Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P42574 (caspase-3)
45,978 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Astrocytes are a major cellular component of the brain that are capable of intense proliferation and metabolic activity during diverse inflammatory brain diseases (such as multiple sclerosis, Alzheimer's dementia, tumor, HIV encephalitis, or prion disease). In this biological process, called reactive gliosis, astrocyte apoptosis is frequently observed and could be an important mechanism of regulation. However, the factors responsible for apoptosis in human astrocytes are poorly defined. Here, we report that short term cultured astrocytes derived from different brain regions express significant levels of CD95 at their surface. Only late passage astrocytes are sensitive to CD95 ligation using either CD95 mAb or recombinant CD95 ligand. Blocking experiments using caspase inhibitors with different specificities (DEVD-CHO, z-VAD-fmk, and YVAD-cmk), an enzymatic activity assay, and immunoblotting show that CPP32/caspase-3 play a prominent role in CD95-induced astrocyte death. In contrast, early passage astrocytes are totally resistant to death, but a significant increase in astrocytic IL-8 secretion (p < 0.001, by Wilcoxon's test for paired samples) is observed after CD95 triggering. Production of IL-8 contributes to the resistance of astrocytes to CD95 ligation. Furthermore, in the presence of IFN-gamma, resistant astrocytes became sensitive to CD95-mediated death. These data suggest that microenvironmental factors can influence the consequences of CD95 ligation on astrocytes. Therefore, we propose that CD95 expressed by human astrocytes plays a pivotal role in the regulation of astrocyte life and death and may be a key factor in inflammatory processes in the brain, such as reactive gliosis.
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PMID:CD95 (Fas/Apo-1) as a receptor governing astrocyte apoptotic or inflammatory responses: a key role in brain inflammation? 997 11

Neurodegenerative disorders such as prion diseases and Alzheimer's disease (AD) are characterized by neuronal dysfunction and accumulation of amyloidogenic protein. In vitro studies have demonstrated that these amyloidogenic proteins can induce cellular oxidative stress and therefore may contribute to the neuronal dysfunction observed in these illnesses. Although the neurotoxic pathways are not fully elucidated, recent studies in AD have demonstrated up-regulation of caspases in neurons treated with amyloid beta (Abeta) peptide, suggesting involvement of apoptotic processes. To examine the role of proapoptotic pathways in prion diseases we treated primary mouse cortical neurons with the toxic prion protein peptide PrP106-126 and measured caspase activation and annexin V binding. We found that PrP106-126 induced a rapid and marked elevation in caspase 3, 6, and 8-like activity in neuronal cultures. Increased annexin V binding was observed predominantly on cortical cell neurites in peptide-treated cultures. Interestingly, these effects were induced by sublethal (5-50 microM) or lethal (100-200 microM) concentrations of PrP106-126. Sublethal concentrations of PrP106-126 maintained elevated caspase activation for at least 10 days with no loss of cell viability. Abeta1-40 also up-regulated caspase 3 activity and annexin V binding at both sublethal (5 microM) and lethal (25 microM) concentrations. There were no changes to proapoptotic marker expression in cultures treated with scrambled PrP106-126 (200 microM) or Abeta1-28 (25 microM) peptides. These studies demonstrate that amyloidogenic peptides can induce prolonged activation of proapoptotic marker expression in cultured neurons even at sublethal concentrations. These effects could contribute to chronic neuronal dysfunction and increase susceptibility to additional metabolic insults in neurodegenerative disorders. If so, targeting of therapeutic strategies against neuronal caspase activation early in the disease course could be beneficial in AD and prion diseases.
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PMID:Sublethal concentrations of prion peptide PrP106-126 or the amyloid beta peptide of Alzheimer's disease activates expression of proapoptotic markers in primary cortical neurons. 1130 Jul 25

Transmissible spongiform encephalopathies are characterised by the transformation of the normal cellular prion protein (PrP(C)) into an abnormal isoform (PrP(TSE)). Previous studies have shown that N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor antagonists can inhibit glutathione depletion and neurotoxicity induced by PrP(TSE) and a toxic prion protein peptide, PrP106-126, in vitro. NMDA receptor activation is known to increase intracellular accumulation of Ca(2+), resulting in up-regulation of arachidonic acid (AA) metabolism. This can stimulate the lipoxygenase pathways that may generate a number of potentially neurotoxic metabolites. Because of the putative relationship between AA breakdown and PrP106-126 neurotoxicity, we investigated AA metabolism in primary cerebellar granule neuron cultures treated with PrP106-126. Our studies revealed that PrP106-126 exposure for 30 min significantly up-regulated AA release from cerebellar granule neurons. PrP106-126 neurotoxicity was mediated through the 5-lipoxygenase (5-LOX) pathway, as shown by abrogation of neuronal death with the 5-LOX inhibitors quinacrine, nordihydroguaiaretic acid, and caffeic acid. These inhibitors also prevented PrP106-126-induced caspase 3 activation and annexin V binding, indicating a central role for the 5-LOX pathway in PrP106-126-mediated proapoptosis. Interestingly, inhibitors of the 12-lipoxygenase pathway had no effect on PrP106-126 neurotoxicity or proapoptosis. These studies clearly demonstrate that AA metabolism through the 5-LOX pathway is an important early event in PrP106-126 neurotoxicity and consequently may have a critical role in PrP(TSE)-mediated cell loss in vivo. If this is so, therapeutic intervention with 5-LOX inhibitors may prove beneficial in the treatment of prion disorders.
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PMID:Involvement of the 5-lipoxygenase pathway in the neurotoxicity of the prion peptide PrP106-126. 1155 Feb 24

Misfolding of the prion protein yields amyloidogenic isoforms, and it shows exacerbating neuronal damage in neurodegenerative disorders including prion diseases. Pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide (PACAP) and vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) potently stimulate neuritogenesis and survival of neuronal cells in the central nervous system. Here, we tested these neuropeptides on neurotoxicity in PC12 cells induced by the prion protein fragment 106-126 [PrP (106-126)]. Concomitant application of neuropeptide with PrP(106-126) (5x10(-5) M) inhibited the delayed death of neuron-like PC12 cells. In particular, PACAP27 inhibited the neurotoxicity of PrP(106-126) at low concentrations (>10(-15) M), characterized by the deactivation of PrP(106-126)-stimulated caspase-3. The neuroprotective effect of PACAP27 was antagonized by the selective PKA inhibitor, H89, or the MAP kinase inhibitor, U0126. These results suggest that PACAP27 attenuates PrP(106-126)-induced delayed neurotoxicity in PC12 cells by activating both PKA and MAP kinases mediated by PAC1 receptor.
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PMID:PACAP protects neuronal PC12 cells from the cytotoxicity of human prion protein fragment 106-126. 1209 20

Copper toxicity contributes to neuronal death in Wilson's disease and has been speculatively linked to the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's and prion diseases. We examined copper-induced neuronal death with the goal of developing neuroprotective strategies. Copper catalyzed an increase in hydroxyl radical generation in solution, and the addition of 20 microM copper for 22 hours to murine neocortical cell cultures induced a decrease in ATP levels and neuronal death without glial death. This selective neuronal death was associated with activation of caspase-3 and was reduced by free radical scavengers and Z-Val-Ala-Asp fluoromethylketone, consistent with free radical-mediated injury leading to apoptosis. Pyruvate dehydrogenase is especially vulnerable to inhibition by oxygen free radicals, and the upstream metabolites, pyruvate, phosphoenolpyruvate, and 2-phosphoglycerate were elevated in cortical cells after toxic exposure to copper. One approach to protecting pyruvate dehydrogenase from oxidative attack might be to enhance binding to cofactors. Addition of thiamine, dihydrolipoic acid, or pyruvate reduced copper-induced neuronal death. To test efficacy in vivo, we added 1% thiamine to the drinking water of Long Evans Cinnamon rats, an animal model of Wilson's disease. This thiamine therapy markedly extended life span from 6.0 +/- 1.6 months to greater than 16 months.
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PMID:Cofactors of mitochondrial enzymes attenuate copper-induced death in vitro and in vivo. 1221 Jul 90

It is usually accepted that prion and amyloid-beta (A beta) peptides induce apoptotic cell death. However, the mechanisms that trigger neuronal death, induced by these amyloidogenic peptides, remain to be clarified. In the present study we analysed the neurotoxic effects of the synthetic prion and A beta peptides, PrP106-126 and A beta 25-35, in primary cultures of rat brain cortical cells. PrP106-126 and A beta 25-35 incubated at a concentration of 25 micro m for 24 h, did not affect cell membrane integrity, but decreased the metabolic capacity of the cells. The intracellular free Ca2+ concentration and reactive oxygen species levels increased significantly after 24 h treatment with PrP106-126 and A beta 25-35. Furthermore, these peptides (after 24 h exposure) also induced cytochrome c release from mitochondria and increased caspase-3-like activity. FK506, an inhibitor of the Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent phosphatase, calcineurin, was able to prevent cytochrome c release, caspase-3 activation and cell death induced by A beta 25-35 or PrP106-126 peptides. Taken together these data suggest that calcineurin is involved in A beta 25-35 and PrP106-126 neurotoxicity.
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PMID:Involvement of calcineurin in the neurotoxic effects induced by amyloid-beta and prion peptides. 1267 Mar 7

Prion protein (PrP(c)) is a cell membrane glycoprotein particularly abundant in the synapses. Prion diseases are characterized by the replacement of the normal PrPc by a protease-resistant, sheet-containing isoform (PrP(CJD), PrP(Sc), PrP(BSE)) that is pathogenic. Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) in humans, scrapie (Sc) in sheep and goats, and bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) in cattle are typical prion diseases. Classical CJD can be presented as sporadic, infectious or familial, whereas the new variant of CJD (nvCJD) is considered a BSE-derived human disease. Spongiform degeneration, glial proliferation, involving astrocytes and microglia, neuron loss and abnormal PrP deposition are the main neuopathological findings in most human and animal prion diseases. Yet recent data point to synapses as principal targets of abnormal PrP deposition. Loss of synapses is an early abnormality in experimental scrapie. Decreased expression of crucial proteins linked to exocytosis and neurotransmission, covering synaptophysin, synaptosomal-associated protein of 25,000 mol wt (SNAP-25), synapsins, syntaxins and Rab3a occurs in the cerebral cortex and cerebellum in sporadic CJD. Moreover, impairment of glomerular synapses and attenuation of parallel fiber pre-synaptic terminals on Purkinje cell dendrites is a cardinal consequence of abnormal PrP metabolism in CJD. Accumulation of synaptic proteins in the soma and axonal torpedoes of Purkinje cells suggests additional impairment of axonal transport. Increase in nuclear DNA vulnerability leading to augmented numbers of cells bearing nuclear DNA fragments is a common feature in the brains of humans affected by prion diseases examined at post-mortem, but also in archival biopsy samples processed with the method of in situ end-labeling of nuclear DNA fragmentation. This form of cell death is reminiscent of apoptosis found in experimental scrapie in rodents. It is not clear that all forms of cell death in human and animal prion diseases are due to apoptosis. Yet new observations have shown cleaved (active) caspase-3 (17 kDa), a main executioner of apoptosis, expressed in scattered cells in the brains of mice with experimental scrapie and in the cerebellum of patients with sporadic CJD. Together, these data suggest activation of the caspase pathway of apoptosis in human and animal prion diseases.
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PMID:Synaptic pathology and cell death in the cerebellum in Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease. 1287 83

We assessed the contribution of the cellular prion protein (PrPc) in the control of neuronal apoptosis by examining cell death in both human cells and murine primary cultured neurons. We first confirmed our previous finding that staurosporine-induced caspase activation is increased by PrPc overexpression in HEK293 cells. We show here that this phenotype is fully dependent on p53 and that the control of p53 activity by PrPc occurs at both transcriptional and post-transcriptional levels in human cells. Of most interest, we demonstrate that neuronal endogenous PrPc also controls a p53-dependent pro-apoptotic phenotype. Thus, DNA fragmentation and TUNEL (terminal deoxynucleotidyltransferase-mediated dUTP nick end-labeling)-positive cells were lower in primary cultured neurons derived from Zrch-1 mice embryos in which PrPc has been abrogated than in wild-type neurons. PrPc knock-out neurons also displayed drastically diminished caspase-3-like activity and immunoreactivity together with reduced p53 expression and transcriptional activity, a phenotype complemented in part by PrPc transfection. Interestingly, p53 expression was also reduced in the brain of adult Prnp-/- mice. Neuronal PrPc likely controls p53 at a post-transcriptional level because the deletion of cellular prion protein is accompanied by a higher Mdm2-like immunoreactivity and reduced phosphorylated p38 MAPK expression. We therefore propose that the physiological function of endogenous cellular prion could be to regulate p53-dependent caspase-3-mediated neuronal cell death. This phenotype likely occurs through up-regulation of p53 promoter transactivation as well as downstream by controlling p53 stability via Mdm2 expression.
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PMID:Primary cultured neurons devoid of cellular prion display lower responsiveness to staurosporine through the control of p53 at both transcriptional and post-transcriptional levels. 1457 Aug 92

Prion diseases are neurodegenerative disorders of the central nervous system of humans and animals, characterized by spongiform degeneration of the central nervous system, astrogliosis, and deposition of amyloid into the brain. The conversion of a cellular glycoprotein (prion protein, PrP(C)) into an altered isoform (PrP(Sc)) has been proposed to represent the causative event responsible for these diseases. The peptide corresponding to the residues 106-126 of PrP sequence (PrP106-126) is largely used to explore the neurotoxic mechanisms underlying the prion diseases. We investigated the intracellular signaling responsible for PrP106-126-dependent cell death in the SH-SY5Y human neuroblastoma cell line. In these cells, PrP106-126 treatment induced apoptotic cell death and the activation of caspase-3. The p38 MAP-kinase blockers (SB203580 and PD169316) prevented the apoptotic cell death evoked by PrP106-126 and Western blot analysis revealed that the exposure of the cells to the peptide induced p38 activation. However, whether the neuronal toxicity of PrP106-126 is caused by a soluble or fibrillar form of this peptide is still unknown. In this study, we correlated the structural state of this peptide with its neurotoxicity. We show that the two conserved glycines in position 114 and 119 prevent the peptide to assume a structured conformation, favoring its aggregation in amyloid fibrils. The substitution of both glycines with alanine residues (PrP106-126AA) generates a soluble nonamyloidogenic peptide, that retained its toxic properties when incubated with neuroblastoma cells. These data show that the amyloid aggregation is not necessary for the induction of the toxic effects of PrP106-126.
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PMID:Prion protein fragment 106-126 induces a p38 MAP kinase-dependent apoptosis in SH-SY5Y neuroblastoma cells independently from the amyloid fibril formation. 1503 1

In an effort to understand the complexity of genomic responses within selectively vulnerable regions after experimental brain injury, we examined whether single apoptotic neurons from both the CA3 and dentate differed from those in an uninjured brain. The mRNA from individual active caspase 3(+)/terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated biotinylated UTP nick end labeling [TUNEL(-)] and active caspase 3(+)/TUNEL(+) pyramidal and granule neurons in brain-injured mice were amplified and compared with those from nonlabeled neurons in uninjured brains. Gene analysis revealed that overall expression of mRNAs increased with activation of caspase 3 and decreased to below uninjured levels with TUNEL reactivity. Cell type specificity of the apoptotic response was observed with both regionally distinct expression of mRNAs and differences in those mRNAs that were maximally regulated. Immunohistochemical analysis for two of the most highly differentially expressed genes (prion and Sos2) demonstrated a correlation between the observed differential gene expression after traumatic brain injury and corresponding protein translation.
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PMID:Neuron-specific mRNA complexity responses during hippocampal apoptosis after traumatic brain injury. 1504 25


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