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Query: UNIPROT:P05412 (
c-Jun
)
11,453
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Previous studies have revealed that in several animal models, N-methyl-D,L-Aspartate (NMA) stimulates LH secretion by acting at a suprapituitary site. In addition, NMDA receptor antagonists appear to block GnRH neuronal activation on the afternoon of proestrous as evidenced by the lack of c-Fos expression in the neurons and by the absence of an ovulatory LH surge. However, administration of NMA does not induce c-Fos or
c-Jun
expression in GnRH neurons. To better understand the effects of NMDA receptor activation on GnRH neuronal function, we examined whether GnRH neurons express the NMDA receptor in male rats, and in female rats during diestrus and proestrus, by performing double label in situ hybridization. An 35S-labeled cRNA probe for the NMDA receptor subunit (NMDAR1) was used to quantify NMDAR1 mRNA and a digoxigenin-labeled cRNA probe for GnRH was used to identify GnRH neurons. The data were quantified and expressed as grains/average cell area. In male and female rats, less than 5% of GnRH neurons expressed grain levels twice the minimum detectable level and were considered double-labeled. However, many non-GnRH neurons in the same areas as GnRH neurons expressed high levels of NMDAR1 mRNA. These results suggest that the effects of NMA on GnRH secretion are unlikely to be mediated solely by the activation of
NMDA
receptors on GnRH neurons. Given the widespread expression of NMDAR1 mRNA in the hypothalamus, it is possible that the stimulatory effects of NMA on GnRH neurons are indirect through activation of other neurons.
...
PMID:Do GnRH neurons express the gene for the NMDA receptor? 749 97
Fos, jun and krox belong to multigene families coding for transcription factors. These cellular immediate early genes (IEGs) are thought to be involved in coupling neuronal excitation to changes of target gene expression. Immunocytochemistry with specific antisera was used to assess regional levels of six IEG-encoded proteins (c-Fos, Fos B, Krox-24,
c-Jun
, Jun B, Jun D) in the rat forebrain after kainic acid-induced limbic seizures. The results demonstrate a complex spatial pattern of IEG induction and/or suppression in limbic and non-limbic structures. The sequence of induction within hippocampal subpopulations was identical for all IEGs investigated, following the order dentate gyrus, CA1 and CA3, and irrespective of different temporal profiles for individual transcription factors. Since Fos and Jun proteins act via homo- and heterodimer complexes at specific DNA sites, our data imply that the postictal combinatorial changes of these dimers allow a sequential and differential regulation of target gene expression in specific forebrain regions. Pretreatment with the non-competitive NMDA receptor antagonist MK-801 did not affect kainate-induced expression of IEGs in the limbic system, indicating that IEG induction in these regions is mediated by high-affinity kainate and AMPA receptors rather than
NMDA
receptors. In contrast, MK-801 abolished IEG induction in the somatosensory cortex and striatum, suggesting that IEG expression in non-limbic neurons occurs transsynaptically and is mediated by
NMDA
receptors.
...
PMID:Spatiotemporal induction of immediate early genes in the rat brain after limbic seizures: effects of NMDA receptor antagonist MK-801. 828 3
Neurons undergoing delayed neuronal death produced by hypoxia-ischaemia (HI) or status epilepticus (SE) showed a massive expression of
c-Jun
in their nuclei 24 h after the insult. With SE there was also a weaker induction of c-Fos and Jun B in dying neurons. SE induced in the presence of the
NMDA
antagonist MK-801 produced no delayed
c-Jun
expression in the hippocampus and nerve cell death did not occur in this region, although there was a delayed c-jun expression in the amygdala/piriform region, and cell death occurred in this area. Activation of central muscarinic receptors with pilocarpine, or block of D2 dopamine receptors with haloperidol, treatments which do not cause neuronal damage, strongly induced Fos and Jun B in hippocampal and striatal neurons, but only induced
c-Jun
very weakly. Thus,
c-Jun
may participate in the genetic cascade of events that produce programmed cell death in neurons.
...
PMID:Is c-Jun involved in nerve cell death following status epilepticus and hypoxic-ischaemic brain injury? 832 31
Drugs that stimulate dopamine and glutamate receptors have been shown to induce the expression of AP-1 proteins (such as c-Fos and
c-Jun
) in the striatum and to induce binding of these proteins to AP-1 sites on DNA, leading to the hypothesis that AP-1-mediated transcription contributes to the long-term effects of these drugs. To examine this hypothesis, we compared the regulation of AP-1-mediated transcription to the inductions of AP-1-binding activity and genes encoding AP-1 proteins in primary cultures of striatal neurons. Although glutamate, dopamine, and forskolin (an activator of adenylate cyclase) all induce c-fos mRNA and AP-1 binding, we found, surprisingly, that only glutamate induces transcription of a transfected AP-1-driven fusion gene. To explore the basis for this discrepancy, we investigated the possibility that the phosphorylation of
c-Jun
may also be required for AP-1-mediated transcription in striatal neurons. Glutamate, but neither dopamine nor forskolin, raises the levels of phosphorylated
c-Jun
as well as the activity of a Jun kinase (SAPK/JNK) in striatal cultures. Both the glutamatergic induction of AP-1-mediated transcription and activation of SAPK/JNK appear to be mediated, at least in part, via
NMDA
receptors. In striatal neurons, the phosphorylation of AP-1 proteins produced by glutamate may be required to convert AP-1 protein expression and binding to transcriptional activation.
...
PMID:Glutamate, but not dopamine, stimulates stress-activated protein kinase and AP-1-mediated transcription in striatal neurons. 913 71
Dissociated cerebellar granule cells maintained in medium containing 25 mM potassium undergo an apoptotic death when switched to medium with 5 mM potassium. Granule cells from mice in which Bax, a proapoptotic Bcl-2 family member, had been deleted, did not undergo apoptosis in 5 mM potassium, yet did undergo an excitotoxic cell death in response to stimulation with 30 or 100 microM
NMDA
. Within 2 h after switching to 5 mM K+, both wild-type and Bax-deficient granule cells decreased glucose uptake to <20% of control. Protein synthesis also decreased rapidly in both wild-type and Bax-deficient granule cells to 50% of control within 12 h after switching to 5 mM potassium. Both wild-type and Bax -/- neurons increased mRNA levels of c-jun, and caspase 3 (CPP32) and increased phosphorylation of the transactivation domain of
c-Jun
after K+ deprivation. Wild-type granule cells in 5 mM K+ increased cleavage of DEVD-aminomethylcoumarin (DEVD-AMC), a fluorogenic substrate for caspases 2, 3, and 7; in contrast, Bax-deficient granule cells did not cleave DEVD-AMC. These results place BAX downstream of metabolic changes, changes in mRNA levels, and increased phosphorylation of
c-Jun
, yet upstream of the activation of caspases and indicate that BAX is required for apoptotic, but not excitotoxic, cell death. In wild-type cells, Boc-Asp-FMK and ZVAD-FMK, general inhibitors of caspases, blocked cleavage of DEVD-AMC and blocked the increase in TdT-mediated dUTP nick end labeling (TUNEL) positivity. However, these inhibitors had only a marginal effect on preventing cell death, suggesting a caspase-independent death pathway downstream of BAX in cerebellar granule cells.
...
PMID:Bax deletion further orders the cell death pathway in cerebellar granule cells and suggests a caspase-independent pathway to cell death. 931 40
Recruitment of the coactivator CBP by signal-regulated transcription factors and stimulation of CBP activity are key regulatory events in the induction of gene transcription following Ca2+ flux through ligand- and/or voltage-gated ion channels in hippocampal neurons. The mode of Ca2+ entry (L-type Ca2+ channels versus
NMDA
receptors) differentially controls the CBP recruitment step to CREB, providing a molecular basis for the observed Ca2+ channel type-dependent differences in gene expression. In contrast, activation of CBP is triggered irrespective of the route of Ca2+ entry, as is activation of
c-Jun
, that recruits CBP independently of phosphorylation at major regulatory
c-Jun
phosphorylation sites, serines 63 and 73. This control of CBP recruitment and activation is likely relevant to other CBP-interacting transcription factors and represents a general mechanism through which Ca2+ signals associated with electrical activity may regulate the expression of many genes.
...
PMID:Control of recruitment and transcription-activating function of CBP determines gene regulation by NMDA receptors and L-type calcium channels. 1023 Jul 98
Stress-activated protein kinase (SAPK) and extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK), both members of the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) family, may in some circumstances serve opposing functions with respect to cell survival. However, SAPK and ERK can also be coordinately activated in neurons in response to glutamate stimulation of
NMDA
receptors. To explore the mechanisms of these MAPK activations, we compared the ionic mechanisms mediating SAPK and ERK activations by glutamate. In primary cultures of striatal neurons, glutamatergic activation of ERK and one of its transcription factor targets, CREB, showed a calcium dependence typical of NMDA receptor-mediated responses. In contrast, extracellular calcium was not required for glutamatergic, NMDA receptor-mediated activation of SAPK and phosphorylation of its substrate,
c-Jun
. Increasing extracellular calcium enhanced ERK activation but reversed SAPK activation, further distinguishing the calcium dependencies of these two NMDA receptor-mediated effects. Finally, reducing extracellular sodium prevented the glutamatergic activation of SAPK but only partially blocked that of ERK. These contrasting ionic dependencies suggest a mechanism by which NMDA receptor activation may, under distinct conditions, differentially regulate neuronal MAPKs and their divergent functions.
...
PMID:Contrasting calcium dependencies of SAPK and ERK activations by glutamate in cultured striatal neurons. 1034 32
During postnatal development, N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor (NMDA-R) expression progressively decreases in ventral and deep dorsal horns. This transient expression might play a role in activity-dependent development of segmental circuitry.
NMDA
-Rs were blocked unilaterally in the lower cervical spinal cord using Elvax implants that released the
NMDA
-R antagonist MK-801 maximally over a 2-week period from postnatal day 7 (P7) onward. At P14, the ratio of
c-Jun
immunoreactive motoneurons ipsilateral/contralateral to the implants was significantly increased and the ratio of parvalbumin immunoreactive neurons decreased, compared to control implants. However, at P84, MK-801-treated and control spinal cords appeared the same. Therefore,
NMDA
-R blockade during development only transiently altered expression of activity-dependent proteins in the spinal cord, unlike lesions to the developing motor cortex, which we have previously shown to have a permanent effect.
...
PMID:N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor blockade during development induces short-term but not long-term changes in c-Jun and parvalbumin expression in the rat cervical spinal cord. 1147 5
The aim of this work was to investigate whether excitotoxicity induced by overstimulation of different ionotropic glutamate receptors could trigger different intracellular signaling cascades. Cultured chick neuronal retina cells, essentially amacrine-like, were particularly sensitive to the toxicity induced by non-
NMDA
glutamate receptor agonists. One hour stimulation with 100 microM kainate induced a reduction of cell viability of about 44%, as assessed by the MTT test 24 hr after stimulation. Kainate-induced toxicity was mediated through AMPA receptors. Glutamate (100 microM, 1 hr) reduced cell viability by 26%, essentially acting through N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors. Five hours after stimulation, neuronal retina cells had an apoptotic-like nuclear morphology. In retinal neurons, the excitotoxic stimulation, with either glutamate or kainate, induced a calcium-dependent enhancement of the DNA-binding activity of the activating protein-1 (AP-1) transcription factor, which was maximal 2 hr after stimulation. Glutamate induced a greater increase in the AP-1 DNA-binding activity than did kainate. Supershift assays using antibodies directed against different members of the Fos and Jun protein families showed that the AP-1 complex in retinal neurons includes proteins of the Fos family, namely, Fra-2,
c-Jun
, and Jun D. The DNA-binding activity of the nuclear factor-kappaB transcription factor was not significantly changed upon excitotoxic stimulation with any agonist. Stimulation of glutamate receptors with 100 microM kainate or 100 microM glutamate for 2 min was sufficient to induce the activation of the extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK). Inhibition of the ERK activation with the MEK inhibitors U 0126 and PD 98059 increased the toxicity induced by kainate but was without effect on the toxicity induced by glutamate. These results indicate that, although stimulation with both glutamate receptor agonists increased ERK phosphorylation, only kainate-induced ERK activation correlates with the activation of a survival signaling pathway. Our results suggest that, in chick embryo retinal neurons, the signaling pathways that mediate excitotoxic cell death and neuroprotection are stimulus specific.
...
PMID:Differential postreceptor signaling events triggered by excitotoxic stimulation of different ionotropic glutamate receptors in retinal neurons. 1174 84
Effects of MK-801 (a NMDA receptor blocker) and CNQX (6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione; a non-NMDA receptor blocker) on several neurotoxic responses induced by kainic acid (KA) were examined in ICR mice. In a lethality test, intracerebroventricular (i.c.v.) pretreatment of MK-801 (1 microg), but not CNQX (0.5 microg), attenuated the time to lethality induced by KA (0.5 microg) administered i.c.v. In the memory test (a passive avoidance test), MK-801, but not CNQX, prevented the memory loss induced by KA (0.1 microg). The damage induced by KA (0.1 microg) administered i.c.v. in the hippocampus was markedly concentrated in the CA3 pyramidal neurons. Both MK-801 and CNQX blocked the pyramidal cell death in CA3 hippocampal region induced by KA. In the immunocytochemical study, KA dramatically increased the phosphorylated ERK (p-ERK) and decreased the phosphorylated CREB (p-CREB) in the hippocmapus. Both MK-801 and CNQX attenuated, in part, the increased p-ERK and the decreased p-CREB induced by KA. In addition, both MK-801 and CNQX partially reduced the increased c-Fos and
c-Jun
protein expression in hippocampus induced by KA. Our results suggest that both
NMDA
and non-
NMDA
receptors are involved in supraspinally administered KA-induced pyramidal cell death in CA3 region of hippocampus in the mouse and the p-ERK and the dephosphorylation of CREB protein may play an important role in CA3 region cell death of the hippocampus induced by KA administered supraspinally. Furthermore, c-Fos and
c-Jun
proteins may serve as third messengers responsible for CA3 pyramidal cell death induced by supraspinally administered KA.
...
PMID:Effects of MK-801 and CNQX on various neurotoxic responses induced by kainic acid in mice. 1252 Dec 95
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