Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P10415 (Bcl-2)
33,771 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The sensitivity of the developing central nervous system (CNS) to the deleterious effects of ethanol has been well documented, with exposure leading to a wide array of CNS abnormalities. Certain CNS regions are susceptible to ethanol during well-defined critical periods. In the neonatal rodent cerebellum, a profound loss of Purkinje cells is found when ethanol is administered early in the postnatal period [on postnatal days 4 or 5 (P4-5)], while this neuronal population is much less vulnerable to similar ethanol insult slightly later in the postnatal period (P7-9). Prior studies have shown that neurotrophic factors (NTFs) can be altered by ethanol exposure, and both in vitro and in vivo studies have provided evidence that such substances have the potential to protect against ethanol neurotoxicity. In the present study, it was hypothesized that depletion of an NTF shown to be important to cerebellar development would exacerbate ethanol-related effects within this region, when administration was confined to a normally ethanol-resistant ontogenetic period. For this study, brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) gene-deleted ("knockout") and wild-type mice were exposed to ethanol via vapor inhalation or to control conditions during the normally ethanol-resistant period (P7 and P8). Two hours after termination of exposure on P8, analyses were made of body weight, crown-rump length, and brain weight. In subsequent investigations, the number and density of Purkinje cells and the volume of cerebellar lobule I were determined, and the expression of anti- and pro-apoptotic proteins and the activities of endogenous antioxidants were assessed. It was found that the BDNF knockouts were significantly smaller than the wild-type animals, with smaller brain weights. Purkinje cell number and density was reduced in ethanol-treated knockout, but not wild-type animals, and the volume of lobule I was significantly decreased in the gene-deleted animals compared to wild-types, but was not further affected by ethanol treatment. The loss of Purkinje cells in the BDNF knockouts was accompanied by decreases in anti-apoptotic Bcl-xl and in phosphorylated (and hence inactivated) pro-apoptotic Bad, and reduced activity of the antioxidant glutathione reductase, while the antioxidant catalase was increased by ethanol treatment in this genotype. In the wild-type animals, anti-apoptotic Bcl-2 was decreased by ethanol treatment, but the pro-apoptotic c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) was markedly diminished by ethanol exposure, while the activity of the protective antioxidant superoxide dismutase (SOD) was significantly enhanced. These results suggest that neurotrophic factors have the capacity to protect against ethanol neurotoxicity, perhaps by regulation of expression of molecules critical to neuronal survival such as elements of the apoptosis cascade and protective antioxidants.
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PMID:Influence of ethanol on neonatal cerebellum of BDNF gene-deleted animals: analyses of effects on Purkinje cells, apoptosis-related proteins, and endogenous antioxidants. 1193 57

Colchicine has been shown to prevent kidney injury in chronic cyclosporine nephrotoxicity; however, the mechanisms of its action are undetermined. The purpose of this study was to clarify whether colchicine prevents cyclosporine-induced kidney injury by decreasing kidney-cell apoptosis. We also sought to determine whether such an antiapoptotic effect was related to Bcl-2/Bax protein and caspase3 activity. Adult male Sprague-Dawley rats kept on a salt-depleted diet (0.05% sodium) were treated daily for 28 days with cyclosporine (15 mg/kg in 1 mL/kg olive-oil vehicle), colchicine (30 microg/kg in 100% ethanol, diluted with sterile saline solution to a final concentration of 30 microg/mL), or both cyclosporine and colchicine. Kidney function, histomorphologic findings, in situ terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase (TdT)-mediated deoxyuridine triphosphate-biotin nick end-labeling assay, expressions of Bcl-2 and Bax proteins, and caspase-3 enzymatic activity were compared for the different treatment groups. Compared with the vehicle-treated rats, rats given cyclosporine showed a decline in creatinine clearance rate, an increase in serum creatinine concentration, tubulointerstitial fibrosis, and an increase in the number of apoptotic cells (all P <.01). Concomitant administration of colchicine significantly reversed all the above parameters (all P <.05). The decreased expression of Bcl-2 and the ratio of Bcl-2 to Bax protein seen in cyclosporine-treated rat kidneys were significantly increased after colchicine treatment, accompanying a suppression of caspase-3 activity (P <.05). Furthermore, the decreased apoptotic cell death was closely correlated with improved renal tubulointerstitial fibrosis (r = 0.583, P <.05). These findings strongly suggest that a renoprotective effect of colchicine on cyclosporine-induced nephrotoxicity is coassociated with a decrease in apoptotic cells.
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PMID:Colchicine decreases apoptotic cell death in chronic cyclosporine nephrotoxicity. 1206 35

This article represents the proceedings of a symposium at the 2001 Research Society on Alcoholism meeting in Montreal, Canada. The chairs were Alan Cahill and Carol C. Cunningham. The presentations were (1) Mitochondrial regulation of ethanol-induced hepatocyte apoptosis: possible involvement of proapoptotic Bcl-2 family protein Bax, by Masayuki Adachi and Hiromasa Ishii; (2) Effects of ethanol on mitochondrial reactive oxygen species production and oxidative protein modification, by Shannon M. Bailey; (3) Acute ethanol binges elicit widespread oxidative mitochondrial DNA damage and depletion: protective effects of antioxidants and inhibitors of ethanol metabolism, by Bernard Fromenty; and (4) Effects of chronic ethanol consumption upon hepatic mtDNA oxidative modification and depletion, by Alan Cahill and Adrian Davies.
Alcohol Clin Exp Res 2002 Jun
PMID:Effects of alcohol and oxidative stress on liver pathology: the role of the mitochondrion. 1206 61

Cell proliferation and apoptosis as well as cell-cell adhesion and communication are essential processes that assure cell survival, renewal and coordination. Since junctional proteins have a tumor suppressor activity, their immunohistochemical characterization has diagnostic and prognostic value. The purpose of this report is to review the role played by junctional and proliferation-related proteins in the salivary glands and to illustrate their immunohistochemical localisation in normal murine submandibular gland. Normal salivary gland tissue was obtained from normal adult male BALB/c mice. After immediate fixation in formalin and ethanol, the samples were immunohistochemically stained for E-cadherin (HECD-1), Bcl-2, Ki67 (MIB-1), connexin26 and connexin 32, beta-catenin and gamma-catenin. Their topological distribution and reactivity were evaluated by light microscopy. The nuclei of submandibular acinar cells exhibited low to moderate staining for Ki67, but no reaction was observed in ductal cells. Murine Bcl-2 was light to moderately expressed in the latero-basal domain of cells of submandibular acini but was only lightly expressed in striated and eosinophilic ducts. The lateral domain of acinar cells were heavily stained with anti-E-cadherin, while only low levels were expressed at the cellular surface of ducts. beta-Catenin was consistently and evenly distributed along the latero-apical boundaries of eosinophilic secretory duct cells as well as on the lateral domain of acinar cells. On the contrary, gamma-catenin was generally expressed at lower levels than beta-catenin, was not expressed in ductal cells and was only lightly stained on the lateral membranes of acinar cells. No expression of connexin 32 was observed in ducts but it was significantly expressed in a spotted pattern along the plasma membrane of acinic cells. Connexin 26 showed similar localization to that of connexin 32 but the staining was much more intense. Since these proteins have been reported to play key roles in maintaining homeostasis via control of cell growth, differentiation and death, their analysis in normal salivary tissue will hopefully contribute to the study of salivary tumorigenesis.
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PMID:Cellular basis and clinical implications of biological markers in salivary tissues: their topological distribution in murine submandibular gland. 1211 Mar 38

The developing central nervous system is extremely sensitive to ethanol, with well-defined temporal periods of vulnerability. Many brain regions are particularly susceptible to ethanol during the early neonatal period, corresponding to the human third trimester, which represents a dynamic period of growth and differentiation. For this study, neonatal rats were acutely exposed to ethanol or control conditions at a neonatal age when the developing striatum has been shown to be vulnerable to ethanol (postnatal day 3 [P3]), and at a later age (P14), when this developing region is relatively ethanol-resistant. We then analyzed basal levels of neurotrophic factors (NTFs), and ethanol-mediated changes in NTFs, apoptosis-related proteins, antioxidants, and reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation, which may underlie this differential temporal vulnerability. Sequential analyses were made following ethanol exposure on these two postnatal days, with assessments of NTFs nerve growth factor (NGF), brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), neurotrophin-3 (NT-3), and neurotrophin-4 (NT-4); apoptosis-related proteins Bcl-2, Bcl-xl, Bax, Akt and c-jun N-terminal kinase (JNK); antioxidants superoxide dismutase, glutathione reductase and catalase; and ROS. The results indicated that basal levels of BDNF, and to some degree NGF, were greater at the older age, and that ethanol exposure at the earlier age elicited considerably more pro-apoptotic and fewer pro-survival changes than those produced at the later age. Thus, differential temporal vulnerability to ethanol in this CNS region appears to be related to differences in both differential levels of protective substances (e.g. NTFs), and differential cellular responsiveness which favors apoptosis at the most sensitive age and survival at the resistant age.
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PMID:Effects of ethanol on neurotrophic factors, apoptosis-related proteins, endogenous antioxidants, and reactive oxygen species in neonatal striatum: relationship to periods of vulnerability. 1258 29

Clinical reports suggest that acute ethanol intoxication is often associated with lymphopenia. Previously, ethanol was reported to invoke thymocyte apoptosis. We studied the effect of ethanol on T cell apoptosis. In addition, we evaluated the molecular mechanism of ethanol-induced T cell apoptosis. Human T cells harvested from healthy subjects after an alcohol drinking binge showed enhanced T cell apoptosis (before, 0.4 +/- 0.2% versus after, 19.6 +/- 2.5% apoptotic lymphocytes/field; P < 0.001). In in vitro studies, ethanol in a concentration of 50 mm and higher enhanced the apoptosis of Jurkat cells. DNA isolated from ethanol-treated Jurkat cells displayed integer multiples of 180 base pairs. Ethanol decreased Jurkat cell expression of Bcl-2, whereas ethanol increased Jurkat cell expression of Bax. Jurkat cells treated with ethanol also showed translocation of cytochrome C into cytosol. Moreover, a caspase-9 inhibitor partially inhibited ethanol-induced Jurkat cell apoptosis. In in vivo studies, after binge drinking, T cell expression of Bcl-2 also decreased. In addition, binge drinking induced the cleavage of caspase-3, suggesting activation of caspase-3 in T cells. These results suggest that ethanol promotes T cell apoptosis through the activation of intrinsic or mitochondrial pathway.
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PMID:Ethanol promotes T cell apoptosis through the mitochondrial pathway. 1260 97

Alcoholic liver disease is associated with an increase in the number of necrotic and apoptotic liver parenchymal cells. Part of this injury is mediated by TNF-alpha. Ethanol exposure sensitizes cells to the cytotoxic effects of TNF-alpha. This may be due, in part, to the increased propensity of the mitochondria in ethanol-exposed cells to induction of mitochondrial permeability transition (MPT) by various agents, including the proapoptotic protein Bax. This idea is supported by the observation that increased cell death induced by TNF-alpha in ethanol-exposed cells was dependent on development of the MPT. In the present study, we elucidate the pathways through which ethanol exposure enhances TNF-alpha induction of the MPT and the resulting cytotoxicity. Specifically, ethanol-exposed cells display caspase-8- and Bid-independent cell killing during TNF-alpha treatment. Moreover, the ethanol-enhanced pathway is dependent on p38 MAPK signaling, which brings about caspase-3 activation, mitochondrial depolarization, accumulation of cytochrome c in the cytosol, and the translocation of Bax to the mitochondria. Additionally, ethanol-exposed cells display a blunting of TNF-alpha-induced Akt activation and Bcl-2 antagonist of cell death phosphorylation that may account, in part, for the increased sensitivity of the mitochondria to Bax-mediated damage.
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PMID:TNF-alpha-induced cell death in ethanol-exposed cells depends on p38 MAPK signaling but is independent of Bid and caspase-8. 1274 63

Skeletal muscle atrophy is a common feature in alcoholism that affects up to two-thirds of alcohol misusers, and women appear to be particularly susceptible. There is also some evidence to suggest that malnutrition exacerbates the effects of alcohol on muscle. However, the mechanisms responsible for the myopathy remain elusive, and some studies suggest that acetaldehyde, rather than alcohol, is the principal pathogenic perturbant. Previous reports on rats dosed acutely with ethanol (<24 h) have suggested that increased proto-oncogene expression (i.e., c-myc) may be a causative process, possibly via activating preapoptotic or transcriptional pathways. We hypothesized that 1) increases in c-myc mRNA levels also occur in muscle exposed chronically to alcohol, 2) muscle of female rats is more sensitive than that from male rats, 3) raising acetaldehyde will also increase c-myc, 4) prior starvation will cause further increases in c-myc mRNA expression in response to ethanol, and 5) other genes involved in apoptosis (i.e., p53 and Bcl-2) would also be affected by alcohol. To test this, we measured c-myc mRNA levels in skeletal muscle of rats dosed either chronically (6-7 wk; ethanol as 35% of total dietary energy) or acutely (2.5 h; ethanol as 75 mmol/kg body wt ip) with ethanol. All experiments were carried out in male Wistar rats (approximately 0.1-0.15 kg body wt) except the study that examined gender susceptibility in male and female rats. At the end of the studies, rats were killed, and c-myc, p53, and Bcl-2 mRNA was analyzed in skeletal muscle by RT-PCR with an endogenous internal standard, GAPDH. The results showed that 1) in male rats fed ethanol chronically, there were no increases in c-myc mRNA; 2) increases, however, occurred in c-myc mRNA in muscle from female rats fed ethanol chronically; 3) raising endogenous acetaldehyde with cyanamide increased c-myc mRNA in acute studies; 4) starvation per se increased c-myc mRNA levels and at 1 day potentiated the acute effects of ethanol, indicative of a sensitization response; 5) the only effect seen with p53 mRNA levels was a decrease in muscle of rats starved for 1 day compared with fed rats, and there was no statistically significant effect on Bcl-2 mRNA in any of the experimental conditions. The increases in c-myc may well represent a preapoptotic effect, or even a nonspecific cellular stress response to alcohol and/or acetaldehyde. These data are important in our understanding of a common muscle pathology induced by alcohol.
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PMID:Acute and chronic effects of alcohol exposure on skeletal muscle c-myc, p53, and Bcl-2 mRNA expression. 1287 71

A great deal of experimental evidence has accumulated in the past several decades, suggesting that polysaccharides have wide bioactivities. Cladonia furcata polysaccharide, CFP-2, a water-soluble lichenin with a mean Mr 7.6 x 10(4), was first obtained by 0.25 M NaOH solution extraction, ethanol precipitation, DEAE-cellulose, and Sephadex G-200 column chromatography. Gas chromatography of acid hydrolyzate of CFP-2 suggested that it was composed of D-glucose, D-galactose, and D-mannose in the molar ratios of 8:1:1. Periodate oxidation, Smith degradation, IR, and NMR spectroscopy analysis revealed that CFP-2 had a backbone consisting of alpha-(1-->3) and alpha-(1-->4)-linked D-glucopyranosyl residues substituted at O-6 with beta-(1-->6)-linked D-galactopyranosyl residue and alpha-(1-->6)-linked D-mannopyranosyl residue. CFP-2 was able to reduce viability of cultured HL-60 and K562 cells. The antiproliferative properties of CFP-2 appeared to be attributable to its induction of apoptotic cell death as determined by ultrastructural change, internucleosomal DNA fragmentation, and increased proportion of the subdiploid cell population. To elucidate molecular events in the apoptosis, protein expressions of Bcl-2, Bax, Fas, and FasL were measured by Western blotting using specific antibodies in HL-60 cells. The level of Bcl-2 remained largely unchanged, but the Bax, Fas, and FasL expression showed up-regulation. Moreover, the telomerase activity analyzed by TRAP-ELISA assay in HL-60 cells treated with CFP-2 decreased as compared with the untreated control cells. These results suggest that CFP-2 could have a possible cancer therapeutic potential.
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PMID:Structure determination, apoptosis induction, and telomerase inhibition of CFP-2, a novel lichenin from Cladonia furcata. 1288 Sep 47

Induction of apoptosis is an approach to suppress carcinogenesis. The effects of a 12-week treatment of female Sprague-Dawley rats with indole-3-carbinol (I3C), beta-naphthoflavone or vehicle (40% ethanol in corn oil), by oral gavages starting 3 weeks after initiation of mammary tumorigenesis with 7,12-dimethylbenz[alpha]anthracene, on apoptotic activities in the mammary adenocarcinomas were examined. Apoptotic cells in tumor sections were detected by terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated dUTP nick end labeling and quantitated by light microscopy and an Image-Plus Program. Activities of caspase-3, caspase-8 and caspase-9 were determined by colorimetric assays using the specific substrate and total tumor protein. There were no significant treatment-related effects on the numbers of apoptotic cells and caspase activities in the mammary adenocarcinomas. Likewise, protein expression levels of Bcl-2 and Bax genes in these tumors, determined by Western blot analysis, showed no treatment-related stimulation of apoptotic process. In the absence of tumorigenesis, the activities of caspase-3, caspase-8 and caspase-9 were increased up to approximately 3.6-fold in the mammary gland of rats treated with I3C at 5 or 25 mg/kg of body weight for 4 or 10 days. The I3C-effected induction of caspase-3 activity in the mammary gland was further confirmed by the cleavage of poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase. Treatment of rats with 3,3'-diindolylmethane, a major product of I3C in vivo, at the dose levels equimolar to those of I3C above, did not increase the caspase activities in the mammary gland. Thus, this I3C dimer does not seem to account for the increases of apoptotic activities in the mammary gland observed with I3C. The results suggest that increase of apoptosis in the mammary gland induced by I3C before initiation of tumorigenesis may contribute to suppression of tumor development.
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PMID:Effects of treatment of rats with indole-3-carbinol on apoptosis in the mammary gland and mammary adenocarcinomas. 1289 30


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