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Query: UMLS:C0344329 (collapse)
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Programmed cell death is an active process wherein the cell initiates a sequence of events culminating in the fragmentation of its DNA, nuclear collapse, and disintegration of the cell into small, membrane-bound apoptotic bodies. Examination of the death program in various models has shown common themes, including a rise in cytoplasmic calcium, cytoskeletal changes, and redistribution of membrane lipids. The calcium-dependent neutral protease calpain has putative roles in cytoskeletal and membrane changes in other cellular processes; this fact led us to test the role of calpain in a well-known model of apoptotic cell death, that of thymocytes after treatment with dexamethasone. Assays for calcium-dependent proteolysis in thymocyte extracts reveal a rise in activity with a peak at about 1 hr of incubation with dexamethasone, falling to background at approximately 2 hr. Western blots indicate autolytic cleavage of the proenzyme precursor to the calpain I isozyme, providing additional evidence for calpain activation. We have also found that apoptosis in thymocytes, whether induced by dexamethasone or by low-level irradiation, is blocked by specific inhibitors of calpain. Apoptosis of metamyelocytes incubated with cycloheximide is also blocked by calpain inhibitors. These studies suggest a required role for calpain in both "induction" and "release" models of apoptotic cell death.
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PMID:Calpain activation in apoptosis. 816 63

Axons are particularly at risk in human diffuse head injury. Use of immunocytochemical labeling techniques has recently demonstrated that axonal injury (AI) and the ensuing reactive axonal change is, probably, more widespread and occurs over a longer posttraumatic time in the injured brain than had previously been appreciated. But the characterization of morphologic or reactive changes occurring after nondisruptive AI has largely been defined from animal models. The comparability of AI in animal models to human diffuse AI (DAI) is discussed and the conclusion drawn that, although animal models allow the analysis of morphologic changes, the spatial distribution within the brain and the time course of reactive axonal change differs to some extent both between species and with the mode of brain injury. Thus, the majority of animal models do not reproduce exactly the extent and time course of AI that occurs in human DAI. Nonetheless, these studies provide good insight into reactive axonal change. In addition, there is developing in the literature considerable variance in the terminology applied to injured axons or nerve fibers. We explain our current understanding of a number of terms now present in the literature and suggest the adoption of a common terminology. Recent work has provided a consensus that reactive axonal change is linked to pertubation of the axolemma resulting in disruption of ionic homeostatic mechanisms within injured nerve fibers. But quantitative data for changes for different ion species is lacking and is required before a better definition of this homeostatic disruption may be provided. Recent studies of responses by the axonal cytoskeleton after nondisruptive AI have demonstrated loss of axonal microtubules over a period up to 24 h after injury. The biochemical mechanisms resulting in loss of microtubules are, hypothetically, mediated both by posttraumatic influx of calcium and activation of calmodulin. This loss results in focal accumulation of membranous organelles in parts of the length of damaged axons where the axonal diameter is greater than normal to form axonal swellings. We distinguish, on morphologic grounds, between axonal swellings and axonal bulbs. There is also a growing consensus regarding responses by neurofilaments after nondisruptive AI. Initially, and rapidly after injury, there is reduced spacing or compaction of neurofilaments. This compaction is stable over at least 6 h and results from the loss or collapse of neurofilament sidearms but retention of the filamentous form of the neurofilaments. We posit that sidearm loss may be mediated either through proteolysis of sidearms via activation of microM calpain or sidearm dephosphorylation via posttraumatic, altered interaction between protein phosphatases and kinase(s), or a combination of these two, after calcium influx, which occurs, at least in part, as a result of changes in the structure and functional state of the axolemma. Evidence for proteolysis of neurofilaments has been obtained recently in the optic nerve stretch injury model and is correlated with disruption of the axolemma. But the earliest posttraumatic interval at which this was obtained was 4 h. Clearly, therefore, no evidence has been obtained to support the hypothesis that there is rapid, posttraumatic proteolysis of the whole axonal cytoskeleton mediated by calpains. Rather, we hypothesize that such proteolysis occurs only when intra-axonal calcium levels allow activation of mM calpain and suggest that such proteolysis, resulting in the loss of the filamentous structure of neurofilaments occurs either when the amount of deformation of the axolemma is so great at the time of injury to result in primary axotomy or, more commonly, is a terminal degenerative change that results in secondary axotomy or disconnection some hours after injury.
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PMID:A mechanistic analysis of nondisruptive axonal injury: a review. 925 61

The degradation of alphaII- and betaII-spectrin during apoptosis in cultured human neuroblastoma SH-SY5Y cells was investigated. Immunofluorescent staining showed that the collapse of the cortical spectrin cytoskeleton is an early event following staurosporine challenge. This collapse correlated with the generation of a series of prominent spectrin breakdown products (BDPs) derived from both alphaII- and betaII-subunits. Major C-terminal alphaII-spectrin BDPs were detected at approximately 150, 145, and 120 kDa (alphaII-BDP150, alphaII-BDP145, and alphaII-BDP120, respectively); major C-terminal betaII-spectrin BDPs were at approximately 110 and 85 kDa (betaII-BDP110 and betaII-BDP85, respectively). N-terminal sequencing of the major fragments produced in vitro by caspase 3 revealed that alphaII-BDP150 and alphaII-BDP120 were generated by cleavages at DETD1185*S1186 and DSLD1478*S1479, respectively. For betaII-spectrin, a major caspase site was detected at DEVD1457*S1458, and both betaII-BDP110 and betaII-BDP85 shared a common N-terminal sequence starting with Ser1458. An additional cleavage site near the C terminus, at ETVD2146*S2147, was found to account for betaII-BDP85. Studies using specific caspase or calpain inhibitors indicate that the pattern of spectrin breakdown during apoptosis differs from that during non-apoptotic cell death. We postulate that in concert with calpain, caspase rapidly targets critical sites in both alphaII- and betaII-spectrin and thereby initiates a rapid dissolution of the spectrin-actin cortical cytoskeleton with apoptosis.
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PMID:Simultaneous degradation of alphaII- and betaII-spectrin by caspase 3 (CPP32) in apoptotic cells. 971 74

Smoking is a significant risk factor for development of atherosclerosis. However, the pathophysiology of smoking-mediated vessel wall damage is not understood. With tools ranging from analytical chemistry to cell biology, we show that cigarette smoke contains metals that catalyze the direct oxidation of cellular proteins by smoke oxidants. Oxidation of cellular proteins causes a loss of microtubule function, culminating in microtubule depolymerization and proteasome-dependent degradation of alpha-tubulin. As a consequence of the microtubule collapse, cytoskeletal structures as well as intermediate filaments break down, leading finally to a contraction of vascular endothelial cells. We observed a smoke extract-induced, calpain-dependent degradation of the intracellular form of platelet-endothelial cell adhesion molecule 1/CD31, as well as a release of P-selectin/CD62P, IL-6, and IL-8 from endothelial cells into the supernatant. Increased levels of soluble CD62P and IL-6 are well known to be associated with smoking in humans. Increased permeability of the vascular endothelium is a crucial event in atherogenesis. This work highlights the compounds and mechanisms by which cigarette smoke induces leakiness of the vascular endothelium.
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PMID:Cigarette smoke metal-catalyzed protein oxidation leads to vascular endothelial cell contraction by depolymerization of microtubules. 1598 33

Although reactive oxygen species (ROS) have been implicated in cadmium (Cd)-induced hepatotoxicity, the role of ROS in this pathway remains unclear. Therefore, we attempted to determine the molecular mechanisms relevant to Cd-induced cell death in HepG2 cells. Cd was found to induce apoptosis in the HepG2 cells in a time- and dose-dependent fashion, as confirmed by DNA fragmentation analysis and TUNEL staining. In the early stages, both rapid and transient ROS generation triggered apoptosis via Fas activation and subsequent caspase-8-dependent Bid cleavage, as well as by calpain-mediated mitochondrial Bax cleavage. The timing of Bid activation was coincided with the timing at which the mitochondrial transmembrane potential (MMP) collapsed as well as the cytochrome c (Cyt c) released into the cytosol. Furthermore, mitochondrial permeability transition (MPT) pore inhibitors, such as cyclosporin A (CsA) and bongkrekic acid (BA), did not block Cd-induced ROS generation, MMP collapse and Cyt c release. N-acetylcysteine (NAC) pretreatment resulted in the complete inhibition of the Cd-induced apoptosis via catalase upregulation and subsequent Fas downregulation. NAC treatment also completely blocked the Cd-induced intracellular ROS generation, MMP collapse and Cyt c release, indicating that Cd-induced mitochondrial dysfunction may be regulated indirectly by ROS-mediated signaling pathway. Taken together, a rapid and transient ROS generation by Cd triggers apoptosis via caspase-dependent pathway and subsequent mitochondrial pathway. NAC inhibits Cd-induced apoptosis through the blocking of ROS generation as well as the catalase upregulation.
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PMID:A rapid and transient ROS generation by cadmium triggers apoptosis via caspase-dependent pathway in HepG2 cells and this is inhibited through N-acetylcysteine-mediated catalase upregulation. 1616 29

Collapsin response mediator proteins (CRMPs) mediate growth cone collapse during development, but their roles in adult brains are not clear. Here we report the findings that the full-length CRMP-3 (p63) is a direct target of calpain that cleaves CRMP-3 at the N terminus (+76 amino acid). Interestingly, activated calpain in response to excitotoxicity in vitro and cerebral ischemia in vivo also cleaved CRMP-3, and the cleavage product of CRMP-3 (p54) underwent nuclear translocation during neuronal death. The expression of p54 was colocalized with the terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated biotinylated UTP nick end labeling-positive nuclei in glutamate-treated cerebellar granule neurons (CGNs) and in ischemic neurons located in the infarct core after focal cerebral ischemia, suggesting that p54 might be involved in neuronal death. Overexpression studies showed that p54, but not p63, caused death of human embryonic kidney cells and CGNs, whereas knock-down CRMP-3 expression by selective small interfering RNA protected neurons against glutamate toxicity. Collectively, these results reveal a novel role of CRMP-3 in that calpain cleavage of CRMP-3 and the subsequent nuclear translocation of the truncated CRMP-3 evokes neuronal death in response to excitotoxicity and cerebral ischemia. Our findings also establish a novel route of how calpain signals neuron death.
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PMID:Calpain-cleaved collapsin response mediator protein-3 induces neuronal death after glutamate toxicity and cerebral ischemia. 1649 51

Collapsin response mediator proteins (CRMPs) are important brain-specific proteins with distinct functions in modulating growth cone collapse and axonal guidance during brain development. Our previous studies have shown that calpain cleaves CRMP3 in the adult mouse brain during cerebral ischemia [S.T. Hou et al. (2006) J. Neurosci., 26, 2241-2249]. Here, the expression of all CRMP family members (1-5) was examined in mouse brains that were subjected to middle cerebral artery occlusion. Among the five CRMPs, the expressions of CRMP1, CRMP3 and CRMP5 were the most abundant in the cerebral cortex and all CRMPs were targeted for cleavage by ischemia-activated calpain. Sub-cellular fractionation analysis showed that cleavage of CRMPs by calpain occurred not only in the cytoplasm but also in the synaptosomes isolated from ischemic brains. Moreover, synaptosomal CRMPs appeared to be at least one-fold more sensitive to cleavage compared with those isolated from the cytosolic fraction in an in-vitro experiment, suggesting that synaptosomal CRMPs are critical targets during cerebral ischemia-induced neuronal injury. Finally, the expression of all CRMPs was colocalized with TUNEL-positive neurons in the ischemic mouse brain, which further supports the notion that CRMPs may play an important role in neuronal death following cerebral ischemia. Collectively, these studies demonstrated that CRMPs are targets of calpains during cerebral ischemia and they also highlighted an important potential role that CRMPs may play in modulating ischemic neuronal death.
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PMID:Calpain cleavage of collapsin response mediator proteins in ischemic mouse brain. 1767 55

We exposed adult Rhesus (Macaca mulatta) to a transient global ischemia, which was induced by clipping the innominate and subclavian arteries that originated from the aortic arch. NHP1 received 20-min, while NHP2 and NHP3, were exposed to a 15-min transient global ischemia and were euthanized at day 1 (NHP1), day 5 (NHP2) or day 30 (NHP3) after ischemia, respectively. NHP1 displayed severe paralysis and rigidity, and intermittent convulsions over the next 24 h. Although histological examination of the brain revealed no detectable gross brain damage (i.e., swelling) and only minimal cell loss in the hippocampus, the acute survival time after surgery likely prevented the cerebral ischemia to fully develop and to be morphologically manifested. Nonetheless, the 20-min ischemia might have been too severe and caused a systemic multiple organ collapse that produced the abnormal behavioral symptoms. On the other hand, NHP2 and NHP3 which received 15-min ischemia only exhibited minor hindlimb paralysis. Indeed, by 48 h after ischemia, both animals appeared fully recovered with only fine motor deficits. Immunohistochemical examination revealed that NHP2 and 3, but not NHP1, had a marked neuronal cell loss in the hippocampal region, specifically the cornu Ammonis (CA1) region. The cell loss in these two ischemic NHP hippocampi was further confirmed by direct comparison with a normal Rhesus brain. These findings replicate the brain pathology seen in Japanese macaques exposed to the same ischemia model [T. Tsukada, M. Watanabe, T. Yamashima, Implications of CAD and DNase II in ischemic neuronal necrosis specific for the primate hippocampus, J. Neurochem. 79 (2001) 1196-1206; T. Yamashima, Implication of cysteine proteases calpain, cathepsin and caspase in ischemic neuronal death of primates, Prog. Neurobiol. 62 (2000) 273-295; T. Yamashima, Y. Kohda, K. Tsuchiya, T. Ueno, J. Yamashita, T. Yoshioka, E. Kominami, Inhibition of ischemic hippocampal neuronal death in primates with cathepsin B inhibitor CA-074: a novel strategy for neuroprotection based on calpain-cathepsin hypothesis, Eur. J. Neurosci. 10 (1998) 1723-1733; T. Yamashima, T.C. Saido, M. Takita, A. Miyazawa, J. Yamano, A. Miyakawa, H. Nishijyo, J. Yamashita, S. Kawashima, T. Ono, T. Yoshioka, Transient brain ischemia provokes Ca2+, PIP2 and calpain responses prior to delayed neuronal death in monkeys, Eur. J. Neurosci. 8 (1996) 1932-1944; T. Yamashima, A.B. Tonchey, T. Tsukada, T.C. Saido, S. Imajoh-Ohmi, T. Momoi, E. Kominami, Sustained calpain activation associated with lysosomal rupture executes necrosis of the postischemic CA1 neurons in primates, Hippocampus 13 (2003) 791-800]. The present minimally invasive transient global ischemia model using Rhesus shows many histopathological symptoms seen in human patients who experienced global ischemia, and should allow translational validation of experimental therapeutics for ischemic injury. Additional studies are warranted to reveal behavioral deficits associated with this ischemia model.
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PMID:Hippocampal CA1 cell loss in a non-human primate model of transient global ischemia: a pilot study. 1768 3

Calcium plays a key role during growth cone collapse. Recently, it has been proposed that low- and high-amplitude rises in [Ca(2+)](i) result in the activation of the neurite outgrowth inhibiting proteins calcineurin and calpain, respectively. However, it remains unknown if and how these mechanisms are modulated by specific guidance cues. Here we report that the inhibitory cue Semaphorin 5B induces growth cone collapse by promoting the influx of extracellular Ca(2+). The resulting rise in [Ca(2+)](i) is characterized by a low-amplitude increase followed by a marked secondary rise, suggesting the potential involvement of both calcineurin and calpain. In support of this, inhibition of either effector attenuated Sema5B-induced collapse, a result that was augmented by the simultaneous inhibition of both targets. Furthermore, we provide evidence that Sema5B induces calpain-mediated cleavage of calcineurin. We thus show for the first time that ligand-induced growth cone collapse can activate both calcineurin- and calpain-mediated pathways concurrently.
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PMID:Combined activation of calpain and calcineurin during ligand-induced growth cone collapse. 1782 76

The signal transduction pathways regulating growth cone motility remain poorly defined. Previously, we have characterized the inhibitory molecule, motuporamine C (MotC), as a robust stimulator of growth cone collapse. Utilizing MotC as a research tool to elucidate pathways involved with collapse, we have previously shown that the Rho-Rho kinase (ROCK) pathway is partially required for collapse. In this study, we report MotC induces a high-amplitude rise in intracellular free Ca(2+) concentration levels in chicks, resulting in the activation of the Ca(2+)-sensitive protease, calpain. Furthermore, we show that while calpain is necessary for collapse, inhibition of calpain only partially attenuates MotC-mediated collapse. Instead, concomitant inhibition of both the Rho-ROCK and calpain pathways has an additive effect in attenuating the collapse response to MotC. To our knowledge, this is the first demonstration of concurrent activation of calpain and Rho-ROCK signaling during growth cone collapse. Our data support a model of growth cone collapse that requires the combinatorial regulation of multiple signal transduction cascades that likely target different cellular mechanisms to induce this motile response.
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PMID:Growth cone collapse stimulated by both calpain- and Rho-mediated pathways. 1840 19


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