Search Results
Results 401 - 450 of 1166
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Heese Klaus - - 2007
The protein family of the neurotrophins (NTs) comprises structurally and functionally related molecules such as nerve growth factor (NGF) which influences the proliferation, differentiation, survival and death of neuronal cells. In addition to their established functions for cell survival, NTs also mediate higher brain activities such as learning and memory. ...
Shavali Shaik - - 2006
Parkinson's disease (PD) is characterized by progressive degeneration of dopaminergic neurons and a substantial decrease in the neurotransmitter dopamine in the nigro-striatal region of the brain. Increased markers of oxidative stress, activated microglias and elevated levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines have been identified in the brains of patients with PD. Although ...
Yu Luyang - - 2006
Focal cerebral ischemia causes apoptosis in neural cells during the postischemia period. TNF is critically involved in such neuronal apoptosis mediated by caspase pathways. A20 can inhibit TNF-induced apoptosis in many cell types. However, little work has been carried out in central nervous system. In the present study, gene transfer ...
Myers Robert R - - 2006
Neuroinflammation is a proinflammatory cytokine-mediated process that can be provoked by systemic tissue injury but it is most often associated with direct injury to the nervous system. It involves neural-immune interactions that activate immune cells, glial cells and neurons and can lead to the debilitating pain state known as neuropathic ...
Kooncumchoo Patcharee - - 2006
The exact molecular mechanism of progressive loss of neuromelanin containing nigrostriatal dopaminergic neurons in Parkinson's disease (PD) remains unknown, yet evidence suggests that iron might play an important role in PD pathology. In this study we have determined the neuroprotective role of coenzyme Q(10) (CoQ(10)) in ironinduced apoptosis in cultured ...
Maser Edmund - - 2006
Oxidative stress is increasingly implicated in neurodegenerative disorders including Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, Huntington's, and Creutzfeld-Jakob diseases or amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. Reactive oxygen species seem to play a significant role in neuronal cell death in that they generate reactive aldehydes from membrane lipid peroxidation. Several neuronal diseases are associated with increased accumulation ...
Hanrott Katharine - - 2006
6-Hydroxydopamine is a neurotoxin commonly used to lesion dopaminergic pathways and generate experimental models for Parkinson disease, however, the cellular mechanism of 6-hydroxydopamine-induced neurodegeneration is not well defined. In this study we have explored how 6-hydroxydopamine neurotoxicity is initiated. We have also investigated downstream signaling pathways activated in response to ...
Frank-Cannon Tamy C - - 2007
Nitric oxide (NO) is a diffusible messenger molecule produced primarily by neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) in the central nervous system. Both nNOS expression and NO production are regulated by calcium ions. Leaner and tottering mice carry a mutation in the pore forming subunit (alpha1A) of P/Q-type voltage-gated calcium ion ...
Henshall David C - - 2005
Epilepsy is a common, chronic neurologic disorder characterized by recurrent unprovoked seizures. Experimental modeling and clinical neuroimaging of patients has shown that certain seizures are capable of causing neuronal death. Such brain injury may contribute to epileptogenesis, impairments in cognitive function or the epilepsy phenotype. Research into cell death after ...
Wu Lingyun - - 2005
Over the last decade, studies have unraveled many aspects of endogenous production and physiological functions of carbon monoxide (CO). The majority of endogenous CO is produced in a reaction catalyzed by the enzyme heme oxygenase (HO). Inducible HO (HO-1) and constitutive HO (HO-2) are mostly recognized for their roles in ...
R?hl A - - 2005
The enteric nervous system is composed of both neurons and glia. Recent evidence indicates that enteric glia-which vastly outnumber enteric neurons-are actively involved in the control of gastrointestinal functions: they contain neurotransmitter precursors, have the machinery for uptake and degradation of neuroligands, and express neurotransmitter-receptors which makes them well suited ...
Marchetti Bianca - - 2005
Alterations in developmental programming of neuroendocrine and immune system function may critically modulate vulnerability to various diseases. In particular, genetic factors, including gender, may interact with early life events such as exposure to hormones, endotoxins, or neurotoxins, thereby influencing disease predisposition and/or severity, but little is known about the role ...
Whittlesey Kevin J - - 2006
Biomaterials capable of efficient gene delivery provide a fundamental tool for basic and applied research models, such as promoting neural regeneration. We developed a system for the encapsulation and sustained release of plasmid DNA complexed with a cationic lipid and investigated their efficacy using in vitro models of neurite outgrowth. ...
Takadera Tsuneo - - 2006
Recent data suggest that anesthetic drugs cause neurodegeneration during development. Ketamine is frequently used in infants and toddlers for elective surgeries. The purpose of this study is to determine whether glycogen synthase kinase-3 (GSK-3) is involved in ketamine-induced apoptosis. Ketamine increased apoptotic cell death with morphological changes which were characterized ...
Florent Sabrina - - 2006
A growing body of evidence supports the notion that soluble oligomers of amyloid-beta (Abeta) peptide interact with the neuronal plasma membrane, leading to cell injury and inducing death-signalling pathways that could account for the increased neurodegeneration occurring in Alzheimer's disease (AD). Docosahexaenoic acid (DHA, C22:6, n-3) is an essential polyunsaturated ...
Fan Guo-Hua - - 2005
The pathology of Parkinson's disease (PD) is characterized by the progressive loss of dopaminergic (DA) neurons in the substantia nigra. However, the pathogenesis of PD remains unclear. Heat shock proteins (HSPs) have many functions, including inhibition of apoptosis and necrosis, protection from oxidative stress, and maintenance of the mitochondrial membrane ...
Culmsee Carsten - - 2005
Delayed neuronal cell death occurring hours after reperfusion is a hallmark of ischemic stroke and a primary target for neuroprotective strategies. In the present study, we investigated whether apoptosis-inducing factor (AIF), a caspase-independent proapoptotic protein, is responsible for neuronal cell death after glutamate toxicity and oxygen-glucose deprivation (OGD) in vitro ...
da Silveira A B M - - 2005
Neuronal lesions have been considered the hallmark of chagasic megaesophagus, but the role of Trypanosoma cruzi and the participation of the inflammatory cells in this process are still debated. In the present study we counted neurons in the oesophagus from patients with and without megaesophagus and further examined these samples ...
Lin Chi-Hsin - - 2005
An in vitro ischemia model was used to determine the molecular mechanisms responsible for the ischemia-induced neuronal cell death. Additionally, the neuronal protective mechanisms of anti-apoptotic drugs against ischemia were also evaluated. In this study, the primary neuronal cultures were incubated in an anoxic chamber with 95% of N2 and ...
Wen Tong-Chun - - 2005
Cardiotrophin-1 (CT-1) was initially defined as a mediator of cardiomyocyte hypertrophy. Additional studies have showed that CT-1 enhanced survival of differentiated cardiac muscle cells and inhibited cardiac myocyte apoptosis after serum deprivation or cytokine stimulation. Moreover, CT-1 has recently been shown to act as a neuroregulatory cytokine in the peripheral ...
Ariel Amiram - - 2005
Docosahexaenoic acid, a major omega-3 fatty acid in human brain, synapses, retina, and other neural tissues, displays beneficial actions in neuronal development, cancer, and inflammatory diseases by mechanisms that remain to be elucidated. In this study we found, using lipid mediator informatics employing liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry, that (10,17S)-docosatriene/neuroprotectin D1, ...
Choi Sang H - - 2005
The present study shows that activation of microglial NADPH oxidase and production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) is associated with thrombin-induced degeneration of nigral dopaminergic neurons in vivo. Seven days after thrombin injection in the rat substantia nigra (SN), tyrosine hydroxylase immunocytochemistry showed a significant loss of nigral dopaminergic neurons. ...
Schuettauf Frank - - 2005
BACKGROUND: Premature neuronal cell death is a feature of numerous central nervous system and eye diseases, including glaucoma. Neurons (including retinal ganglion cells, RGCs) are protected by several neurotrophic factors, among those the IL-6 family of cytokines. Lately, a novel member of the IL-6 family of cytokines has been identified ...
Liu Xuhong - - 2005
Neuronal injury in manganism is accompanied by activation of astroglia within the basal ganglia that is thought to increase production of inflammatory mediators such as nitric oxide (NO). The present studies postulated that astroglial-derived NO mediates neuronal apoptosis induced by manganese (Mn) and pro-inflammatory cytokines. Pheochromocytoma (PC12) cells differentiated with ...
Kaul Siddharth - - 2005
Alpha-synuclein is a pre-synaptic protein of unknown function that has been implicated in the pathogenesis of Parkinson's disease (PD). Recently, we demonstrated that 1-methyl-4-phenylpyridinium (MPP+) induces caspase-3-dependent proteolytic activation of PKCdelta, which subsequently contributes to neuronal apoptotic cell death in mesencephalic dopaminergic neuronal cells. In the present study, we examined ...
Kuehn Markus H - - 2005
Various cellular and molecular mechanisms that may lead to apoptotic cell death of retinal ganglion cells in glaucoma are discussed. These cellular mechanisms include neurotrophic factor deprivation, ischemia, glial cell activation, glutamate excitotoxicity, and abnormal immune response. Based on experimental and clinical evidence, the rationale for various neuroprotective strategies is ...
Matyja Ewa - - 2005
There is increasing evidence that so-called "autophagic cell death" participates in cell degeneration in certain pathological conditions. Autophagy might be involved in some neurodegenerative processes, including lateral amyotrophic sclerosis (SLA). The exact mechanism leading to progressive motor neuron (MN) loss remains unclear, but glutamate-mediated mechanism is thought to be responsible. ...
Chu Charleen T - - 2005
Parkinson's disease is a debilitating neurodegenerative disease characterized by loss of midbrain dopaminergic neurons. These neurons are particularly sensitive to the neurotoxin 1-methyl-4-phenylpyridinium (MPP+), the active metabolite of 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine (MPTP), which causes parkinsonian syndromes in humans, monkeys and rodents. Although apoptotic cell death has been implicated in MPTP/MPP+ toxicity, several ...
Joung Insil - - 2005
p62 is a ubiquitously expressed phosphoprotein that interacts with a number of signaling molecules and a major component of neurofibrillary tangles in the brain of Alzheimer's disease patients. It has been implicated in important cellular functions such as cell proliferation and anti-apoptotic pathways. In this study, we have addressed the ...
Levenson Cathy W - - 2005
The genetically programmed form of neuronal death known as apoptosis plays a role in many neurodegenerative diseases including Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and Huntington's disease. Apoptosis is also responsible for neuronal death after traumatic brain and spinal cord injury, stroke, and seizures. The cognitive and behavioral ...
Wang Xijin - - 2005
Increasing evidences suggest that activated microglia may contribute to neurodegeneration in Parkinson's disease (PD). In the present study, primary ventral mesencephalic (VM) cultures from E14 rats and PC12 cells were utilized as in vitro models to examine the mechanism underlying microglia activation mediated dopaminergic neurodegeneration. Using lipopolysaccharide (LPS) (1-100 ng/ml) ...
Bachis Alessia - - 2005
Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1)-positive patients in the late phase of infection develop AIDS dementia complex, an array of neurological complications that include extrapyramidal symptoms, cognitive impairments, and psychiatric disturbances. Brains of these patients exhibit brain injury. The HIV-1 envelope glycoprotein 120 (gp120) has been suggested to be a ...
Nunnari Giuseppe - - 2005
The use of exogenous cytokines is part of translational immune-antiretroviral approaches to induce immune reconstitution and possibly eliminate the persistence of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) in virally suppressed infected individuals on highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART). Recently, our laboratories demonstrated that interleukin-7 (IL-7) has significant efficiency in stimulating ...
Höke Ahmet - - 2005
Many illnesses that affect the peripheral nervous system (PNS) lead to distal axonal degeneration rather than loss of neuronal cell bodies. Strategies aimed at promoting survival of injured neurons (i.e., preventing cell death) may not be applicable to many PNS illnesses. We have developed in vitro and in vivo animal ...
Ezaki Yasuyuki - - 2005
The accumulation of damage caused by oxidative stress exacerbates cell death in many neurodegenerative diseases. We evaluated the mechanism of neuronal cell death raised by glutamate-induced toxicity, using the immortalized mouse hippocampal cell line HT-22. Our results showed that vitamin E prevented glutamate-induced cell death, accompanied by the decline of ...
Bernardino L - - 2005
The aim of the present review is to discuss the evidence supporting the hypothesis that inflammation and neurogenesis play an important role in temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) and to examine whether possible strategies that involve the pharmacological manipulation of inflammation/neurogenesis can lead to the development of novel approaches for the ...
Araújo Inês M - - 2005
Dysregulation of intracellular calcium homeostasis is a common hallmark of degenerating neurons, at some point in the cell death cascade. It is also a feature of many neurological disorders, including stroke, epilepsy, trauma and several neurodegenerative diseases, commonly associated with the phenomenon of excitotoxicity. Nitric oxide (NO) is a signaling ...
Bessis Alain - - 2005
Tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNFalpha) is a prototypic inflammatory cytokine up-regulated in most if not all neurodegenerative diseases. Many studies have reported variable roles in the adult or pathological brain. In contrast, the implication of TNFalpha in developmental neuronal cell death has been well documented in few studies. In sympathetic and ...
Stirling David P - - 2005
Several studies have shown that minocycline, a semisynthetic, second-generation tetracycline derivative, is neuroprotective in animal models of central nervous system trauma and several neurodegenerative diseases. Common to all these reports are the beneficial effects of minocycline in reducing neural inflammation and preventing cell death. Here, the authors review the proposed ...
Gahm C - - 2005
BACKGROUND: The pathophysiological mechanisms of secondary neurological injury after traumatic brain injury are complex. Post-traumatic biochemical reactions include parenchymal inflammation, free radical production, increased intracellular calcium and lipid peroxidation and nitric oxide production. The relative importance of each mechanism is unknown in brain contusions. This study was undertaken to investigate ...
Jiang Yuying - - 2005
Apoptosis is an essential process during normal neuronal development. Approximately one-half of the neurons produced during neurogenesis die before completion of CNS maturation. To characterize the role of the inhibitor of apoptosis gene, survivin, during neurogenesis, we used the Cre-loxP-system to generate mice lacking survivin in neuronal precursor cells. Conditional ...
Cozzolino Mauro - - 2006
Several studies have indicated that apoptotic pathways are responsible for the loss of motor neurons that constitute the hallmark of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). In this study, we demonstrate that apoptosis induced by the expression of several mutant Cu,Zn superoxide dismutases (SOD1) typical of familial ALS is mediated by Apaf1, ...
Wang Gang - - 2005
In vivo and in vitro studies have suggested a neuroprotective role for Pituitary adenylate cyclase activating polypeptide (PACAP) against neuronal insults. Here, we showed that PACAP27 protects against neurotoxicity induced by rotenone, a mitochondrial complex I inhibitor that has been implicated in the pathogenesis of Parkinson's disease (PD). The neuroprotective ...
Mao Yingwei - - 2005
Gab proteins amplify and integrate signals stimulated by many growth factors. In culture and animals, retinoic acid (RA) induces neuronal differentiation. We show that Gab2 expression is detected in neurons in three models of neuronal differentiation: embryonic carcinoma (EC) stem cells, embryonic stem cells, and primary neural stem cells (NSCs). ...
Ke Zun-Ji - - 2005
Inflammatory/immune processes are important in the pathogenesis of neurodegenerative diseases. Thiamine deficiency (TD) models the region selective neuronal loss in brain that accompanies mild impairment of oxidative metabolism. TD induces well-defined alterations in neurons, microglia, astrocytes, and endothelial cells. To test the role of inflammatory/immune mechanisms in TD-induced neurodegeneration, the ...
Lossi L - - 2005
It is generally assumed that about half of the neurons produced during neurogenesis die before completion of maturation of the central nervous system (CNS). Neural cell death is also relevant in aging and several neurodegenerative diseases. Among the modalities by which neurons die, apoptosis has very much attracted the interest ...
Peruzzi Francesca - - 2005
HIV-associated dementia (HAD) is a serious neurological disorder affecting about 7% of people with AIDS. In the brain, HIV-1 infects a restricted number of cell types, being primarily present in macrophages and microglial cells, less abundant in astrocytes, and rarely seen in oligodendrocytes and neurons. Lack of a productive HIV-1 ...
Millet Pascal - - 2005
Amyloid-beta peptide (A beta), derived from the amyloid-beta precursor protein (APP), plays a central role in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease and induces neuronal apoptosis. Neural progenitor cells persist in the adult mammalian brain and continue to produce new neurons throughout the life. The aim of our study was to ...
Giffard Rona G - - 2005
Astrocytes are essential for neuronal survival and function, neurogenesis, and neural repair. Although astrocytes are more resistant than neurons to most stress conditions in vitro, certain astrocyte subtypes, such as the glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP)-negative protoplasmic astrocytes that predominate in gray matter structures, may be equally or more sensitive ...
Hald Andreas - - 2005
Parkinson's disease (PD) is a neurodegenerative disorder characterized by a dramatic loss of dopaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra (SN). Among the many pathogenic mechanisms thought to contribute to the demise of these cells, dopamine-dependent oxidative stress has classically taken center stage due to extensive experimental evidence showing that dopamine-derived ...
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