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)

Ascorbate is a reducing agent, but it is also known to oxidize cellular components under specific conditions. The mechanism of this oxidative action, however, is not well established. Ascorbate treatment increased lipid peroxide content in PC12 cells, but did not increase quantities of lipid peroxide when homogenates of PC12 cells were treated with ascorbate, suggesting that cellular integrity is required for ascorbate to generate lipid peroxidation. However, dehydroascorbate increased lipid peroxide production in both intact PC12 cells and the cell homogenates. These differential effects of ascorbate and dehydroascorbate on intact cells versus homogenates suggest that the dehydroascorbate in cytosol induces an oxidative stress. Ascorbate in culture medium is rapidly oxidized to dehydroascorbate, which is transported into cells by a glucose transporter (GLUT). The GLUT antagonists wortmannin and cytochalasin B, or a high concentration of glucose, blocked (14)C uptake (from ascorbate) in a time-dependent manner and suppressed lipid peroxide production in PC12 cells. These observations support the concept that ascorbate is oxidized to dehydroascorbate, which is transported into cells via GLUT. The dehydroascorbate induces oxidative stress. The oxidative stress triggered apoptosis according to ceramide production, caspase-3 activation, and TUNEL. We have concluded that ascorbate is taken up after oxidation to dehydroascorbate via a "dehydroascorbate transporter" (GLUT), and the dehydroascorbate generates an oxidative stress which triggers apoptosis. These studies have significant implications for conditions under which a high concentration of ascorbate in a tissue is released during a period of hypoxia (e.g., stroke) and taken up during a reperfusion period as dehydroascorbate. Inhibiting uptake of dehydroascorbate may offer novel therapeutic strategies to alleviate brain damage during a reperfusion period.
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PMID:Involvement of oxidative stress in ascorbate-induced proapoptotic death of PC12 cells. 1135 56

Any modulation of the activity of polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNL) is a potential cause of the altered immune response in uremia. Because the level of glycation products is elevated in uremic sera and peritoneal effluents, the effect of glycated proteins on essential functions and on apoptosis of PMNL was investigated. Proteins from sera of healthy donors were incubated with and without glucose. The extent of early glycation was monitored by boronate chromatography and the fructosamine assay. The formation of late glycation products was assessed by fluorescence spectroscopy and Western blotting that used a specific antibody for imidazolone, a late glycation product. With the addition of aminoguanidine, a compound that inhibits the formation of late but not of early glycation products, protein samples with early glycation only were obtained. Glucose-modified proteins increased chemotaxis and activation of the 2-deoxy-D-glucose uptake of PMNL obtained from healthy donors, compared with those of unmodified proteins. PMNL apoptosis, assessed by morphologic changes, by detecting DNA strand breaks, and by measurement of the caspase 3 activity, was increased in the presence of glucose-modified serum proteins. It was found that the formation of late glycation products is necessary for the effect on PMNL chemotaxis. In contrast, early glycation of proteins is responsible for the increase of glucose uptake and apoptosis. It was concluded that the accumulation of glycated proteins in uremic sera and peritoneal fluid may contribute to the diminished immune function observed in uremia, by modulation of essential PMNL functions and acceleration of PMNL apoptosis.
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PMID:Glucose-modified proteins modulate essential functions and apoptosis of polymorphonuclear leukocytes. 1137 51

Because high D-glucose significantly stimulates endothelial cell death, we examined the molecular mechanisms of high D-glucose-induced endothelial apoptosis. Treatment of human aortic endothelial cells with high D-glucose (25 mmol/l), but not mannitol and L-glucose, resulted in a significant decrease in cell number and a significant increase in apoptotic cells as compared with a physiological concentration (5 mmol/l). Interestingly, high D-glucose treatment significantly increased bax protein, accompanied by translocation of bax protein from cytosol to mitochondria-enriched heavy membrane fraction. In contrast, the expression and distribution of bcl-2 protein were not altered by high D-glucose. In addition, the activity of caspase-3 proteases was increased after exposure to high glucose, whereas caspase inhibitors prevented endothelial cell death induced by high D-glucose. On the other hand, p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) was markedly phosphorylated and showed sustained phosphorylation after stimulation. A specific inhibitor of p38 MAPK, SB 203580, and the overexpression of kinase-inactive p38 MAPK significantly attenuated cell death induced by high D-glucose in human aortic endothelial cells, whereas at 6 h after high D-glucose treatment, SB 203580 and overexpression of kinase-inactive p38 MAPK did not attenuate caspase-3 activation induced by high D-glucose. Importantly, caspase inhibitors significantly attenuated the sustained phosphorylation of p38 MAPK induced by high D-glucose. Thus, we finally focused the MAPK kinase (MEK) kinase 1 (MEKK1) to further examine the cross-talk between p38 MAPK and the bax-caspase proteases pathway. High D-glucose treatment induced MEKK1 cleavage, whereas caspase inhibitors significantly attenuated the cleavage. Importantly, kinase-inactive MEKK1 also blocked the phosphorylation of p38 MAPK induced by high D-glucose. Here, we demonstrated that high D-glucose induced apoptosis in human endothelial cells through activation of the bax-caspase proteases pathway and through phosphorylation of p38 MAPK mediated by MEKK1. Phosphorylation of p38 MAPK downstream of the bax-caspase pathway may play a pivotal role in endothelial apoptosis mediated by high D-glucose.
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PMID:Phosphorylation of p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase downstream of bax-caspase-3 pathway leads to cell death induced by high D-glucose in human endothelial cells. 1137 50

1. The role of endogenous nitric oxide in rat hepatocyte functionality and survival in cell culture was examined. Towards this aim, cytochrome P450 activities (CYP1A1/2, 2B1, 2A1, 2C11, 2D1, 2E1 and 3A1), liver-specific metabolic functions and cell survival were comparatively evaluated in hepatocytes isolated from the male Sprague-Dawley rat and/or cultured in control conditions or in the presence of N-omega-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (NAME), an inhibitor of nitric oxide synthesis. 2. Suppression of nitric oxide production by NAME paralleled a substantial preservation of hepatocyte phenotype in culture. The presence of NAME was particularly important during isolation and/or the 6-24h culture. By 24h, beneficial effects were evident in parameters particularly unstable in culture (glycogen content, P450), whereas no changes were produced in well-preserved functions (glucose, urea and albumin synthesis, glutathione, drug-conjugating enzymes). 3. Long-term treatment of hepatocytes with NAME also produced a reduction in caspase 3 activation and in the percentage of spontaneous apoptotic cells, and an increase in cell survival and transcriptional activity as shown by attached cellular protein content and the protein-DNA ratio respectively. 4. In conclusion, inhibition of early endogenous nitric oxide formation is an efficient procedure for obtaining hepatocyte cultures with stable expression of differentiated functions, high cell survival and few signs of cell senescence.
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PMID:Role of endogenous nitric oxide in liver-specific functions and survival of cultured rat hepatocytes. 1149 87

Recent studies suggest that the degree of mitochondrial dysfunction in cerebral ischemia may be an important determinant of the final extent of tissue injury. Although loss of mitochondrial membrane potential (psi(m)), one index of mitochondrial dysfunction, has been documented in neurons exposed to ischemic conditions, it is not yet known whether astrocytes, which are relatively resistant to ischemic injury, experience changes in psi(m) under similar conditions. To address this, we exposed cortical astrocytes cultured alone or with neurons to oxygen-glucose deprivation (OGD) and monitored psi(m) using tetramethylrhodamine ethyl ester. Both neurons and astrocytes exhibited profound loss of psi(m) after 45-60 min of OGD. However, although this exposure is lethal to nearly all neurons, it is hours less than that needed to kill astrocytes. Astrocyte psi(m) was rescued during OGD by cyclosporin A, a permeability transition pore blocker, and (G)N-nitro-arginine, a nitric oxide synthase inhibitor. Loss of mitochondrial membrane potential in astrocytes was not accompanied by depolarization of the plasma membrane. Recovery of astrocyte psi(m) after reintroduction of O(2) and glucose occurred over a surprisingly long period (>1 hr), suggesting that OGD caused specific, reversible changes in astrocyte mitochondrial physiology beyond the simple lack of O(2) and glucose. Decreased psi(m) was associated with a cyclosporin A-sensitive loss of cytochrome c but not with activation of caspase-3 or caspase-9. Our data suggest that astrocyte mitochondrial depolarization could be a previously unrecognized event early in ischemia and that strategies that target the mitochondrial component of ischemic injury may benefit astrocytes as well as neurons.
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PMID:The mitochondrial permeability transition pore and nitric oxide synthase mediate early mitochondrial depolarization in astrocytes during oxygen-glucose deprivation. 1151 50

An excessive activation of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) has been proposed to play a key role in post-ischemic neuronal death. We examined the neuroprotective effects of the PARP inhibitors benzamide, 6(5H)-phenanthridinone, and 3,4-dihydro-5-[4-1(1-piperidinyl)buthoxy]-1(2H)-isoquinolinone in three rodent models of cerebral ischemia. Increasing concentrations of the three PARP inhibitors attenuated neuronal injury induced by 60 min oxygen-glucose deprivation (OGD) in mixed cortical cell cultures, but were unable to reduce CA1 pyramidal cell loss in organotypic hippocampal slices exposed to 30 min OGD or in gerbils following 5 min bilateral carotid occlusion. We then examined the necrotic and apoptotic features of OGD-induced neurodegeneration in cortical cells and hippocampal slices using biochemical and morphological approaches. Cortical cells exposed to OGD released lactate dehydrogenase into the medium and displayed ultrastructural features of necrotic cell death, whereas no caspase-3 activation nor morphological characteristics of apoptosis were observed at any time point after OGD. In contrast, a marked increase in caspase-3 activity was observed in organotypic hippocampal slices after OGD, together with fluorescence and electron microscope evidence of apoptotic neuronal death in the CA1 subregion. Moreover, the caspase inhibitor Z-VAD-FMK reduced OGD-induced CA1 pyramidal cell loss. These findings suggest that PARP overactivation may be an important mechanism leading to post-ischemic neurodegeneration of the necrotic but not of the apoptotic type.
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PMID:Poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase inhibitors attenuate necrotic but not apoptotic neuronal death in experimental models of cerebral ischemia. 1152 47

Recent studies have suggested that apoptosis and necrosis share common features in their signaling pathway and that apoptosis requires intracellular ATP for its mitochondrial/apoptotic protease-activating factor-1 suicide cascade. The present study was, therefore, designed to examine the role of intracellular energy levels in determining the form of cell death in cardiac myocytes. Neonatal rat cardiac myocytes were first incubated for 1 h in glucose-free medium containing oligomycin to achieve metabolic inhibition. The cells were then incubated for another 4 h in similar medium containing staurosporine and graded concentrations of glucose to manipulate intracellular ATP levels. Under ATP-depleting conditions, the cell death caused by staurosporine was primarily necrotic, as determined by creatine kinase release and nuclear staining with ethidium homodimer-1. However, under ATP-replenishing conditions, staurosporine increased the percentage of apoptotic cells, as determined by nuclear morphology and DNA fragmentation. Caspase-3 activation by staurosporine was also ATP dependent. However, loss of mitochondrial transmembrane potential (DeltaPsi(m)), Bax translocation, and cytochrome c release were observed in both apoptotic and necrotic cells. Moreover, cyclosporin A, an inhibitor of mitochondrial permeability transition, attenuated staurosporine-induced apoptosis and necrosis through the inhibition of DeltaPsi(m) reduction, cytochrome c release, and caspase-3 activation. Our data therefore suggest that staurosporine induces cell demise through a mitochondrial death signaling pathway and that the presence of intracellular ATP favors a shift from necrosis to apoptosis through caspase activation.
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PMID:Important role of energy-dependent mitochondrial pathways in cultured rat cardiac myocyte apoptosis. 1155 54

Glycation of plasma proteins may contribute to an excess risk of developing atherosclerosis in patients with diabetes mellitus. Although it is believed that high-density lipoprotein (HDL) is nonenzymatically glycosylated at an increased level in diabetic individuals, little is known about a possible linkage between glycated HDL and endothelium dysfunction in diabetes. This study set out to clarify whether glucose-modified HDL affects the function of endothelial cells by examining the apoptosis of cultured human aortic endothelial cells (HAECs) exposed to a glycated-oxidized HDL (gly-ox-HDL) prepared in vitro. Incubation of HAECs with 100 microg/ml of gly-ox-HDL for 48 h showed apoptotic features, such as cell shrinkage, membrane blebbing, and concentration and fragmentation of the nucleus, and the degree of apoptosis was dose-dependent on the glucose used in the preparation of gly-ox-HDL. Stimulation of HAECs with gly-ox-HDL elicited a marked increase in caspase 3 activity and the expressions of active caspase 3 and caspase 9, whereas concomitant treatment with a caspase 3 inhibitor significantly blocked gly-ox-HDL-induced apoptosis of HAECs. The release of cytochrome c into cytosols markedly increased in HAECs during the treatment with gly-ox-HDL. The increased expressions of Bax and Bad were detected in HAECs incubated for 24 h with gly-ox-HDL, but gly-ox-HDL failed to interfere with the expression of Bcl-2 and Bcl-x. Moreover, in vitro experiments with HDL (gly-HDL) glycated in the presence of 2 mM EDTA and Cu(2+)-oxidized HDL suggested that the apoptotic effect of gly-ox-HDL on endothelial cells might be due to an additional oxidative modification of gly-HDL. Taken altogether, additional oxidation of HDL under hyperglycemic conditions may induce endothelial apoptosis through a mitochondrial dysfunction, following the deterioration of vascular function.
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PMID:Glycated high-density lipoprotein induces apoptosis of endothelial cells via a mitochondrial dysfunction. 1156 54

Mutations in presenilin-1 (PS-1) have been shown to increase neuronal vulnerability to apoptosis in Alzheimer's disease (AD). Par-4 is a novel cell-death-promoting protein associated with neuronal degeneration in AD. We previously reported that, in transfected PC12 cells, Par-4 seems to be involved in the neurodegenerative mechanisms of PS-1 mutations. However, direct evidence for a necessary role of Par-4 in the pathogenic mechanisms of PS-1 mutations in neurons is lacking. We recently generated and characterized presenilin-1 mutant M146V knock-in (PS-1 M146V KI) mice. We now report that expression of the mutant presenilin-1 in these mice induces early and exaggerated increase in Par-4 expression in hippocampal neurons following glucose deprivation (an insult relevant to the pathogenesis of AD). Importantly, inhibition of Par-4 expression by antisense par-4 oligonucleotide treatment counteracts neuronal apoptosis promoted by M146V mutation of PS-1. Mitochondrial dysfunction and caspase-3 activity induced by glucose deprivation was significantly exacerbated in hippocampal neurons expressing the mutant PS-1. Antisense par-4 treatment largely suppressed the adverse effect of the mutant PS-1 on mitochondrial dysfunction and caspase activation. These results provide evidence in hippocampal neurons that Par-4 is involved in the neurodegenerative cascades associated with PS-1 M146V mutation by acting relatively early in the apoptotic process before mitochondrial dysfunction and caspase-3 activation. Since levels of Par-4 are significantly increased in the hippocampus in human AD brain, the results of this study may provide a significant link between aberrant induction of Par-4 and the neurodegenerative cascades promoted by PS-1 mutations in AD.
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PMID:Aberrant induction of Par-4 is involved in apoptosis of hippocampal neurons in presenilin-1 M146V mutant knock-in mice. 1157 14

Glucose uptake and metabolism inhibit hypoxia-induced apoptosis in a variety of cell types, but the underlying molecular mechanisms remain poorly understood. In the present study, we explore hypoxia-mediated cell death pathways in Jurkat cells in the presence and absence of extracellular glucose. In the absence of extracellular glucose, hypoxia caused cytochrome c release, caspase 3 and poly(ADP-ribose)polymerase cleavage, and DNA fragmentation; this apoptotic response was blocked by the caspase 9 inhibitor z-LEHD-FMK. The presence of extracellular glucose during hypoxia prevented cytochrome c release and activation of caspase 9 but did not prevent apoptosis in Jurkat cells. In these conditions, overexpression of the caspase 8 inhibitor v-FLIP prevented hypoxia-mediated cell death. Thus hypoxia can stimulate two apoptotic pathways in Jurkat cells, one dependent on cytochrome c release from mitochondria that is prevented by glucose uptake and metabolism, and the other independent of cytochrome c release and resulting from activation of the death receptor pathway, which is accelerated by glucose uptake and metabolism.
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PMID:Hypoxia induces apoptosis via two independent pathways in Jurkat cells: differential regulation by glucose. 1160 Apr 23


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