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Query: UNIPROT:P42574 (
caspase-3
)
45,978
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Polyamines play critical roles during the development of brain neurons. In the present study we examined the effects of polyamines on neuronal apoptotic death. Rat cerebellar granule neurons were cultured in the presence of a depolarizing concentration of KCl (25 mM) in the medium. Apoptotic neuronal death was induced by changing the medium to that containing 5.6 mM KCl without serum. Spermine as well as spermidine and putrescine prevented cell death in a concentration-dependent manner with the order of potency being spermine > spermidine > putrescine. The effect of spermine was partially blocked by several NMDA-type glutamate receptor antagonists including (+)-5-methyl-10,11-dihydro-5H-dibenzo[a,d]cyclohepten-5,10-imine (MK-801). MK-801-sensitive neuroprotection by spermine depended on cell density. Activation of CPP32 (
caspase-3
/Yama/apopain)-like proteolytic activity, a key mediator of apoptosis, precedes neuronal death, and polyamines prevented an increase in this activity. These results demonstrate that polyamines protect neurons from apoptotic cell death through both
NMDA receptor
-dependent and -independent mechanisms, acting upstream from the activation of CPP32-like protease(s).
...
PMID:Polyamines prevent apoptotic cell death in cultured cerebellar granule neurons. 912 10
Cerebellar granule neurons cultured in medium containing a physiological concentration of KCl (5 mM) undergo apoptosis. The cells can be rescued by the in vitro addition of NMDA. The protective effect of NMDA is thought to reflect the in vivo innervation of developing cerebellar granule neurons by glutamatergic afferents. In the current work, we investigated the mechanism of the anti-apoptotic (protective) effect of NMDA. NMDA treatment reduced
caspase-3
-like activity in cerebellar granule neurons, and the time course and concentration dependence of the protective effect of NMDA mirrored the ability of NMDA to induce brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) expression. Furthermore, a Trk receptor antagonist, K252a, as well as a blocking antibody to BDNF, attenuated the protective effects of both NMDA and BDNF. These results suggest that NMDA-induced BDNF expression mediates the anti-apoptotic effect of NMDA. The protective effects of NMDA and BDNF were reduced by inhibitors of the phosphatidylinositol 3'-OH kinase (PI 3-kinase) signal transduction cascade (wortmannin and LY29004) but not by a MAP kinase kinase (MEK) inhibitor (PD98059) or a protein kinase A inhibitor (Rp-cAMPS). BDNF increased phosphorylation of Akt, a target of PI 3-kinase, and NMDA also induced Akt phosphorylation, but only after an exposure that was long enough to induce BDNF expression. Furthermore, ethanol, which interferes with
NMDA receptor
function, inhibited the NMDA-induced increase in BDNF levels but did not block the protective effect of BDNF. These findings further support the role of BDNF in the anti-apoptotic effect of NMDA in cerebellar granule neurons and suggest that the NMDA-BDNF interaction may play a key role in in vivo cerebellar granule neuron development, as well as in the deleterious effects of ethanol on the developing cerebellum.
...
PMID:Brain-derived neurotrophic factor mediates the anti-apoptotic effect of NMDA in cerebellar granule neurons: signal transduction cascades and site of ethanol action. 1021 87
The effect of N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor antagonists on cell viability was studied in rat primary cortical cells. NMDA antagonists [MK-801 and 2-amino-5-phosphonovalerate (APV)] induced cell shrinkage, nuclear condensation or fragmentation, and internucleosomal DNA fragmentation. Treatment of cells with MK-801 (an NMDA antagonist) for 1-2 days induced apoptotic cell death in a dose-dependent manner (1 nM to 10 microM). NMDA (25 microM), however, inhibited the MK-801 (0.1 microM)-induced apoptotic cell death. MK-801 and APV decreased the concentration of intracellular calcium ion. Activation of
caspase-3
was accompanied by MK-801-induced cell death in a dose-dependent manner, and an inhibitor of
caspase-3
reduced the cell death. Further, cycloheximide (0.2 microg/ml) completely protected the cells from MK-801-induced apoptotic cell death and
caspase-3
activation. Insulin-like growth factor I completely attenuated MK-801-induced apoptotic cell death and
caspase-3
activation. These results demonstrated that the moderate
NMDA receptor
activation is probably involved in the survival signal of the neuron.
...
PMID:Apoptotic cell death and caspase-3 activation induced by N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor antagonists and their prevention by insulin-like growth factor I. 1042 50
Ethanol significantly enhances cell death of differentiated rat cerebellar granule neurons on culture in a serum-free medium containing a depolarizing concentration of KCl (25 mM), 5 microM MK-801 (an
NMDA receptor
antagonist), and 20-200 mM ethanol for 1-4 days. Cell death augmented by ethanol was concentration- and time-dependent with neurons displaying hallmark apoptotic morphology and DNA fragmentation that correlated with the activation of cytosolic
caspase-3
. Inclusion of 5 microM MK-801 or 100 microM glycine in culture media did not alter rates of cell death indicating ethanol toxicity is mediated via an
NMDA receptor
-independent pathway. Preincubation with 50 microM gangliosides GM1, GD1a, GD1b or GT1b for 2 h, or preincubation with 10 microM LIGA20 (a semisynthetic GM1 with N-dichloroacetylsphingosine) for 10 min, attenuated
caspase-3
activity and ethanol-induced cell death. Data show native gangliosides and a synthetic derivative are potently neuroprotective in this model of ethanol toxicity, and potentially serve as useful probes to further unravel the mechanisms relevant to neuronal apoptosis.
...
PMID:Gangliosides attenuate ethanol-induced apoptosis in rat cerebellar granule neurons. 1048 81
Whereas excessive activation of the
NMDA receptor
may contribute to ischemic neuronal injury, physiologic activation may promote neuronal survival under certain conditions. Consistently, it has recently been shown that NMDA antagonists induce apoptosis of central neurons in immature rats. In the present study, we have examined whether NMDA antagonists induce neuronal apoptosis also in a culture condition. Exposure of cortical cultures (DIV 10-13) to MK-801 (1-10 microM) for 48 h resulted in death of about 30-40% of neurons. Similar neuronal death was induced by exposure to other NMDA antagonists, D-AP5 and dextromethorphan. The neuronal death was dependent on the culture age; MK-801 induced much less neuronal death in younger (DIV 7) and older (DIV 16-19) cultures. The NMDA antagonist-induced neuronal death was accompanied by cell body shrinkage, nuclear fragmentation, and cleavage/activation of
caspase-3
. Furthermore, it was attenuated by cycloheximide and zVAD-fmk, indicating that the death occurred mainly by the apoptosis mechanism. As in several other apoptosis models, high-potassium medium blocked the NMDA antagonist-induced apoptosis, which was reversed by voltage-gated calcium channel blockers. The present results demonstrate that NMDA antagonists induce neuronal apoptosis in cortical culture, consistent with the findings obtained in immature rats. Since the activation of the voltage-gated calcium channels attenuated the NMDA antagonist-induced apoptosis, it may be another example of the "calcium set point hypothesis."
...
PMID:N-Methyl-D-aspartate receptor blockade induces neuronal apoptosis in cortical culture. 1048 81
Neuronal necrosis and apoptosis occur after traumatic brain injury (TBI) in animals and contribute to subsequent neurological deficits. In contrast, relatively little apoptosis is found after mechanical injury in vitro. Because in vivo trauma models and clinical head injury have associated cerebral ischemia and/or metabolic impairment, we transiently impaired cellular metabolism after mechanical trauma of neuronal-glial cultures by combining 3-nitropropionic acid treatment with concurrent glucose deprivation. This produced greater neuronal cell death than mechanical trauma alone. Such injury was attenuated by the
NMDA receptor
antagonist dizocilpine (MK801). In addition, this injury significantly increased the number of apoptotic cells over that accruing from mechanical injury alone. This apoptotic cell death was accompanied by DNA fragmentation, attenuated by cycloheximide, and associated with an increase in
caspase-3
-like but not caspase-1-like activity. Cell death was reduced by the pan-caspase inhibitor BAF or the
caspase-3
selective inhibitor z-DEVD-fmk, whereas the caspase-1 selective inhibitor z-YVAD-fmk had no effect; z-DEVD-fmk also reduced the number of apoptotic cells after combined injury. Moreover, cotreatment with MK801 and BAF resulted in greater neuroprotection than either drug alone. Thus, in vitro trauma with concurrent metabolic inhibition parallels in vivo TBI, showing both NMDA-sensitive necrosis and
caspase-3
-dependent apoptosis.
...
PMID:Combined mechanical trauma and metabolic impairment in vitro induces NMDA receptor-dependent neuronal cell death and caspase-3-dependent apoptosis. 1050 92
Excessive activation of glutamate receptors mediates neuronal death in a number of neurodegenerative diseases. The intracellular signaling pathways that mediate this type of neuronal death are only partly understood. Following mild insults via
NMDA receptor
activation, central neurons undergo apoptosis, but with more fulminant insults, necrosis intervenes. Caspases are important in several forms of apoptosis in vivo and in vitro. Previously, we have demonstrated that caspases are important in excitotoxicity-mediated apoptosis of cerebrocortical neurons. To determine the possible activation of
caspase-3
in NMDA-induced neuronal apoptosis, we used an affinity-labeling technique: Biotinylated N-acetyl-Asp-Glu-Val-Asp-aldehyde (DEVD.CHO) preferentially labels conformationally active
caspase-3
-like proteases, allowing us to visualize affinity-labeled caspases with streptavidin-fluorescein isothiocyanate under confocal microscopy. NMDA-induced apoptosis of cerebrocortical neurons was associated with a time-dependent increase in conformationally active
caspase-3
-like proteases. The activation of caspases was apparent within 20 min of NMDA stimulation and was localized primarily in the cytosol. However, following incubation of neurons for 18-24 h, conformationally active
caspase-3
-like proteases were also detectable in nuclei. Double labeling with propidium iodide to detect chromatin condensation indicated that affinity-labeled
caspase-3
-like proteases were specifically expressed in apoptotic cells. To further confirm this, we used an antibody specific for the conformationally active fragment of
caspase-3
and found largely concordant results. Moreover, preincubation with DEVD.CHO prevented NMDA-induced apoptosis. Our results suggest that
caspase-3
-like proteases play a major role in excitotoxin-induced neuronal apoptosis.
...
PMID:Involvement of activated caspase-3-like proteases in N-methyl-D-aspartate-induced apoptosis in cerebrocortical neurons. 1061 14
The excitotoxic response of striatal neurons to NMDA and non-
NMDA receptor
agonists involves the nuclear translocation of transcription factor nuclear factor-kappa B (NF-kappaB) due to IkappaB-alpha degradation. Resultant augmentation in c-Myc, p53 and cyclin D1 expression presages the apoptotic-like destruction of these cells in vivo. To differentiate molecular events triggered by intrastriatally injected quinolinic acid (QA, 60 nmol) and kainic acid (KA, 2.5 nmol), we compared the effects of a
caspase-3
inhibitor (DEVD.CHO, 8 microgram intrastriatally), a free radical scavenger (OPC-14117; 600 mg/kg, orally) and ethanol (2.14-8.6 micromol, intrastriatally or 25-100 mmol/kg, orally) on changes induced by these glutamatergic agonists on NF-kappaB cascade components and the apoptotic death of rat striatal neurons in vivo. The results indicated that the QA-induced degradation of IkappaB-alpha is almost totally mediated by a
caspase-3
-dependent mechanism, while KA-induced IkappaB-alpha degradation is only partially dependent on
caspase-3
. OPC-14117 attenuated the effects of QA but not KA on IkappaB-alpha degradation, suggesting that oxidative stress contributes to the QA- but not the KA-induced degradation of IkappaB-alpha. In contrast, ethanol inhibited the KA- but not the QA-induced degradation of IkappaB-alpha and the ensuing DNA fragmentation and loss of striatal GABAergic neurons. It would now appear that NF-kappaB activation in striatal neurons induced by NMDA or KA receptor stimulation involves different biochemical mechanisms. Since excitotoxicity associated with NF-kappaB activation may contribute to neuronal degenerative disorders such as Huntington's disease, a more detailed understanding of biochemical events underlying ionotrophic glutamate receptor-stimulated cell death may assist in the discovery of alternative approaches to interdicting the deleterious consequences of excitotoxic insult.
...
PMID:NMDA and non-NMDA receptor-stimulated IkappaB-alpha degradation: differential effects of the caspase-3 inhibitor DEVD.CHO, ethanol and free radical scavenger OPC-14117. 1071 66
In cultured cerebrocortical neurons, mild excitotoxic insults or staurosporine result in apoptosis. We show here that N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) receptor-mediated, but not staurosporine-mediated, apoptosis is preceded by depolarization of the mitochondrial membrane potential (Deltapsi(m)) and ATP loss. Both insults, however, release cytochrome c (Cyt c) into the cytoplasm. What prompts mitochondria to release Cyt c and the mechanism of release are as yet unknown. We examined the effect of inhibition of the adenine nucleotide translocator (ANT), a putative component of the mitochondrial permeability transition pore. Inhibition of the mitochondrial ANT with bongkrekic acid (BA) prevented
NMDA receptor
-mediated apoptosis of cerebrocortical neurons. Concomitantly, BA prevented Deltapsi(m) depolarization, promoted recovery of cellular ATP content, and blocked
caspase-3
activation. However, in the presence of BA, Cyt c was still released. Because BA prevented NMDA-induced
caspase-3
activation and apoptosis, the presence of Cyt c in the neuronal cytoplasm is not sufficient for the induction of caspase activity or apoptosis. In contrast to these findings, BA was ineffective in preventing staurosporine-induced activation of caspases or apoptosis. Additionally, staurosporine-induced, but not NMDA-induced, apoptosis was associated with activation of caspase-8. These results indicate that, in cerebrocortical cultures, excessive
NMDA receptor
activation precipitates neuronal apoptosis by means of mitochondrial dysfunction, whereas staurosporine utilizes a distinct pathway.
...
PMID:Mitochondrial and extramitochondrial apoptotic signaling pathways in cerebrocortical neurons. 1081 98
Elimination of neurons produced in excess naturally occurs during brain development through programmed cell death. Among the many survival factors affecting this process, a role for neurotransmitters acting on specific receptors has been suggested. We have performed an in vivo pharmacological blockade of the N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) subtype of glutamate receptors, using the competitive
NMDA receptor
antagonist CGP 39551 at developmental stages corresponding to those at which a survival dependence on the stimulation of this receptor has been demonstrated for cerebellar granule neurons explanted in culture (typically from postnatal day 7 to postnatal day 11 or 13). We were able to demonstrate an increased level of DNA fragmentation in the cerebellum of the treated rats. At the P11 stage, in particular, the fragmented DNA extracted from the cerebellum of CGP 39551-treated pups showed a clear laddering of nucleosomal fragments after agarose-gel electrophoresis. Accordingly, in situ TUNEL technique showed a remarkable increase of cells positive for nucleosomal DNA fragmentation, particularly in the inner granular layer of the cerebellum of treated rats at P11 stage. Therefore, the natural rate of apoptotic elimination of cerebellar granule neurons is considerably enhanced under conditions of pharmacological blockade of the
NMDA receptor
, thus demonstrating, for the first time in vivo, a clear survival dependence of these neurons upon the stimulation of the
NMDA receptor
. Concomitantly with the increased rate of apoptotic elimination of granule neurons, the activity of two death proteases of the caspase family, in particular of
caspase 3
and caspase 1 at a lower extent, was remarkably increased in the cerebellum of the treated rats. On the contrary, a marker related to the normal differentiation process of granule neurons, the enzyme ornithine decarboxylase, was strongly decreased in its activity in the cerebellum of treated rat pups.
...
PMID:Blockade of the NMDA receptor increases developmental apoptotic elimination of granule neurons and activates caspases in the rat cerebellum. 1099 95
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