Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0917798 (cerebral ischemia)
17,036 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Calpain (calcium-activated neutral protease) has been implicated as playing a role of neuronal injury in cerebral ischemia and excitotoxicity. Here we report that, in addition to extreme excitotoxic conditions [N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA), alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid (AMPA), and kainate challenges], other neurotoxins such as maitotoxin, A23187, and okadaic acid also induce calpain activation, as detected by m-calpain autolytic fragmentation and nonerythroid alpha-spectrin breakdown. Under the same conditions, calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II-alpha (CaMPK-IIalpha) and neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) are both proteolytically cleaved by calpain. Such fragmentation can be reduced by calpain inhibitors (acetyl-Leu-Leu-Nle-CHO and PD151746). In vitro digestion of protein extract from cortical cultures with purified mu- and m-calpain produced fragmentation patterns for CaMPK-IIalpha and nNOS similar to those produced in situ. Also, several other calpain-sensitive calmodulin-binding proteins (plasma membrane calcium pump, microtubule-associated protein 2, and calcineurin A) and protein kinase C-alpha are also degraded in neurotoxin-treated cultures. Lastly, in a rat pup model of acute excitotoxicity, intrastriatal injection of NMDA resulted in breakdown of CaMPK-IIalpha and nNOS. The degradation of CaMPK-IIalpha, nNOS, and other endogenous calpain substrates may contribute to the neuronal injury associated with various neurotoxins.
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PMID:Neuronal nitric oxide synthase and calmodulin-dependent protein kinase IIalpha undergo neurotoxin-induced proteolysis. 928 22

The calpains form a growing family of structurally related intracellular multidomain cysteine proteinases containing a papain-related catalytic domain, whose activity depends on calcium. The calpains are believed to play important roles in cytoskeletal remodeling processes, cell differentiation, apoptosis and signal transduction, but are also implicated in muscular dystrophy, cardiac and cerebral ischemia, platelet aggregation, restenosis, neurodegenerative diseases, rheumatoid arthritis and cataract formation. The best characterized calpains, the ubiquitously expressed mu- and m-calpains, are heterodimers consisting of a common 30-kDa small and a variable 80-kDa subunit. The recently determined crystal structures of human and rat m-calpain crystallized in the absence of calcium essentially explain the inactivity of the apoform by catalytic domain disruption, indicate several sites where calcium could bind causing reformation of a papain-like catalytic domain, and additionally reveal modes by which phospholipid membranes could reduce the calcium requirement. Current evidence points to a cooperative interaction of several sites, which, upon calcium binding, trigger the reformation of a papain-similar catalytic domain.
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PMID:The structure of calcium-free human m-calpain: implications for calcium activation and function. 1167 52

Calpains represent a superfamily of Ca2+-activated cysteine-proteases, which are important mediators of apoptosis and necrosis. In the brain, m-calpain and micro-calpain, the two ubiquitous calpain-isoforms, are strongly activated in neurones after an excitotoxic Ca2+ influx occurring, for example, during cerebral ischemia. Because oestrogen and its receptors (ERalpha/ERbeta) can exert neuroprotective activity, we investigated their influence on expression of calpains and their endogenous inhibitor, calpastatin. We found that ectopic expression of ERalpha in human neuroblastoma SK-N-MC cells led to a ligand-independent constitutive down-regulation of m-calpain accompanied by an up-regulation of micro-calpain expression. Up-regulation of micro-calpain was reversed in the presence of oestrogen, which, in turn, could be blocked by co-treatment with the oestrogen-receptor antagonist ICI 182,780. Expression of calpastatin was not altered, either in the absence or in the presence of oestrogen. Additional studies revealed that ERalpha-expressing cells exhibited decreased calpain enzymatic activity and increased survival when cells were exposed to the Ca2+ ionophore, ionomycin. Since all investigated effects could be observed exclusively in the presence of ERalpha, but not ERbeta, and since the effects are reduced when ERalpha and ERbeta are co-expressed, our data suggest a novel ER subtype-specific neuroprotective action by repressing calpain expression and calpain activity under conditions of a massive Ca2+ influx.
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PMID:Oestrogen receptor subtype-specific repression of calpain expression and calpain enzymatic activity in neuronal cells--implications for neuroprotection against Ca-mediated excitotoxicity. 1652 85

Mild NMDA receptor activation is correlated with neuroprotection in models of cerebral ischemia. Neuroprotection with NMDA manifests as a form of ischemic tolerance and involves the induction of cellular stress systems sensitive to disturbances in cellular calcium homeostasis. Unilateral micro-injection of 10, 160 and 320 microM NMDA into the prefrontal cortex of a rat 30 min prior to permanent occlusion of the middle cerebral artery (MCAO) significantly reduced the area of infarct observed after 4 h of ischemia. The highest dose of NMDA (320 microM) prevented the propagation of ischemic damage through a direct toxicity on neuronal tissue adjacent to the injection site as demonstrated in thionin-stained sections. As a result, the degree of ischemia-induced damage was similar to that measured in rats pretreated with the low dose of NMDA (10 microM). Expression of heat shock protein (HSP) 70 and glucose-regulated protein (GRP) 94 in cortical samples taken from the region of infarct following MCAO was significantly reduced in rats pretreated with 10 microM NMDA compared to saline-injected control rats and rats pretreated with higher doses of NMDA. Furthermore, 10 microM NMDA did not appear to influence expression of m-calpain or GRP78, however, higher doses of NMDA did significantly induce expression of both proteins as assessed by Western blotting. In summary, our data demonstrate an in vivo rodent model of ischemic tolerance in which 30 min of neuronal preconditioning with 10 microM NMDA confers protection against a 4 h period of MCAO-induced ischemia. This effect may involve modulation of cellular stress signals, in particular HSP70 and GRP94.
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PMID:Ischemic tolerance following low dose NMDA involves modulation of cellular stress proteins. 1899 20

In vitro nitric oxide (NO) regulates calpain and caspase-3 activation, and in vivo neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS), calpain and caspase-3 participate in the ischemic brain injury. Our objective was to investigate whether nNOS was involved in the ischemic brain injury through activating calpain and caspase-3 during experimental stroke. Rats received 1-h ischemia by intraluminant filament, and then reperfused for 23h (R 23h). nNOS inhibitor 7-nitroindozale (7-NI, 50mg/kg) was administrated intraperitoneally 5min before ischemia. Our data showed that treatment with 7-NI markedly reduced neurological deficits, the brain swelling, and the infarct volume at R 23h. Enzyme studies revealed significant suppression of the activities of m-calpain and caspase-3 in penumbra and core, and the activities of mu-calpain in penumbra, but not in core, in 7-NI-treated rats versus vehicle-treated rats. Western blot analysis demonstrated that 7-NI markedly increased the levels of MAP-2 and spectrin in penumbra and core compared with vehicle-treated rats. Histopathological studies displayed that 7-NI significantly reduced the necrotic cell death in penumbra and core, and apoptotic cell death in penumbra, but not in core. These data demonstrate the involvement of NO produced by nNOS in the ischemic neuronal injury through affecting the activation of calpain and caspase-3 in penumbra and core after experimental stroke, which provides a new perspective on possible mechanisms of action of nNOS inhibition in cerebral ischemia.
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PMID:Inhibition of nNOS reduces ischemic cell death through down-regulating calpain and caspase-3 after experimental stroke. 1916 6