Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P04637 (p53)
77,613 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The temporospatial expression pattern of the nuclear DNA repair enzyme redox factor-1 (ref-1), the p53-activated gene (pag) 608 and the effector caspase-3 was examined by in situ hybridization histochemistry in gerbils subjected to two 10-min episodes of unilateral common carotid artery occlusion, separated by 5h. Gene responses were correlated with the metabolic state, as revealed by regional adenosine 5'-triphosphate bioluminescent imaging, and with the degree of histological damage, as assessed by haematoxylin-eosin staining and terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated-dUTP nick end labeling (TUNEL), in order to evaluate the role of these genes in the maturation of injury. Focal infarcts developed in the dorsolateral cerebral cortex at the bregma level and the nucleus caudate-putamen within four days after repeated unilateral ischemia, as indicated by a secondary adenosine 5'-triphosphate loss after initial adenosine 5'-triphosphate recovery and by histomorphological signs of pannecrosis. The more caudal cortex at hippocampal levels and the hippocampus (CA1>CA3 area), however, exhibited selective neuronal injury without adenosine 5'-triphosphate depletion. TUNEL+ cells appeared starting 5h after repeated unilateral ischemia. TUNEL+ cells reached maximum levels in the caudate-putamen at 12-24h, but much later in the cortex and hippocampus at two days after ischemia. Remarkably few TUNEL+ cells were noticed in the thalamus, where adenosine 5'-triphosphate state did not recover after reperfusion. Following repeated unilateral ischemia, a transient elevation of ref-1 mRNA was detected after 5h in the cerebral cortex and hippocampal CA1 area. Ref-1 mRNA levels decreased within 12-24h, before the onset of tissue damage. Subsequently, pag608 and caspase-3 mRNA levels increased, closely in parallel with the appearance of DNA fragmented cells, but slightly prior to the deterioration of adenosine 5'-triphosphate state. In the caudate-putamen, pag608 and caspase-3 mRNAs reached maximum levels already 12-24h after repeated common carotid artery occlusion, when DNA fragmentation was most prominent, and declined thereafter. In the cortex and hippocampal CA1-3 areas, where DNA damage appeared more slowly, pag608 and caspase-3 mRNAs were induced starting 24h after ischemia, and remained elevated even after two to four days. The levels of pag608 and caspase-3 mRNAs were similar at rostral and caudal levels of the cortex, as well as in the hippocampal CA1 and CA3 area, although the degree of injury differed considerably between these structures. Notably, pag608 and caspase-3 mRNAs were not elevated in the thalamus after repeated unilateral ischemia. The present report shows a close temporal association between the induction of ref-1, pag608 and caspase-3 mRNAs, the manifestation of cell injury and the secondary adenosine 5'-triphosphate depletion in infarcting brain areas, suggesting (i) that de novo responses of these genes may be involved in the maturation of cell injury and (ii) that apoptotic programs and the secondary deterioration of cerebral energy state may interfere with each other after ischemia.
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PMID:Expression of redox factor-1, p53-activated gene 608 and caspase-3 messenger RNAs following repeated unilateral common carotid artery occlusion in gerbils--relationship to delayed cell injury and secondary failure of energy state. 1118 42

Cathepsin D (CD) and cathepsin E are representative lysosomal and nonlysosomal aspartic proteinases, respectively, and play an important role in the degradation of proteins, the generation of bioactive proteins, antigen processing, etc. Recenty, several lines of evidence have suggested the involvement of these two enzymes in the execution of neuronal death pathways induced by aging, transient forebrain ischemia, and excessive stimulation of glutamate receptors with excitotoxins. CD has also been shown to mediate apoptosis induced by various stimuli and p53-dependent tumor suppression. To gain more insight into in vivo functions of CD, mice deficient in this enzyme were generated. The mutant animals showed a progressive atrophy of the intestinal mucosa, a massive destruction of lymphoid organs, and a profound accumulation of ceroid lipofuscin, and developed a phenotype resembling neuronal ceroid lipofucinosis, suggesting that CD is essential for proteolysis of proteins regulating cell growth and tissue homeostasis. It has also been shown that CD molecules secreted from human prostate carcinoma cells are responsible for the generation of angiostatin, a potent endogenous inhibitor of angiogenesis, suggesting its contribution to the prevention of tumor growth and angiogenesis-dependent growth of metastases. Interestingly, pro-CD from human breast carcinoma cells showed a significantly lower angiostatin-generating activity than that from prostate carcinoma cells. Since deglycosylated CD molecules from both carcinoma cells showed a low angiostatin-generating activity, this discrepancy appeared to be attributed to the difference in the carbohydrate structures of CD molecules between the two cell types and to contribute to their potency to prevent tumor growth and metastases.
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PMID:New functional aspects of cathepsin D and cathepsin E. 1121 63

Heme is considered to play an instrumental role in the pathology of hemolysis, trauma, and reperfusion following ischemia. However, data are sparse and experimental models are required. The transport of heme by hemopexin to tissues is a specific, membrane receptor-mediated process. Hemopexin recycles after endocytosis like transferrin. Heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1), transferrin, the transferrin receptor, and ferritin are regulated by heme-hemopexin. Genes that encode proteins important for cellular defenses against oxidative stress, such as the cysteine-rich metallothioneins (MTs), are also activated by hemopexin, as are proteins that regulate cell cycle control including p21WAF1 and the tumor suppressor p53. The hemopexin system is being investigated to establish how intracellular events are affected by signal(s) from the plasma membrane due to hemopexin receptor occupancy and heme transport. A transient oxidative modification of proteins, shown by carbonyl production, takes place. Redox processes at the cell surface, which generate cuprous ions, are involved in the regulation of the MT-1 and HO-1 genes by heme-hemopexin before heme catabolism and intracellular release of iron. The "redox-sensitive" transcription factors activated by the hemopexin system include c- Jun, RelA/NFkappaB and MTF-1. The specific copper chelator bathocuproine disulfonate prevents carbonyl production, the nuclear translocation of MTF-1, and the induction of MT-1 revealing a novel, pivotal role for copper in the hemopexin system. In addition, surface redox-active copper is the first link shown for the concomitant regulation of HO-1 and MT-1 and is required for the activation of the amino-terminal c-Jun kinase (JNK) by heme-hemopexin.
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PMID:Links between cell-surface events involving redox-active copper and gene regulation in the hemopexin heme transport system. 1122 23

The p53 tumor suppressor gene is a sequence-specific transcription factor that activates the expression of genes engaged in promoting growth arrest or cell death in response to genotoxic stress. A possible role for p53-related modulation of neuronal viability has been suggested by the finding that p53 expression is elevated in damaged neurons in acute models of injury such as ischemia and epilepsy and in brain tissue samples derived from patients with chronic neurodegenerative diseases. Moreover, the absence of p53 has been shown to protect neurons from a wide variety of acute toxic insults. Signal transduction pathways associated with p53-induced cell death are being unraveled and suggest that intervention may prove fruitful in maintaining neuronal viability and restoring function following cytopathic insults.
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PMID:The role of p53 in neuronal cell death. 1127 32

Recent evidence indicates that the p53 tumor suppressor protein, and its related family member, p73, play an essential role in regulating neuronal apoptosis in both the developing and injured, mature nervous system. In the developing nervous system, they do so by regulating naturally-occurring cell death in neural progenitor cells and in postmitotic neurons, acting to ensure the apoptosis of cells that either do not appropriately undergo the progenitor to postmitotic neuron transition, or that fail to compete for sufficient quantities of trophic support. Somewhat surprisingly, in developing postmitotic neurons, p53 plays a proapoptotic role, while a naturally-occurring, truncated form of p73, DeltaNp73, antagonizes p53 and plays an anti-apoptotic role. In the mature nervous system, numerous studies indicate that p53 is essential for the neuronal death in response to a variety of insults, including DNA damage, ischemia and excitotoxicity. It is likely that all of these insults culminate in DNA damage, which may well be a common trigger for neuronal apoptosis. In this regard, the signaling pathways that are responsible for triggering p53-dependent neuronal apoptosis are starting to be elucidated, and involve cell cycle deregulation and activation of the JNK pathway. Finally, accumulating evidence indicates that p53 is perturbed in the CNS in a number of neurodegenerative disorders, leading to the hypothesis that longterm oxidative damage and/or excitotoxicity ultimately trigger p53-dependent apoptosis in the chronically degenerating nervous system.
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PMID:Neuronal life and death: an essential role for the p53 family. 1127 33

The transcriptional factor p53 is a regulatory protein which contributes to the preservation of tissue integrity by promoting either DNA repair or apoptosis. To establish the pathophysiological role of this protein in ischemia, we produced 1 h transient middle cerebral artery (MCA) occlusion in normal and in p53-deficient mice and investigated the resulting tissue damage by multiparametric imaging. Possible genetic influences on the angioarchitecture of the MCA territory and blood flow were examined by intravascular latex infusion and laser-Doppler flowmetry. Wild-type (p53(+/+)), heterozygous (p53(+/-)) and homozygous (p53(-/-)) mice deficient for the p53 gene did not differ in respect to angioarchitecture or the effect of vascular occlusion on blood flow and general physiological parameters. Twenty-four hours after 1 h MCA occlusion, mice revealed a gene dose-dependent decline in the size of metabolic disturbances (ATP depletion and inhibition of protein synthesis) and histological injury (Cresyl Violet staining). DNA fragmentations detected by terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated UTP nick end labeling (TUNEL) did not differ in the three groups and were only present in ATP-depleted tissue. Our findings suggest that after transient focal brain ischemia p53 prevents rather than aggravates brain injury, and that this effect is brought about by mechanisms that are unrelated to the pro-apoptotic properties of this gene.
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PMID:Aggravation of brain injury after transient focal ischemia in p53-deficient mice. 1129 31

Angiotensin II (Ang II) and apoptosis contribute significantly to myocardial ischemia-reperfusion (I-R) injury. Evidence indicates that Ang II may activate apoptosis in myocytes. The present study was undertaken to investigate the effects of angiotensin receptor blockers (ARBs), candesartan, on the apoptosis of cardiac myocytes in rats after I-R. Rats were divided into a control group, a candesartan group I (0.015 mg/kg), and a candesartan group II (0.03 mg/kg). Candesartan was intravenously administered 30 min before ischemia. All rats were subjected to 30 min of coronary occlusion followed by 3 h of reperfusion. The data showed that left ventricular (LV) systolic pressure and LV +dp/dt was decreased after administration of candesartan, but increased after reperfusion in the candesartan group II, compared with those in the candesartan group I and control group. LV -dp/dt was decreased after candesartan administration in candesartan group II. The number of apoptotic cells in the candesartan groups (497+/-204 and 543+/-254, respectively) was higher than that in the control group (287+/-166; p<0.05). There was no significant difference in infarct size among the three groups. However, plasma CPK was lower in the candesartan groups than in the control group. Northern blot analysis showed that p53 mRNA was upregulated in the candesartan groups, in association with increased expression of bax mRNA. Immunohistochemical analysis showed that p53 and bax immunoreactivity were increased in both of the candesartan groups. In conclusion, candesartan increased apoptosis in the rat hearts after acute I-R, and this increase was possibly mediated by upregulation of p53 and bax gene expressions. In addition, candesartan was shown to improve LV function, in association with reduction of CPK release.
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PMID:An angiotensin II type 1 receptor blocker, candesartan, increases myocardial apoptosis in rats with acute ischemia-reperfusion. 1140 58

Myocardial apoptosis is primarily triggered during reperfusion (R). The aim of this study was to test the hypothesis that R-induced apoptosis develops progressively during the late phase of R, and that R-induced apoptosis is associated with changes in expression of anti- and pro-apoptotic proteins and infiltrated inflammatory cells. Thirty-one dogs were subjected to 60 min of left anterior descending coronary occlusion followed by 6, 24, 48, and 72 h R, respectively. There was no group difference in collateral blood flow, measured by colored microspheres during ischemia. Necrotic cell death (TTC staining) was significantly increased during R, starting at 27 +/- 2% at 6 h R and increasing to 41 +/- 2% at 24 h R. There was no further change at 48 (37 +/- 3%) and 72 (36 +/- 6%) h R, respectively. TUNEL positive cells (% total normal nuclei) in the peri-necrotic zone progressively increased from 6 (26 +/- 2) to 24 (38 +/- 1), 48 (48 +/- 3) and 72 (59 +/- 4) h R, respectively. The number of detected TUNEL positive cells at these time points was consistent with an increased intensity of DNA ladders, identified by agarose gel electrophoresis. Compared with normal tissue, western blot analysis showed persistent reduction in expression of anti-apoptotic protein Bcl-2 from 6 (16 +/- 0.8%) to 72 h R (78 +/- 2%), and increase in expression of pro-apoptotic proteins including Bax from 6 (30 +/- 3%) to 72 h R (66 +/- 3%), and p53 from 6 (12 +/- 1%) to 72 h R (91 +/- 2%), respectively. Immunohistochemical staining revealed that infiltrated neutrophils (mm(2) myocardium) were significantly correlated with development of necrotic and apoptotic cell death from 6 to 24 h R, respectively (P < 0.05), while large macrophage infiltration seen during 48 to 72 h R were correlated with apoptotic cell death (P < 0.05). These results indicate that 1) necrosis peaked at 24 h R when apoptosis was still progressively developing during later R; 2) changes in Bcl-2 family and p53 proteins may participate in R-induced myocardial apoptosis; 3) inflammatory cells may play a role in triggering cell death during R. P < 0.05 vs. normal nuclei and tissue; P < 0.01 vs. 6 h R.
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PMID:Progressively developed myocardial apoptotic cell death during late phase of reperfusion. 1144 70

The objective was to relate the response of the HSP70 and P53 genes to the cessation and the recovery of cardiac muscle cell functions when submitted to ischemia-reperfusion. We have measured the electromechanical activity, the released enzymes and HSP70 RNA and protein levels in cultured neonatal rat cardiomyocytes (CM) in a substrate-free, hypoxia-reoxygenation model of ischemia-reperfusion. In parallel the expression of the two genes P53 (the key apoptosis regulator gene) and P21/Waf1 (the P53 target gene) has been evaluated. The functional recovery during post-'ischemic' reoxygenation was associated with an overexpression of HSP70 and P53 lasting until the functional parameters reverted back to the normal, prehypoxic values. In contrast, extending the substrate-free hypoxic treatment worsens the dysfunction of the cardiac muscle cell and, in these conditions, reoxygenation failed to restore cell functions and to activate HSP70. Finally, in the conditions of reversible 'ischemic' cell injury, an early and transitory activation of P53 was associated with the functional recovering process of the CM submitted to simulated ischemia. These observations are suggestive of a contributive role of both HSP70 and P53 to a cytoprotective program activated by reoxygenation in post-'ischemic' CM.
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PMID:Changes in HSP70 and P53 expression are related to the pattern of electromechanical alterations in rat cardiomyocytes during simulated ischemia. 1145 86

The evolution of brain injury was examined in mice subjected to focal cerebral ischemia as induced by 30 min of intraluminar thread occlusion of the middle cerebral artery, followed by 3 h to 3 days of reperfusion. Metabolic dysfunctions were studied by 3H-leucine autoradiography for the measurement of cerebral protein synthesis and by regional ATP bioluminescent imaging. Metabolic changes were compared with responses of the genes c-fos, c-jun, heat-shock protein gene (hsp)72, p53-activated gene (pag)608 and caspase-3, which were investigated by in situ hybridization histochemistry and immunocytochemistry, and correlated with the degree of DNA fragmentation, as assessed by the terminal TdT-mediated dUTP-biotin nick end labeling method. Intraluminar thread occlusion led to a reproducible reduction of cerebral laser Doppler flow to 20-30% of control. Thread withdrawal was followed by a short-lasting post-ischemic hyperperfusion to approximately 120%. In non-ischemic control animals, fractional protein synthesis values of 0.81+/-0.26 and 0.94+/-0.23 were obtained. Thread occlusion resulted in a suppression of protein synthesis throughout the territory of the middle cerebral artery after 3 h of reperfusion (0.04+/-0.08 in caudate-putamen and 0.14+/-0.19 in somatosensory cortex, P<0.05). Protein synthesis partly recovered in the cortex after 24 h and 3 days (0.71+/-0.40 and 0.63+/-0.26, respectively), but remained suppressed in the caudate-putamen (0.14+/-0.22 and 0.28+/-0.28). Regional ATP levels did not show any major disturbances at the reperfusion times examined. Thread occlusion resulted in a transient increase of c-fos mRNA levels in ischemic and non-ischemic parts of the cortex and caudate-putamen at 3 h after ischemia, which suggests that spreading depressions were elicited in the tissue. At the same time, c-jun and hsp72 mRNAs were elevated only in ischemic brain areas showing inhibition of protein synthesis. C-fos and c-jun responses completely disappeared within 24 h of reperfusion. Hsp72 mRNA levels remained elevated in the cortex after 24 h, but decreased to basal values in the caudate-putamen. Twenty-four hours after reperfusion, pag608 and caspase-3 mRNA levels increased in the caudate-putamen, where protein synthesis rates were still reduced, and remained elevated even after 3 days. However, pag608 and caspase-3 mRNA levels did not increase in the cortex, where protein synthesis recovered. After 24 h and 3 days, functionally active p20 fragment of caspase-3 was detected in the caudate-putamen, closely associated with the appearance of DNA fragmented cells. Neither activated caspase-3 nor DNA fragmentation were noticed in the cortex.In summary, the suppression of protein synthesis is reversible in the ischemia-resistant cortex following 30 min of thread occlusion in mice, but persists in the vulnerable caudate-putamen. In the caudate-putamen, apoptotic programs are induced, closely in parallel with the manifestation of delayed cell death. Thus, the recovery of protein synthesis may be a major factor influencing tissue survival after transient focal ischemia.
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PMID:Relationship between metabolic dysfunctions, gene responses and delayed cell death after mild focal cerebral ischemia in mice. 1145 82


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