Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UNIPROT:P42574 (
caspase-3
)
45,978
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Few studies have characterised apoptosis in a brain injury model that causes a significant degree of diffuse
axonal
injury. Such characterisation is essential from a clinical viewpoint since diffuse
axonal
injury is a major component of human head injury. The present study therefore, examines the expression of active and proactive
caspase-3
, and the bax, bcl-2 and bcl-x members of the bcl-2 family, to characterise the temporal profile of apoptosis in a model of traumatic brain injury in rats that produces significant diffuse
axonal
injury. Pentobarbital anaesthetised male Sprague-Dawley rats were injured using the 2m impact-acceleration model of diffuse traumatic brain injury. After injury, diffuse trauma resulted in an increased bax expression followed by induction of
caspase-3
. The increase in
caspase-3
was simultaneous with an increase in anti-apoptotic bcl-2 expression. Bcl-x levels were increased after induction of
caspase-3
and the increased levels of bcl-x were sustained to the end of the 5-day observation period. Increased active
caspase-3
expression was associated with the appearance of TUNEL positive cells. These cells were detected in different brain regions at different times, with some regions showing no apoptotic cells until 3 days after injury. No TUNEL positive cells were detected at 7 and 14 days after injury. DNA electrophoresis confirmed that DNA fragmentation was maximal at 3 days after injury. Increased active
caspase-3
levels were also significantly correlated with increased bcl-2 levels (r=0.80; P<0.001) suggesting that the apoptotic cascade after diffuse traumatic brain injury is a carefully controlled cellular homeostatic response. Pharmacological manipulation of this balance may offer a therapeutic approach for preventing cell death and improving outcome after diffuse traumatic brain injury.
...
PMID:Temporal characterisation of pro- and anti-apoptotic mechanisms following diffuse traumatic brain injury in rats. 1238 17
Hydrocephalus may result in loss of tissue associated with neuronal degeneration,
axonal
damage, and reactive gliosis. The soluble form of the anti-apoptotic regulator Fas (sFas) and the pro-apoptotic factors soluble FasL (sFasL) and activated
caspase 3
were studied in the cerebrospinal fluid of infants with hydrocephalus. Fifteen preterm infants with posthemorrhagic hydrocephalus undergoing serial reservoir puncture and seven term or near-term infants with nonhemorrhagic hydrocephalus and shunt surgery were included in the study. Twenty-four age-matched patients with lumbar puncture for the exclusion of meningitis served as controls. Elevated levels of sFas were observed in infants with posthemorrhagic hydrocephalus [median (range), 131 ng/mL (51-279 ng/mL)] and in nonhemorrhagic hydrocephalus [127 ng/mL (35-165 ng/mL)]. sFas concentrations were highest in a subgroup of eight patients with posthemorrhagic hydrocephalus developing periventricular leukomalacia [164 ng/mL (76-227 ng/mL)]. In contrast, in 24 control infants, sFas was low, in 15 cases below detection limit (0.5 ng/mL) and in nine cases, 24 ng/mL (20-43 ng/mL). sFasL and activated
caspase 3
did not differ from control infants in all groups of patients. Increased intrathecal release of sFas in the cerebrospinal fluid of infants with hydrocephalus may serve as an indicator of brain injury from progressive ventricular dilatation.
...
PMID:Soluble Fas (CD95/Apo-1), soluble Fas ligand, and activated caspase 3 in the cerebrospinal fluid of infants with posthemorrhagic and nonhemorrhagic hydrocephalus. 1286
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.
...
PMID:Synaptic pathology and cell death in the cerebellum in Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease. 1287 83
The glial glutamate transporter EAAT2 is primarily responsible for clearance of glutamate from the synaptic cleft and loss of EAAT2 has been previously reported in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and Alzheimer's disease. The loss of functional EAAT2 could lead to the accumulation of extracellular glutamate, resulting in cell death known as excitotoxicity. However, it is still unknown whether it is a primary cause in the cascade leading to neuron degeneration or a secondary event to cell death. The goals of this study were to generate transgenic mice overexpressing EAAT2 and then to cross these mice with the ALS-associated mutant SOD1(G93A) mice to investigate whether supplementation of the loss of EAAT2 would delay or rescue the disease progression. We show that the amount of EAAT2 protein and the associated Na+-dependent glutamate uptake was increased about 2-fold in our EAAT2 transgenic mice. The transgenic EAAT2 protein was properly localized to the cell surface on the plasma membrane. Increased EAAT2 expression protects neurons from L-glutamate induced cytotoxicity and cell death in vitro. Furthermore, our EAAT2/G93A double transgenic mice showed a statistically significant (14 days) delay in grip strength decline but not in the onset of paralysis, body weight decline or life span when compared with G93A littermates. Moreover, a delay in the loss of motor neurons and their
axonal
morphologies as well as other events including
caspase-3
activation and SOD1 aggregation were also observed. These results suggest that the loss of EAAT2 may contribute to, but does not cause, motor neuron degeneration in ALS.
...
PMID:Increased expression of the glial glutamate transporter EAAT2 modulates excitotoxicity and delays the onset but not the outcome of ALS in mice. 1291 61
Long-term experimental diabetes may best model the prominent and irreversible sensory deficits of chronic human diabetic polyneuropathy. Whereas irretrievable loss of sensory neurons, if present, would be an unfortunate feature of the disease, systematic unbiased counting has indicated that sensory neurons survive long-term experimental diabetes. In this study, we examined whether incipient cell loss from apoptosis in chronic experimental diabetes might nonetheless be in process, or whether neurons somehow adapt to their chronic insults. We examined sensory neurons in L4 and L5 dorsal root ganglia of long-term experimental streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats using transferase-mediated dUTP nick-end labeling (TUNEL), 4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) staining of nuclear morphology, and electron microscopic appraisal of cell morphology. None provided any evidence for ongoing apoptosis. Despite this confirmation that sensory neurons survive, neurons had elevated expression of activated
caspase-3
in unique patterns that included their nuclei, cytoplasm, and proximal
axonal
segments. Bcl-2 expression, a marker of antiapoptosis signaling, was observed in similar numbers of diabetic and nondiabetic neurons. In contrast, diabetic sensory neurons had elevated expression of the DNA repair enzyme poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) in their nuclei, cytoplasm, and proximal
axonal
segments not overlapping with
caspase-3
localization. Diabetic sensory neurons also had an apparent rise in cytoplasmic labeling of nitrotyrosine, a marker of peroxynitrite toxicity reported to activate PARP.
...
PMID:Sensory neurons with activated caspase-3 survive long-term experimental diabetes. 1294 77
Mechanisms of oligodendrocyte death after spinal cord injury (SCI) were evaluated by T9 cord level hemisection in wild-type mice (C57BL/6J and Bax+/+ mice), Wlds mice in which severed axons remain viable for 2 weeks, and mice deficient in the proapoptotic protein Bax (Bax-/-). In the lateral white-matter tracts, substantial oligodendrocyte death was evident in the ipsilateral white matter 3-7 mm rostral and caudal to the hemisection site 8 d after injury. Ultrastructural analysis and expression of anti-activated
caspase-3
characterized the ongoing oligodendrocyte death at 8 d as primarily apoptotic. Oligodendrocytes were selectively preserved in Wlds mice compared with C57BL/6J mice at 8 d after injury, when severed axons remained viable as verified by antereograde labeling of the lateral vestibular spinal tract. However, 30 d after injury when the severed axons in Wlds animals were already degenerated, the oligodendrocytes preserved at 8 d were lost, and numbers were then equivalent to control C57BL/6J mice. In contrast, oligodendrocyte death was prevented at both time points in Bax-/- mice. When cultured oligodendrocytes were exposed to staurosporine or cyclosporin A, drugs known to stimulate apoptosis in oligodendrocytes, those from Bax-/- mice but not from Bax+/+ or Bax+/- mice were resistant to the apoptotic death. In contrast, the three groups were equally vulnerable to excitotoxic necrosis death induced by kainate. On the basis of these data, we hypothesize that the Wallerian degeneration of white matter axons that follows SCI removes
axonal
support and induces apoptotic death in oligodendrocytes by triggering Bax expression.
...
PMID:Enhanced oligodendrocyte survival after spinal cord injury in Bax-deficient mice and mice with delayed Wallerian degeneration. 1450 67
A myelin deficit in the cerebral white matter in infantile GM1 gangliosidosis is well established. Some have proposed this deficit to be secondary to
axonal
loss, while others argue for delayed or arrested myelination. We compared the frontal white and gray matter of two infants with GM1 gangliosidosis with four age-matched controls, using light microscopy with a quantitative analysis, immunohistochemistry, terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated nick-end labeling (TUNEL), and electron microscopy (EM). In the GM1 cases, we found a marked decrease in the number of oligodendrocytes (85% in case 1 and 50% in case 2) and myelin sheaths (80% and 40%), with a mild decrease in axons (20% and 10%). Ultrastructurally, some naked axons and dilated cisterns of rough endoplasmic reticulum (RER) in oligodendrocytes were observed. There was no appreciable storage in remaining oligodendrocytes, nor obvious neocortical neuronal loss. An immunohistochemical decrease in proteolipid protein (PLP) and a more profound deficiency of myelin basic protein (MBP) indicate that this lesion is not simply the result of a delay or arrest in myelination and suggests a "dying-back" oligopathy. TUNEL-positive oligodendrocytes correlated with activated
caspase-3
immunoreactivity. Amyloid precursor protein (APP)-immunoreactive aggregates were observed in proximal axons and meganeurites as well as in white matter axons. These data suggest that the myelin deficit results from a loss of oligodendrocytes and abnormal axoplasmic transport, perhaps consequent to massive neuronal storage of GM1.
...
PMID:The leukoencephalopathy of infantile GM1 gangliosidosis: oligodendrocytic loss and axonal dysfunction. 1504 87
Transgenic mice overexpressing human tau with the P301L mutation develop neurofibrillary tangles, extensive gliosis, adult-onset motor abnormalities, and neuronal loss in affected brain regions. We investigated the mechanism of neuronal cell death in this model of tauopathy. There was no evidence of neuronal apoptosis at any age; however, a population of oligodendorocytes was immunopositive for TUNEL and activated
caspase-3
. EM confirmed that these oligodendrocytes were undergoing apoptosis. These data suggest that classical apoptosis is not a major mechanism of neuronal cell death associated with the tau dysfunction in this mouse model; however, prominent white matter pathology in the spinal cord suggests that
axonal
degeneration in dying neurons causes oligodendrocytes to undergo apoptosis. It is unknown if loss of oligodendrocytes either through apoptosis or through the formation of intracellular tau lesions further contributes to the neurodegeneration seen in these mice.
...
PMID:Apoptosis in oligodendrocytes is associated with axonal degeneration in P301L tau mice. 1505 63
The ability of fimbria-fornix bilateral axotomy to elicit calpain and
caspase-3
activation in the rat septohippocampal pathway was determined using antibodies that selectively recognize either calpain- or caspase-cleaved products of the cytoskeletal protein alphaII-spectrin. Radioenzymatically determined choline acetyl transferase (ChAT) activity was elevated in the septum at day 5, but reduced in the dorsal hippocampus at days 3, 5 and 7, after axotomy. Prominent accumulation of calpain-, but not
caspase-3
-, cleaved spectrin proteolytic fragments was observed in both the septum and dorsal hippocampus 1-7 days after axotomy. ChAT-positive neuronal cell bodies in the septum also displayed calpain-cleaved spectrin indicating that calpain activation occurred in cholinergic septal neurons as a consequence of transection of the septohippocampal pathway. Calpain-cleaved alphaII-spectrin immunoreactivity was observed in cholinergic fibers coursing through the fimbria-fornix, but not in pyramidal neurons of the dorsal hippocampus, suggesting that degenerating cholinergic nerve terminals were the source of calpain activity in the dorsal hippocampus following axotomy. Accumulation of calpain-cleaved spectrin proteolytic fragments in the dorsal hippocampus and septum at day 5 after axotomy was reduced by i.c.v. administration of two calpain inhibitors. Calpain inhibition partially reduced the elevation of ChAT activity in the septum produced by transection but failed to decrease the loss of ChAT activity in the dorsal hippocampus following axotomy. These findings suggest that calpain activation contributes to the cholinergic cell body response and hippocampal
axonal
cytoskeletal degradation produced by transection of the septohippocampal pathway.
...
PMID:Effects of fimbria-fornix transection on calpain and choline acetyl transferase activities in the septohippocampal pathway. 1520 27
Plaques composed of amyloid beta (Abeta) have been found within days following brain trauma in humans, similar to the hallmark plaque pathology of Alzheimer's disease (AD). Here, we evaluated the potential source of this Abeta and long-term mechanisms that could lead to its production. Inertial brain injury was induced in pigs via head rotational acceleration of 110 degrees over 20 ms in the coronal plane. Animals were euthanized at 3 hours, 3 days, 7 days, and 6 months post-injury. Immunohistochemistry and Western blot analyses of the brains were performed using antibodies specific for amyloid precursor protein (APP), Abeta peptides, beta-site APP-cleaving enzyme (BACE), presenilin-1 (PS-1),
caspase-3
, and caspase-mediated cleavage of APP (CCA). Substantial co-accumulation for all of these factors was found in swollen axons at all time points up to 6 months following injury. Western blot analysis of injured brains confirmed a substantial increase in the protein levels of these factors, particularly in the white matter. These data suggest that impaired
axonal
transport due to trauma induces long-term pathological co-accumulation of APP with BACE, PS-1, and activated caspase. The abnormal concentration of these factors may lead to APP proteolysis and Abeta formation within the
axonal
membrane compartment.
...
PMID:Long-term accumulation of amyloid-beta, beta-secretase, presenilin-1, and caspase-3 in damaged axons following brain trauma. 1527 12
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>