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Query: UNIPROT:P10415 (
Bcl-2
)
33,771
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
This study was undertaken to investigate the molecular mechanisms underlying the neuroprotective actions of lithium against glutamate excitotoxicity with a focus on the role of proapoptotic and antiapoptotic genes. Long term, but not acute, treatment of cultured cerebellar granule cells with LiCl induces a concentration-dependent decrease in mRNA and protein levels of proapoptotic p53 and Bax; conversely, mRNA and protein levels of cytoprotective
Bcl-2
are remarkably increased. The ratios of
Bcl-2
/Bax protein levels increase by approximately 5-fold after lithium treatment for 5-7 days. Exposure of cerebellar granule cells to glutamate induces a rapid increase in p53 and Bax mRNA and protein levels with no apparent effect on
Bcl-2
expression. Pretreatment with LiCl for 7 days prevents glutamate-induced increase in p53 and Bax expression and maintains
Bcl-2
in an elevated state. Glutamate exposure also triggers the release of cytochrome c from the mitochondria into the cytosol.
Lithium
pretreatment blocks glutamate-induced cytochrome c release and cleavage of lamin B1, a nuclear substrate for caspase-3. These results strongly suggest that lithium-induced
Bcl-2
up-regulation and p53 and Bax down-regulation play a prominent role in neuroprotection against excitotoxicity. Our results further suggest that lithium, in addition to its use in the treatment of bipolar depressive illness, may have an expanded use in the intervention of neurodegeneration.
...
PMID:Long term lithium treatment suppresses p53 and Bax expression but increases Bcl-2 expression. A prominent role in neuroprotection against excitotoxicity. 1003 82
Recent advances in cellular and molecular biology have resulted in the identification of two novel, hitherto completely unexpected targets of lithium's actions, discoveries that may have a major impact on the future use of this unique cation in biology and medicine. Chronic lithium treatment has been demonstrated to markedly increase the levels of the major neuroprotective protein, bcl-2 in rat frontal cortex, hippocampus, and striatum. Similar lithium-induced increases in bcl-2 are also observed in cells of human neuronal origin, and are observed in rat frontal cortex at lithium levels as low as approximately 0.3 mmol/L.
Bcl-2
is widely regarded as a major neuroprotective protein, and genetic strategies that increase bcl-2 levels have demonstrated not only robust protection of neurons against diverse insults, but have also demonstrated an increase the regeneration of mammalian CNS axons.
Lithium
has also been demonstrated to inhibit glycogen synthase kinase 3 beta (GSK-3 beta), an enzyme known to regulate the levels of phosphorylated tau and beta-catenin (both of which may play a role in the neurodegeneration observed in Alzheimer's disease). Consistent with the increases in bcl-2 levels and inhibition of GSK-3 beta, lithium has been demonstrated to exert robust protective effects against diverse insults both in vitro and in vivo. These findings suggest that lithium may exert some of its long term beneficial effects in the treatment of mood disorders via underappreciated neuroprotective effects. To date, lithium remains the only medication demonstrated to markedly increase bcl-2 levels in several brain areas; in the absence of other adequate treatments, the potential efficacy of lithium in the long term treatment of certain neurodegenerative disorders may be warranted.
...
PMID:Lithium at 50: have the neuroprotective effects of this unique cation been overlooked? 1050 76
Treatment of rat pheochromocytoma cells (PC 12) cells with beta-amyloid peptide-(1-42) for 24 h induced a concentration-dependent decrease in cellular redox activity in the dose range of 1 to 20 microM. These effects were markedly attenuated by pretreatment with 2 mM LiCl for 7 days, whereas 1-day pretreatment was ineffective. Measurements of live and dead cells by double-staining with fluorescein diacetate and propidium iodide, respectively revealed that protracted lithium pretreatment attenuated PC 12 cell death induced by beta-amyloid-(1-42) and cerebellar granule cell death induced by beta-amyloid-(25-35). Preceding PC 12 cell death, beta-amyloid peptide elicited a slight decrease in protein levels of
Bcl-2
. Conversely, 7-day pretreatment with lithium resulted in an approximate doubling of
Bcl-2
protein levels in cells treated with or without beta-amyloid peptide-(1-42).
Lithium
-induced
Bcl-2
upregulation was temporally associated with the cytoprotective effects of this drug. Thus, lithium protection against beta-amyloid peptide neurotoxicity might involve
Bcl-2
overexpression, and lithium treatment for Alzheimer's disease should be reexamined.
...
PMID:beta-amyloid peptide-induced death of PC 12 cells and cerebellar granule cell neurons is inhibited by long-term lithium treatment. 1076 62
Lithium
is an effective drug for both treatment and prophylaxis of bipolar disorder. However, the mechanism of lithium action is still unknown. The inositol depletion hypothesis is supported by biochemical and behavioral data in rats, but primate inositol levels are higher than in rodents and may obviate the effects of depletion. Inhibition of 5HT autoreceptors by lithium is supported by biochemical and behavioral data in rats but would seem more related to lithium's antidepressant than to its antimanic or prophylactic effects.
Lithium
induces increases in levels of the anti-apoptotic factor
Bcl-2
. This effect could be most relevant for treatment of neurodegenerative disorders.
Lithium
inhibits glycogen synthase kinase-3, which is involved in a wide range of signal transduction pathways. However, this lithium effect occurs at high concentrations and may be more relevant for its toxic effect.
Lithium
in low concentrations induces accumulation of PAP, which affects several cellular processes including RNA processing. However, PAP phosphatase is present more in peripheral tissues than in brain. This lithium effect could explain some of its peripheral side effects. Chronic lithium administration upregulates glutamate reuptake and thus decreases glutamate availability in synapse. Glutamate is an excitatory neurotransmitter and its reduction could exert an antimanic effect. Biochemical and clinical experiments are necessary to determine the key mechanism of lithium efficacy in treatment and prophylaxis of affective disorders.
...
PMID:The mechanism of lithium action: state of the art, ten years later. 1138 81
Lithium
, the major drug used to treat manic depressive illness, robustly protects cultured rat brain neurons from glutamate excitotoxicity mediated by N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptors. The lithium neuroprotection against glutamate excitotoxiciy is long-lasting, requires long-term pretreatment and occurs at therapeutic concentrations of this drug. The neuroprotective mcchanisms involve inactivation of NMDA receptors, decreased expression of pro-apoptotic proteins, p53 and Bax, enhanced expression of the cytoprotective protein,
Bcl-2
, and activation of the cell survival kinase, Akt. In addition, lithium pretreatment suppresses glutamate-induced loss of the activities of Akt, cyclic AMP-response element binding protein (CREB), c-Jun - N-terminal kinase (JNK) and p38 kinase.
Lithium
also reduces brain damage in animal models of neurodegenerative diseases in which excitotoxicity has been implicated. In the rat model of stroke using middle cerebral artery occlusion, lithium markedly reduces neurologic deficits and decreases brain infarct volume even when administered after the onset of ischemia. In a rat Huntington's disease model, lithium significantly reduces brain lesions resulting from intrastriatal infusion of quinolinic acid, an excitotoxin. Our results suggest that lithium might have utility in the treatment of neurodegenerative disorders in addition to its common use for the treatment of bipolar depressive patients.
...
PMID:Neuroprotective effects of lithium in cultured cells and animal models of diseases. 1207 10
Lithium
has long been one of the primary drugs used to treat bipolar mood disorder. However, neither the etiology of this disease nor the therapeutic mechanism(s) of this drug is well understood. Several lines of clinical evidence suggest that lithium has neurotrophic actions. For example chronic lithium treatment increases the volume of gray matter and the content of N-acetyl-aspartate, a cell survival marker, in bipolar mood disorder patients (Moore et al., 2000). Moreover, treatment with this mood-stabilizer suppresses the decrease in the volume of the subgenual pre-frontal cortex found in bipolar patients (Drevets, 2001). To elucidate molecular mechanisms underlying the neuroprotective and neurotrophic actions of lithium, we employed a preparation of cultured cortical neurons prepared form embryonic rats. We found that treatment with therapeutic doses (0.2-1.2 mM) of lithium robustly protects cortical neurons from multiple insults, notably glutamate-induced excitotoxicity. The neuroprotection against glutamate excitotoxicity is time-dependent, requiring treatment for 5-6 days for maximal effect, and is associated with a reduction in NMDA receptor-mediated Ca2+ influx. The latter is correlated with a decrease in Tyrosine 1472 phosphorylation levels in the NR2B subunit of NMDA receptors and a loss of Src kinase activity which is involved in NR2B tyrosine phosphorylation. Neither the activity of total tyrosine protein kinase nor that of tyrosine protein phosphatase is affected by this drug, indicating the selectivity of the modulation.
Lithium
neuroprotection against excitotoxicity is inhibited by a BDNF-neutralizing antibody and K252a, a Trk antagonist.
Lithium
treatment time-dependently increases the intracellular level of BDNF in cortical neurons and activates its receptor, TrkB. The neuroprotection can be completely blocked by either heterozygous or homozygous knockout of the BDNF gene. These results suggest a central role of BDNF and TrkB in mediating the neuroprotective effects of this mood-stabilizer. Finally, long-term lithium treatment of cortical neurons stimulates the proliferation of their progenitor cells detected by co-labeling with BrdU and nestin.
Lithium
pretreatment also blocks the decrease in progenitor proliferation induced by glutamate, glucocorticoids and haloperidol, suggesting a role in CNS neuroplasticity. We used animal models to investigate further therapeutic potentials for lithium. In the MCAO/reperfusion model of stroke, we found that post-insult treatment with lithium robustly reduced infarct volume and neurological deficits. These beneficial effects were evident when therapeutic concentrations of lithium were injected at least up to 3 h after ischemic onset. The neuroprotection was associated with activation of heat-shock factor-1 and induction of heat-shock protein-70, a cytoprotective protein. In a rat excitotoxic model of Huntington's disease, the excitotoxin-induced loss of striatal medium-sized neurons was markedly reduced by lithium. This lithium protection was correlated with up-regulation of cytoprotective
Bcl-2
and down-regulation of apoptotic proteins p53 and Bax, and neurons showing DNA damage and caspase-3 activation. Taken together, our results provide a new insight into the molecular mechanisms involved in lithium neuroprotection against glutamate excitotoxicity. Moreover, these novel molecular and cellular actions might contribute to the neurotrophic and neuroprotective actions of this mood-stabilizer in patients, and could be related to its clinical efficacy for treating mood disorder patients. Clearly, mood-stabilizers may have expanded use for treating excitotoxin-related neurodegenerative diseases.
...
PMID:[Neuroprotective actions of lithium]. 1270 Dec 14
We assessed the ability of lithium to reduce neurodegeneration and to stimulate cell proliferation in a rat model of Huntington's disease in which quinolinic acid (QA) was unilaterally infused into the striatum. LiCl (0.5-3.0 mEq/kg) was injected subcutaneously 24 h before and 1 h after QA infusion. At 7 days after QA injection, lithium significantly diminished the loss of neurons immunostained for Neuronal Nuclei (NeuN) in the injured striatum, but failed to prevent the reduction of NADPH-diaphorase-positive striatal interneurons.
Lithium
also reduced the number of neurons showing DNA damage or activated caspase-3. This neuroprotection was associated with an upregulation of
Bcl-2
protein levels in the striatal tissue and an increase in the number and density of
Bcl-2
immunostaining in striatal neurons. Bromodeoxyuridinie (BrdU) labeling in the lithium-treated injured striatum revealed the presence of large numbers of proliferating cells near the QA-injection site, with a reduction of BrdU-labeled cells in the subventricular zone (SVZ). All BrdU-labeled cells in the SVZ and the majority of BrdU-labeled cells near the QA-injection site were negative for either NeuN or glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), suggesting that they are undifferentiated progenitor cells. However, a small number of BrdU-positive cells found in the QA-injected and lithium-treated striatum site were positive for either NeuN or GFAP. Our results suggest that lithium is neuroprotective in the QA-injection model of Huntington's disease not only due to its ability to inhibit apoptosis but also because it can stimulate neuronal and astroglial progenitor proliferation in the QA-injected striatum or their migration from the SVZ.
...
PMID:Short-term lithium treatment promotes neuronal survival and proliferation in rat striatum infused with quinolinic acid, an excitotoxic model of Huntington's disease. 1470 90
Lithium
has been reported to exert neuroprotective activity in several neuronal cell cultures and in vivo models against glutamate toxicity. Since this action was reported to be associated with alterations in the antiapoptotic
Bcl-2
family proteins, the effect of chronic lithium diet on the ability of the parkinsonism neurotoxin, N-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine (MPTP) to deplete striatal dopamine in mice was determined. Mice were fed for with a diet containing 1.1, 2.2, 3.3, and 4.4 g/kg lithium chloride (LiCl) for 4 weeks, during which time serum levels of lithium were monitored. The 3.3 g/kg lithium diet gave serum level value very similar to what is observed in lithium therapy in man and the 4.4 g/kg well above this. At the end of this period the mice received 24 mg/kg MPTP i.p. once daily for 3 days. A direct relation was established with the increase in serum lithium and its ability to prevent MPTP induced depletion of striatal dopamine (DA) and its metabolites DPOAC and HVA. With the diet containing the highest lithium concentration there was an almost complete prevention of striatal dopamine depletion and the reduction in tyrosine hydroxylase activity and protein and it prevented the increase in dopamine turnover (DOPAC + HVA/DA) normally observed in MPTP treatment.
Lithium
did not interfere with the metabolism of MPTP, or with its brain uptake, since, the level of its monoamine oxidase (MAO) B derived metabolite, MPP+, in the striata of lithium and non-lithium treated mice were almost identical. Striatal
Bcl-2
was significantly decreased, while Bax was increased in MPTP treated mice.
Lithium
treatment not only increased striatal
Bcl-2
in control mice, but also prevented its reduction as induced by MPTP, and an opposing effect was seen with Bax. The neuroprotective action of lithium in this model of Parkinson's disease has been attributed to its antiapoptotic activity which among other factors includes induction of
Bcl-2
and reduction of Bax.
...
PMID:Prevention of MPTP (N-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine) dopaminergic neurotoxicity in mice by chronic lithium: involvements of Bcl-2 and Bax. 1511 Oct 20
Lithium
has emerged as a neuroprotective agent efficacious in preventing apoptosis-dependent cellular death.
Lithium
neuroprotection is provided through multiple, intersecting mechanisms, although how lithium interacts with these mechanisms is still under investigation.
Lithium
increases cell survival by inducing brain-derived neurotrophic factor and thereby stimulating activity in anti-apoptotic pathways, including the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase/Akt and the mitogen-activated protein kinase pathways. In addition, lithium reduces pro-apoptotic function by directly and indirectly inhibiting glycogen synthase kinase-3beta activity and indirectly inhibiting N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA)-receptor-mediated calcium influx.
Lithium
-induced regulation of anti- and pro-apoptotic pathways alters a wide variety of downstream effectors, including beta-catenin, heat shock factor 1, activator protein 1, cAMP-response-element-binding protein, and the
Bcl-2
protein family.
Lithium
neuroprotection has a wide variety of clinical implications. Beyond its present use in bipolar mood disorder, lithium's neuroprotective abilities imply that it could be used to treat or prevent brain damage following traumatic injury, such as stroke, and neurodegenerative diseases such as Huntington's and Alzheimer's diseases.
...
PMID:Lithium neuroprotection: molecular mechanisms and clinical implications. 1548 56
The mood stabilizing drug lithium has emerged as a robust neuroprotective agent in preventing apoptosis of neurons. Long-term treatment with lithium effectively protects primary cultures of rat brain neurons from glutamate-induced, NMDA receptor-mediated excitotoxicity. This neuroprotection is accompanied by an inhibition of NMDA-receptor-mediated calcium influx, upregulation of anti-apoptotic
Bcl-2
, downregulation of pro-apoptotic p53 and Bax, and activation of cell survival factors.
Lithium
treatment antagonizes glutamate-induced activation of c-Jun-N-terminal kinase (JNK), p38 kinase, and AP-1 binding, which has a major role in cytotoxicity, and suppresses glutamate-induced loss of phosphorylated cAMP responsive element binding protein (CREB).
Lithium
also induces the expression of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) and subsequent activation TrkB, the receptor for BDNF, in cortical neurons. The activation of BDNF/TrkB signaling is essential for the neuroprotective effects of this drug. In addition, lithium stimulates the proliferation of neuroblasts in primary cultures of CNS neurons.
Lithium
also shows neuroprotective effects in rodent models of diseases. In a rat model of stroke, post-insult treatment with lithium or valproate, another mood stabilizer, at therapeutic doses markedly reduces brain infarction and neurological deficits. This neuroprotection is associated with suppression of caspase-3 activation and induction of chaperone proteins such as heat shock protein 70. In a rat model of Huntington's disease (HD) in which an excitotoxin is unilaterally infused into the striatum, both long- and short-term pretreatment with lithium reduces DNA damage, caspase-3 activation, and loss of striatal neurons. This neuroprotection is associated with upregulation of
Bcl-2
.
Lithium
also induces cell proliferation near the injury site with a concomitant loss of proliferating cells in the subventricular zone. Some of these proliferating cells display neuronal or astroglial phenotypes. These results corroborate our findings obtained in primary neuronal cultures. The neuroprotective and neurotrophic actions of lithium have profound clinical implications. In addition to its present use in bipolar patients, lithium could be used to treat acute brain injuries such as stroke and chronic progressive neurodegenerative diseases.
...
PMID:Neuroprotective and neurotrophic actions of the mood stabilizer lithium: can it be used to treat neurodegenerative diseases? 1558 3
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