterization of PARP deficient mouse models have been instrumental in defining the biological role of the molecule and its involvement in the pathogenesis of various diseases including diabetes,
stroke
, Parkinson disease, general inflammation as well as tumorigenesis, and have, therefore, provided information for the development of pharmaceutical strategies for the treatment of diseases.
...
PMID:Functions of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) in DNA repair, genomic integrity and cell death. 1137 91
DNA damage has been implicated as one important initiator of cell death in neuropathological conditions such as
stroke
. Accordingly, it is important to understand the signaling processes that control neuronal death induced by this stimulus. Previous evidence has shown that the death of embryonic cortical neurons treated with the DNA-damaging agent camptothecin is dependent on the
tumor suppressor p53
and cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) activity and that the inhibition of either pathway alone leads to enhanced and prolonged survival. We presently show that
p53
and CDKs are activated independently on parallel pathways. An increase in
p53 protein
levels, nuclear localization, and DNA binding that result from DNA damage are not affected by the inhibition of CDK activity. Conversely, no decrease in retinoblastoma protein (pRb) phosphorylation was observed in
p53
-deficient neurons that were treated with camptothecin. However, either
p53
deficiency or the inhibition of CDK activity alone inhibited Bax translocation, cytochrome c release, and caspase-3-like activation. Taken together, our results indicate that
p53
and CDK are activated independently and then act in concert to control Bax-mediated apoptosis.
...
PMID:Cyclin-dependent kinases and P53 pathways are activated independently and mediate Bax activation in neurons after DNA damage. 1143 77
Emerging evidence has shown that
tumor suppressor p53
expression is enhanced in response to brain ischemia/hypoxia and that
p53
plays a critical role in the cell death pathway in such an acute neurological insult. However the mechanism remains unclear. Recently it was reported that Peg3/Pw1, originally identified as a paternally expressed gene, plays a pivotal role in the
p53
-mediated cell death pathway in mouse fibroblast cell lines. In this study, we found that Peg3/Pw1 expression is enhanced in peri-ischemic neurons in rat
stroke
model by in situ hybridization analysis, where
p53
expression was also induced by immunohistochemical analysis. Moreover, we found that
p53
was co-localized with Peg3/Pw1 in brain ischemia/hypoxia by double staining analysis. In human neuroblastoma-derived SK-N-SH cells, Peg3/Pw1 mRNA expression is enhanced remarkably at 24 h post-hypoxia, when
p53 protein
expression was also enhanced at high levels. Subcellular localization of Peg3/Pw1 was observed in the nucleus. Adenovirus-mediated high dose
p53
overexpression induced Peg3/Pw1 mRNA expression. Overexpression of Peg3/Pw1 reduced cell viability under hypoxic conditions, whereas that of the C-terminal-deleted mutant and anti-sense Peg3/Pw1 inhibited hypoxia-induced cell death. These results suggest that Peg3/Pw1 is involved in the
p53
-mediated cell death pathway as a downstream effector of
p53
in brain ischemia/hypoxia.
...
PMID:Peg3/Pw1 is involved in p53-mediated cell death pathway in brain ischemia/hypoxia. 1167 86
The BRCA1-associated protein BARD1 is a putative tumor suppressor. We suggest that BARD1 is a mediator of apoptosis since (1) cell death in vivo (ischemic
stroke
) and in vitro is accompanied by increased levels of BARD1 protein and mRNA; (2) overexpression of BARD1 induces cell death with all features of apoptosis; and (3) BARD1-repressed cells are defective for the apoptotic response to genotoxic stress. The proapoptotic activity of BARD1 involves binding to and elevations of
p53
. BRCA1 is not required for but partially counteracts apoptosis induction by BARD1. A tumor-associated mutation Q564H of BARD1 is defective in apoptosis induction, thus suggesting a role of BARD1 in tumor suppression by mediating the signaling from proapoptotic stress toward induction of apoptosis.
...
PMID:Identification of BARD1 as mediator between proapoptotic stress and p53-dependent apoptosis. 1177 1
Uwhangchungsimwon (pill, UC) is one of the traditional Korean medical prescriptions that has been most frequently used for
stroke
. To characterize the effects of UC on human neuronal cells, the human neuroblastoma cell line IMR32 was treated with UC, and cell viability, cell proliferation, apoptosis, and gene expression were analyzed. The effect of UC on recovery of cell viability was analyzed following stress induction by nutrient depletion or cold shock. Flow cytometric analysis of the cell cycle showed that UC inhibits cell cycle progression of IMR32 in a dose- and time-dependent manner. UC was also identified to increase cell viability and suppress apoptosis induction by a DNA-damaging agent, etoposide. Quantitative RT-PCR analysis revealed that expressions of the
p53 tumor suppressor
gene and its downstream effect, Waf1, are stimulated whereas expressions of positive cell cycle regulators, c-Myc, c-Fos, and Cyclin D1 were repressed by UC treatment. Moreover, while expression levels of apoptosis inhibitors, Bcl-2 and Bcl-XL were increased following UC treatment, that of an apoptosis promoter, Bax, was decreased. In addition, expression of BMP-7, which has been recently demonstrated to improve the motor neuron recovery from
stroke
, was induced by UC while it was not detected in untreated cells. Taken together, our data suggest that the pharmacoclinical effects of UC might be derived in part from its negative regulation of cell proliferation and apoptosis through the transcriptional control of related genes.
...
PMID:Effects of uwhangchungsimwon on cell viability, proliferation, and gene expression of human neuronal cell line IMR32. 1178 87
Much interest has recently been shown in apoptosis-mediated roles in the pathophysiology of mitochondrial diseases, because mitochondrial defects are implicated in a wide variety of degenerative diseases. We investigated whether apoptotic events occurred in skeletal muscles of patients with mitochondrial diseases, including chronic progressive external ophthalmoplegia (CPEO), Kearns-Sayer syndrome (KSS), and mitochondrial myopathy, encephalopathy, lactic acidosis and
stroke
-like episodes (MELAS). In a immunohistochemical study, stainings for 8-hydroxy-deoxyguanosine (8-OH-dG), 4-hydroxy-nonenal (4-HNE), Mn-SOD, Bcl-2, cytochrome c, DNase I and Bcl-x L showed a pronounced granular distribution in the cytochrome c oxidase (COX)-negative ragged-red fibers (RRFs). On the other hand, the signals for Bax,
p53
, Fas and caspase 3 were not obviously increased in RRFs. In situ labeling of DNA breaks demonstrated preferential signals not only in myonuclei but also in subsarcolemmal regions of RRFs, indicating that mitochondrial as well as myonuclear DNA is fragmented in RRFs. An immunoblotting study demonstrated that cytochrome c was increased in the cytosol of diseased muscles and that DNase I was increased in mitochondria, compared to that of normal muscles. No difference was observed between protein bands at 20 kDa corresponding to caspase 3 in diseased and normal muscles. These findings demonstrate that these mitochondrial diseases harbor unique apoptosis-related changes that differ from caspase 3-dependent apoptosis. It is thought that these changes are induced by superoxide overproduction and cytochrome c release resulting from an inherent mitochondrial defect and that the events are associated with DNase I activation.
...
PMID:Apoptosis-related changes in skeletal muscles of patients with mitochondrial diseases. 1181 Jan 83
Lithium, the major drug used to treat manic depressive illness, robustly protects cultured rat brain neurons from glutamate excitotoxicity mediated by N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptors. The lithium neuroprotection against glutamate excitotoxiciy is long-lasting, requires long-term pretreatment and occurs at therapeutic concentrations of this drug. The neuroprotective mcchanisms involve inactivation of NMDA receptors, decreased expression of pro-apoptotic proteins,
p53
and Bax, enhanced expression of the cytoprotective protein, Bcl-2, and activation of the cell survival kinase, Akt. In addition, lithium pretreatment suppresses glutamate-induced loss of the activities of Akt, cyclic AMP-response element binding protein (CREB), c-Jun - N-terminal kinase (JNK) and p38 kinase. Lithium also reduces brain damage in animal models of neurodegenerative diseases in which excitotoxicity has been implicated. In the rat model of
stroke
using middle cerebral artery occlusion, lithium markedly reduces neurologic deficits and decreases brain infarct volume even when administered after the onset of ischemia. In a rat Huntington's disease model, lithium significantly reduces brain lesions resulting from intrastriatal infusion of quinolinic acid, an excitotoxin. Our results suggest that lithium might have utility in the treatment of neurodegenerative disorders in addition to its common use for the treatment of bipolar depressive patients.
...
PMID:Neuroprotective effects of lithium in cultured cells and animal models of diseases. 1207 10
Tumor suppressor protein,
p53
, is an intracellular protein that is critical within the biochemical cascade that leads to cell death via apoptosis. Recent studies identified the tetrahydrobenzothiazole analogue, pifithrin-alpha (2), as a
p53
inhibitor that was effective in protecting neuronal cells against a variety of lethal insults and reducing the side effects of anticancer drugs. As up-regulation of
p53
has been described as a common feature of several neurodegenerative disorders, including Alzheimer's disease, 2 and novel analogues (3-16) were synthesized to (i) assess the value of tetrahydrobenzothiazole analogues as neuroprotective agents and (ii) define the structural requirements for
p53
inactivation. Not only did 2 exhibit neuroprotective activity in both tissue culture and in vivo
stroke
models but also compounds 6, 7, 10, 13, 15, and 16 proved to be highly potent in protecting PC12 cells and compounds 3, 4, and 6 were highly potent in protecting primary hippocampal cells against death induced by the DNA-damaging agent, camptothecin.
...
PMID:Novel p53 inactivators with neuroprotective action: syntheses and pharmacological evaluation of 2-imino-2,3,4,5,6,7-hexahydrobenzothiazole and 2-imino-2,3,4,5,6,7-hexahydrobenzoxazole derivatives. 1240 20
Activated protein C (APC) is a systemic anti-coagulant and anti-inflammatory factor. It reduces organ damage in animal models of sepsis, ischemic injury and
stroke
and substantially reduces mortality in patients with severe sepsis. It was not known whether APC acts as a direct cell survival factor or whether its neuroprotective effect is secondary to its anti-coagulant and anti-inflammatory effects. We report that APC directly prevents apoptosis in hypoxic human brain endothelium through transcriptionally dependent inhibition of
tumor suppressor protein p53
, normalization of the pro-apoptotic Bax/Bcl-2 ratio and reduction of caspase-3 signaling. These mechanisms are distinct from those involving upregulation of the genes encoding the anti-apoptotic Bcl-2 homolog A1 and inhibitor of apoptosis protein-1 (IAP-1) by APC in umbilical vein endothelial cells. Cytoprotection of brain endothelium by APC in vitro required endothelial protein C receptor (EPCR) and protease-activated receptor-1 (PAR-1), as did its in vivo neuroprotective activity in a
stroke
model of mice with a severe deficiency of EPCR. This is consistent with work showing the direct effects of APC on cultured cells via EPCR and PAR-1 (ref. 9). Moreover, the in vivo neuroprotective effects of low-dose mouse APC seemed to be independent of its anti-coagulant activity. Thus, APC protects the brain from ischemic injury by acting directly on brain cells.
...
PMID:Activated protein C blocks p53-mediated apoptosis in ischemic human brain endothelium and is neuroprotective. 1261 68
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