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Query: UMLS:C0917798 (
cerebral ischemia
)
17,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Lipocortin-1 (annexin-1), an endogenous phospholipid and
calcium binding protein
, has been shown to significantly attenuate the damage produced by focal
cerebral ischaemia
in the rat. In the present study we have therefore investigated its effect on N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) induced neuronal damage. Unilateral intrastriatal infusion of a potent and selective NMDA agonist, cis-2,4-methanoglutamate (MGlu), induced an extensive lesion of the striatum in the rat, which was inhibited (greater than 80%) by prior injection of MK801 (4 mg/kg, i.p.). Infusion of 1.2 micrograms of an active fragment of lipocortin-1 (N-terminal 1-188 aa) immediately after MGlu significantly reduced the extent of damage by 44.2 +/- 8.0%. In contrast, infusion of 3 microliters of neutralizing anti-lipocortin-1 antibody with MGlu increased lesion size by 158.9 +/- 22.0%. These findings indicate that the damage produced by intrastriatal infusion of MGlu is mediated by the NMDA receptor. Lipocortin-1 fragment markedly attenuated, and the neutralizing antibody increased, this NMDA mediated neuronal damage. These observations may explain the neuroprotective action of lipocortin following
cerebral ischaemia
.
...
PMID:Lipocortin-1 inhibits NMDA receptor-mediated neuronal damage in the striatum of the rat. 138 36
The mechanisms of ischemic neuronal death have been focused on glutamate receptor activation and subsequent elevation of intracellular Ca2+ concentration. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effects of dizocilpine, an NMDA receptor antagonist, pretreatment on Fos expression and parvalbumin (PV,
calcium binding protein
) immunoreactivity in the hippocampus of the mongolian gerbil after global ischemic insults. The number of PV-immunoreactive (PV-ir) neurons in CA1 were significantly decreased from 1 day after
cerebral ischemia
, while dizocilpine pretreatment completely suppressed the loss of PV-ir neurons in CA1. Dizocilpine pretreatment also protected the structural loss of microtubule-associated protein 2 immunoreactivity in CA1 after ischemic insults. In addition, dizocilpine pretreatment increased Fos expression in both hippocampal CA3 and CA4 after 3 hr ischemic reperfusion as compared to that of the saline pretreated group. Subsequently, the Fos-defined cellular activity of PV-ir neurons was slightly increased by dizocilpine pretreatment in the hippocampal area. This study demonstrated that NMDA receptor mediated calcium influx was associated with the loss of PV-ir neurons in CA1 hippocampal region, and that dizocilpine pretreatment increased Fos expression and the neuronal activity of PV-ir neurons in the non-vulnerable region of hippocampus after
cerebral ischemia
. Based on this data, we conclude that the protective effect of dizocilpine may be induced by the regulation of calcium overload, or by the upregulation of a neuroregenerative initiator such as Fos protein.
...
PMID:Effects of dizocilpine pretreatment on parvalbumin immunoreactivity and Fos expression after cerebral ischemia in the hippocampus of the Mongolian gerbil. 1072 Jan 83
After focal
cerebral ischemia
, the infarct volume increases rapidly within acute infarct expansion (initial 12 to 24 h) and continues slowly during delayed infarct expansion (25 to 168 h). While acute infarct expansion represents progressive necrosis within the ischemic core, delayed infarct expansion starts as disseminated apoptotic cell death in a narrow rim surrounding the infarct border, which gradually coalesces to form a larger infarct. Discovery of a distinct correlation between reactive astrogliosis along the infarct border and delayed infarct expansion in the rodent ischemia model led us to investigate the possible causal relationship between the two events. Specifically, the
calcium binding protein
S100B exerts detrimental effects on cell survival through activation of various intracellular signaling pathways, resulting in altered protein expression. Arundic acid [(R)-(-)-2-propyloctanoic acid, ONO-2506] is a novel agent that inhibits S100B synthesis in cultured astrocytes. In the rodent ischemia model, this agent was shown to inhibit both the astrocytic overexpression of S100B and the subsequent activation of signaling pathways in the peri-infarct area. Concurrently, delayed infarct expansion was prevented, and neurologic deficits were promptly ameliorated. The results of subsequent studies suggest that the efficacy of arundic acid is mediated by restoring the activity of astroglial glutamate transporters via enhanced genetic expression.
...
PMID:Arundic acid (ONO-2506) ameliorates delayed ischemic brain damage by preventing astrocytic overproduction of S100B. 1585 98
Hypoxia-ischemia constitutes a risk in infants by altering cerebral blood flow regulatory mechanisms and causing loss of cerebral vascular auto-regulation. Hypotension,
cerebral ischemia
, and reperfusion are the main events involved in vascular auto-regulation leading to cell death and tissue damage. Reperfusion could be critical since organ damage, particularly of the brain, may be amplified during this period. An exaggerated activation of vasoactive agents of calcium mediated effects could be responsible for reperfusion injury, which, in turns, leads to cerebral hemorrhage and damage. These dramatic phenomena represent a common repertoire in infants complicated by perinatal acute or chronic hypoxia or cardiovascular disorders treated by risky procedures such as open heart surgery and cardiopulmonary by-pass (CPB). To date, despite accurate perinatal and intra-operative monitoring, the post-insult period is crucial, since clinical symptoms and monitoring parameters may be of no avail and therapeutic window for pharmacological intervention (6-12 hours) may be limited, at a time when brain damage is already occurring. Therefore, the measurement of circulating biochemical markers of brain damage, such as vasoactive agents and nervous tissue peptides is eagerly awaited in clinical practice to detect high risk infants. The present review is aimed at investigating the role as circulating biochemical markers such as adrenomedullin, a vasoactive peptide; S100B, a
calcium binding protein
, activin A, a glycoprotein; neuronal specific enolase (NSE), a dimeric isoenzyme; glial fibrillary acid protein (GFAP), a astroglial protein, in the cascade of events leading to ischemia reperfusion injury in infants complicated by perinatal asphyxia or cardiovascular disorders requiring risky therapeutic strategies such as CPB and/or extracorporeal membrane oxygenation.
...
PMID:Circulating biochemical markers of brain damage in infants complicated by ischemia reperfusion injury. 1935 73
Hypoxia-ischemia (H-I) constitutes the main phenomenon responsible for brain-blood barrier permeability modifications leading to cerebral vascular auto-regulation loss in newborns. Hypotension,
cerebral ischemia
, and reperfusion are the main events involved in vascular auto-regulation loss leading to cell death and tissue damage. Reperfusion could be critical since organ damage, particularly of the brain, may be amplified during this period. An exaggerated activation of vasoactive agents, of calcium mediated effects could be responsible for reperfusion injury (R-I), which, in turns, leads to cerebral hemorrhage and damage. These phenomena represent a common repertoire in newborns complicated by perinatal acute or chronic hypoxia treated by risky procedures such as mechanical ventilation, nitric oxide supplementation, brain cooling, and extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO). Despite accurate monitoring, the post-insult period is crucial, as clinical symptoms and standard monitoring parameters may be silent at a time when brain damage is already occurring and the therapeutic window for pharmacological intervention is limited. Therefore, the measurement of circulating biochemical markers of brain damage, such as vasoactive agents and nervous tissue peptides is eagerly awaited in clinical practice to detect high risk newborns. The present review is aimed at investigating the role of biochemical markers such as adrenomedullin, a vasoactive peptide; S100B, a
calcium binding protein
, activin A, a glycoprotein, in the cascade of events leading to I-R injury in newborns complicated by perinatal asphyxia.
...
PMID:New markers of neonatal neurology. 1971 79
Hypoxia-ischemia (H-I) constitutes the main phenomenon responsible for brain-blood barrier permeability modifications leading to cerebral vascular autoregulation loss in newborns. Hypotension,
cerebral ischemia
, and reperfusion are the main events involved in vascular auto-regulation loss leading to cell death and tissue damage. Reperfusion could be critical since organ damage, particularly of the brain, may be amplified during this period. An exaggerated activation of vasoactive agents, of calcium mediated effects could be responsible for reperfusion injury (R-I), which, in turns, leads to cerebral hemorrhage and damage. These phenomena represent a common repertoire in newborns complicated by perinatal acute or chronic hypoxia treated by risky procedures such as mechanical ventilation, nitric oxide supplementation, brain cooling, and extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO). Despite accurate monitoring, the post-insult period is crucial, as clinical symptoms and standard monitoring parameters may be silent at a time when brain damage is already occurring and the therapeutic window for pharmacological intervention is limited. Therefore, the measurement of circulating biochemical markers of brain damage, such as vasoactive agents and nervous tissue peptides is eagerly awaited in clinical practice to detect high risk newborns. The present article is aimed at investigating the role of dosage biochemical markers in non-invasive biological fluids such as S100B, a
calcium binding protein
, activin A, a protein expressed in Central nervous System (CNS).
...
PMID:[Markers of brain injury in non-invasive biological fluids]. 2109 84
Calbindin is a
calcium binding protein
that controls intracellular calcium levels and has a neuroprotective function against apoptotic stimuli. We investigated the expression of calbindin in ischemic brain injury. Focal
cerebral ischemia
was induced in male rats by middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAO) and cerebral cortices were collected 24 h after MCAO.
Cerebral ischemia
significantly increased infarct volume. RT-PCR and Western blot analyses showed that MCAO injury induced a decrease of calbindin expression. Moreover, immunohistochemical staining showed that the number of calbindin-positive cells decreased in ischemic regions of MCAO-operated animals. In cultured hippocampal-derived cell lines, glutamate exposure increased intracellular Ca(2+) concentrations and decreased calbindin expression. Taken together, both in vivo and in vitro results demonstrated decreases of calbindin after neuronal cell injury. These results suggest that decreases of calbindin in ischemic brain injury contribute to neuronal cell death.
...
PMID:Focal cerebral ischemic injury decreases calbindin expression in brain tissue and HT22 cells. 2410 10
Recently, the Na(+)/Ca(+2) exchanger NCX1 and the
calcium binding protein
calretinin have emerged as new molecular effectors of delayed preconditioning in the brain. In the present study, we investigated whether NCX1 and calretinin cooperate within the preconditioned striatum to confer neurons greater resistance to degeneration. Confocal microscopy analysis revealed that NCX1 expression was upregulated in calretinin-positive interneurons in the rat striatum after tolerance induction. Consistently, coimmunoprecipitation assays performed on human SHSY-5Y cells, a neuronal cell line which constitutively expresses calretinin, revealed a binding between NCX1 and calretinin. Finally, silencing of calretinin expression, both in vitro and in vivo, significantly prevented preconditioning-induced neuroprotection. Interestingly, our biochemical and functional studies showed that the selective silencing of calretinin in brain cells significantly prevented not only the preconditioning-induced upregulation of NCX1 expression and activity but also the activation of the prosurvival protein kinase Akt, which is involved in calretinin and NCX1 protective actions. Collectively, our results indicate that the Na(+)/Ca(+2) exchanger NCX1 and the
calcium binding protein
calretinin cooperate within the striatum to confer tolerance against
cerebral ischemia
.
...
PMID:NCX1 Exchanger Cooperates with Calretinin to Confer Preconditioning-Induced Tolerance Against Cerebral Ischemia in the Striatum. 2563 96