Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0917798 (
cerebral ischemia
)
17,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
No neuroprotective compounds are clinically available for the treatment of ischemic stroke. The potential salutary effect of pifithrin alpha, a novel-specific inhibitor of the transcription factor
p53
, administered 1-6 h following focal reversible
cerebral ischemia
, was investigated. Studies measuring histological, motor, and behavioral outcomes showed significant improvements in pifithrin alpha-treated animals. Pifithrin alpha reduced the number of apoptotic cells in the ischemic brain by inhibiting the binding of
p53
to its DNA sites as it reduced the expression of the
p53
-related gene p21(WAF) without changing the amount of
p53 protein
itself.
...
PMID:The role of p53-induced apoptosis in cerebral ischemia: effects of the p53 inhibitor pifithrin alpha. 1514 74
The tumor suppressor gene
p53
plays an important role in the regulation of apoptosis through transcriptional activation of cell cycle control. Degradation of
p53
hinders its role in apoptosis regulation. Recent studies have shown that MDM2-mediated ubiquitylation and the ubiquitin-proteasome system are critical regulating systems of
p53
ubiquitylation. However, the mechanism regulating
p53
-mediated neuronal apoptosis after
cerebral ischemia
remains unknown. We examined the MDM2 pathway and the ubiquitin-proteasome system using a transient focal
cerebral ischemia
(tFCI) model and analyzed the interaction between
p53
regulation and superoxide using copper/zinc superoxide dismutase (SOD1) transgenic mice after tFCI.
p53
degradation and ubiquitylation were detected after tFCI. The accumulation of ubiquitylated
p53
was inhibited and
p53
degradation was facilitated by SOD1. Nuclear translocation and MDM2/Akt interaction were detected after tFCI and were inhibited by phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase inhibition and promoted by SOD1. Cytosolic translocation of the
p53
/MDM2 complex was detected after tFCI and was promoted by SOD1. Moreover, accumulation of multiubiquitin chains and direct oxidative injury to a proteasome were detected and inhibited by SOD1 after tFCI. These results suggest that SOD1 promotes the MDM2 pathway and the ubiquitin-proteasome system after tFCI and that production of reactive oxygen species after tFCI prevents
p53
degradation by inhibiting both systems.
...
PMID:Modulation of p53 degradation via MDM2-mediated ubiquitylation and the ubiquitin-proteasome system during reperfusion after stroke: role of oxidative stress. 1567 28
Protein transduction domains (PTDs), such as the TAT PTD, have been shown to deliver a wide variety of cargo in cell culture and to treat preclinical models of cancer and
cerebral ischemia
. The TAT PTD enters cells by a lipid raft-dependent macropinocytosis mechanism that all cells perform. Consequently, PTDs resemble small-molecule therapeutics in their lack of pharmacologic tissue specificity in vivo. However, several human malignancies overexpress specific receptors, including HER2 in breast cancer, GnRH in ovarian carcinomas, and CXC chemokine receptor 4 (CXCR4) in multiple malignancies. To target tumor cells that overexpress the CXCR4 receptor, we linked the CXCR4 DV3 ligand to two transducible anticancer peptides: a
p53
-activating peptide (DV3-TATp53C') and a cyclin-dependent kinase 2 antagonist peptide (DV3-TAT-RxL). Treatment of tumor cells expressing the CXCR4 receptor with either the DV3-TATp53C' or DV3-TAT-RxL targeted peptides resulted in an enhancement of tumor cell killing compared with treatment with nontargeted parental peptides. In contrast, there was no difference between DV3 targeted peptide and nontargeted, parental peptide treatment of non-CXCR4-expressing tumor cells. These observations show that a multidomain approach can be used to further refine and enhance the tumor selectivity of biologically active, transducible macromolecules for treating cancer.
...
PMID:Enhanced targeting and killing of tumor cells expressing the CXC chemokine receptor 4 by transducible anticancer peptides. 1632 5
Ischemic stroke results from a transient or permanent reduction in cerebral blood flow that is restricted to the territory of a major brain artery. The major pathobiological mechanisms of ischemia/reperfusion injury include excitotoxicity, oxidative stress, inflammation, and apoptosis. In the present report, we first investigated the protective effects of anthocyanins against focal cerebral ischemic injury in rats. The pretreatment of anthocyanins (300 mg/kg, p.o.) significantly reduced the brain infarct volume and a number of TUNEL positive cells caused by middle cerebral artery occlusion and reperfusion. In the immunohistochemical observation, anthocyanins remarkably reduced a number of phospho-c-Jun N-terminal kinase (p-JNK) and
p53
immunopositive cells in the infarct area. Moreover, Western blotting analysis indicated that anthocyanins suppressed the activation of JNK and up-regulation of
p53
. Thus, our data suggested that anthocyanins reduced neuronal damage induced by focal
cerebral ischemia
through blocking the JNK and
p53
signaling pathway. These findings suggest that the consumption of anthocyanins may have the possibility of protective effect against neurological disorders such as brain ischemia.
...
PMID:Protective effect of anthocyanins in middle cerebral artery occlusion and reperfusion model of cerebral ischemia in rats. 1644 29
Although
p53
controls cell death after various stresses, its role in neuronal death after brain ischemia is poorly understood. To address this issue, we subjected
p53
-deficient (
p53
-/- and p53+/-) mice (backcrossed for 12 generations with C57BL/6 mice) and wild-type mice (p53+/+) to transient global ischemia by the three-vessel occlusion method. Despite similar severity of ischemia, as shown by anoxic depolarization and cortical blood flow, neuronal death in the hippocampal cornus ammonis (CA)1 region was much more extensive in p53+/+ than in
p53
-/- mice (surviving neuronal count, 9.3%+/-3.0% versus 61.3%+/-34.0% of nonischemic p53+/+ controls, respectively, P<0.0037). In p53+/- mice, a similar trend was also observed, though not statistically significant (43.5% of nonischemic p53+/+ controls). In p53+/+ mice,
p53
-like immunoreactivity in hippocampal CA1 neurons was enhanced at 12 h after ischemia, and messenger ribonucleic acid for Bax, a direct downstream target of
p53
, was also increased. These results indicate that
p53
potentiates ischemic neuronal death in vivo and suggest that this molecule could be a therapeutic target in neuronal death after
cerebral ischemia
.
...
PMID:p53 potentiates hippocampal neuronal death caused by global ischemia. 1653 33
We investigated the long-term effects of sevoflurane on histopathologic injury and key proteins of apoptosis in a rat hemispheric ischemia/reperfusion model. Sixty-four male Sprague-Dawley rats were randomly assigned to Group 1 (fentanyl and N2O/O2; control) and Group 2 (2.0 vol% sevoflurane and O2/air). Ischemia (45 min) was produced by unilateral common carotid artery occlusion plus hemorrhagic hypotension (mean arterial blood pressure 40 mm Hg). Animals were killed after 1, 3, 7, and 28 days. In hematoxylin and eosin-stained brain sections eosinophilic hippocampal neurons were counted. Activated caspase-3 and the apoptosis-regulating proteins Bax, Bcl-2, Mdm-2, and
p53
were analyzed by immunostaining. No eosinophilic neurons were detected in sevoflurane-anesthetized rats over time, whereas 9%-38% of the hippocampal neurons were eosinophilic (days 1-28) in control animals. On days 1 and 3, the concentration of Bax was 140%-200% larger in fentanyl/N2O-anesthetized animals compared with sevoflurane. Bcl-2 was 100% less in control animals during the first 3 days. Activated caspase-3 was detected in neurons of both groups (0.75%-2.2%). These data support a sustained neuroprotective potency of sevoflurane related to reduced eosinophilic injury after
cerebral ischemia
/reperfusion.
...
PMID:The long-term effect of sevoflurane on neuronal cell damage and expression of apoptotic factors after cerebral ischemia and reperfusion in rats. 1679 Jun 48
Although
p53
is a key modulator of cellular stress responses, the mechanism of
p53
-mediated apoptosis is ambiguous.
p53
can mediate apoptosis in response to death stimuli by transcriptional activation of proapoptotic genes and transcriptional-independent mechanisms. Recent studies have shown that the
p53 protein
can directly induce permeabilization of the outer mitochondrial membrane by forming a inhibitory complex with a protective Bcl-2 family protein, resulting in cytochrome c release. However, how the mitochondrial
p53
pathway mediates neuronal apoptosis after
cerebral ischemia
remains unclear. We examined the interaction between the mitochondrial
p53
pathway and vulnerable hippocampal CA1 neurons in rats using a transient global
cerebral ischemia
(tGCI) model. Western blot analysis and immunofluorescent staining revealed mitochondrial
p53
translocation after tGCI in the hippocampal CA1 neurons. Coimmunoprecipitation revealed that translocated
p53
bound to Bcl-X(L) in the mitochondrial fraction. To examine the effect of a specific
p53
inhibitor on the mitochondrial
p53
pathway and apoptotic cell death after tGCI, we intravenously administered pifithrin-alpha (PFT). Mitochondrial
p53
translocation and interaction between
p53
and Bcl-X(L) were prevented by treatment with PFT. Moreover, cytochrome c release from mitochondria and subsequent apoptotic CA1 neuronal death were decreased with PFT treatment. These results suggest that the mitochondrial
p53
pathway is one of the novel mechanisms mediating delayed death of vulnerable hippocampal CA1 neurons after tGCI.
...
PMID:Mitochondrial translocation of p53 mediates release of cytochrome c and hippocampal CA1 neuronal death after transient global cerebral ischemia in rats. 1687 Jul 42
p53
, a tumour suppressor, is involved in DNA repair and cell death processes and mediates apoptosis in response to death stimuli by transcriptional activation of pro-apoptotic genes and by transcription-independent mechanisms. In the latter process,
p53
induces permeabilization of the outer mitochondrial membrane by forming an inhibitory complex with a protective Bcl-2 family protein, resulting in cytochrome c release in several cell line systems. However, it is unclear how the mitochondrial
p53
pathway mediates neuronal apoptosis after
cerebral ischaemia
. We examined interaction between the mitochondrial
p53
pathway and vulnerable hippocampal CA1 neurons using a tGCI (transient global
cerebral ischaemia
) rat model. We showed mitochondrial translocation of
p53
and its binding to Bcl-X(L). Mitochondrial
p53
translocation, interaction between
p53
and Bcl-X(L), and cytochrome c release from mitochondria and subsequent CA1 neuronal death were prevented by pifithrin-alpha, a
p53
-specific inhibitor. These results suggest that the mitochondrial
p53
pathway plays a role in delayed CA1 neuronal death after tGCI.
...
PMID:Mitochondrial translocation of p53 underlies the selective death of hippocampal CA1 neurons after global cerebral ischaemia. 1707 2
Mild hypothermia, applied either during or soon after
cerebral ischemia
, has been shown to confer robust neuroprotection against brain injury in experimental stroke and in patients recovering from cardiac arrest. However, the mechanism underlying hypothermic neuroprotection is not completely understood. In this study, the effect of mild hypothermia on the induction of oxidative DNA damage, an early harmful event during post-ischemic reperfusion that triggers both necrotic and apoptotic cell death in the brain, was studied using the rat model of middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAO) and reperfusion. Rats were subjected to 2-hr MCAO and reperfusion of various durations up to 3 days. Selective brain hypothermia (33 degrees C) was induced at the onset of ischemia and terminated at the beginning of reperfusion, and this significantly decreased infarct volume 72 hr later. Correlated with this protective effect, intraischemic mild hypothermia markedly attenuated the nuclear accumulations of several oxidative DNA lesions, including 8-oxodG, AP sites, and DNA single-strand breaks, after 2-hr MCAO. Consequently, harmful DNA damage-dependent signaling events, including NAD depletion,
p53
activation, and mitochondrial translocation of PUMA and NOXA, were reduced during post-ischemic reperfusion in hypothermia-treated brains. These results suggest that the attenuation of oxidative DNA damage and DNA damage-triggered pro-death signaling events may be an important mechanism underlying the neuroprotective effect of mild hypothermia against ischemic brain injury.
...
PMID:Mild hypothermia diminishes oxidative DNA damage and pro-death signaling events after cerebral ischemia: a mechanism for neuroprotection. 1712 18
The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is important for maintaining the quality of cellular proteins. Various stimuli can disrupt ER homeostasis and cause the accumulation of unfolded or misfolded proteins, i.e., a state of ER stress. Recently, ER stress has been reported to play an important role in the pathogenesis of neurological disorders such as
cerebral ischemia
and neurodegenerative diseases, but its involvement in the spinal cord diseases has not been fully discussed. We conducted this study using tunicamycin (Tm) as an ER stress inducer for rat spinal cord in organotypic slice culture, a system that we have recently established. Tm was shown to induce ER stress by increased expression of GRP78. The viability rate of spinal cord neurons decreased in a dose-dependent manner with Tm treatment, and dorsal horn interneurons were more vulnerable to Tm-induced neurotoxicity. A
p53
inhibitor significantly increased the viability of dorsal horn interneurons, and immunofluorescence studies showed nuclear accumulation of
p53
in the dorsal horns of Tm-treated spinal cord slices. These findings suggest that
p53
plays an important role in the killing of dorsal horn interneurons by Tm. In contrast, motor neurons were not protected by the
p53
inhibitor, suggesting that the role of
p53
may vary between different cell types. This difference might be a clue to the mechanism of the stress-response pathway and might also contribute to the potential application of
p53
inhibitors for the treatment of spinal cord diseases, including amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.
...
PMID:Role of p53 in neurotoxicity induced by the endoplasmic reticulum stress agent tunicamycin in organotypic slice cultures of rat spinal cord. 1713 18
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>