Literature DB >> 12566981

Ischemia-reperfusion-related repair deficit after oxidative stress: implications of faulty transcripts in neuronal sensitivity after brain injury.

Philip K Liu1.   

Abstract

Diseases of the heart are the No. 1 killer in industrialized countries. Brain injury can develop as a result of cerebral ischemia-reperfusion due to stroke (brain attack) and other cardiovascular diseases. Learning about the disease is the best way to reduce disability and death. We present here whether gene repair activities are associated with neuronal death in an ischemia-reperfusion model that simulates stroke in male Long-Evans rats. This experimental stroke model is known to induce necrosis in the ischemic cortex. Cerebral ischemia causes overactivation of membrane receptors and accumulation of extracellur glutamate and intracellular calcium, which activates neuronal nitric oxide synthase, causing damage to lipids, proteins, and nucleic acids, and reduces energy sources with consequent functional deterioration, leading to cell death. Restoration processes normally repair genes with few errors. However, ischemia elevates oxidative DNA lesions despite these repair mechanisms. These episodes concurrently occur with the induction of immediate-early genes that critically activate other late genes in the signal transduction pathway. Damage, repair, and transcription of the c-FOS gene are presented here as examples, because Fos peptide, one of the components of activator protein 1, activates nerve growth factor and repair mechanisms. The results of our studies show that treatments with 7-nitroindazole, a specific inhibitor of nitric oxide synthase known to attenuate nitric oxide, oxidative DNA lesions, and necrosis, increase intact c-fos mRNA levels after stroke. This suggests that the accuracy of gene expression could be accounted for the recovery of cellular function after cerebral injury. Copyright 2003 National Science Council, ROC and S. Karger AG, Basel

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12566981      PMCID: PMC2695961          DOI: 10.1007/BF02255992

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biomed Sci        ISSN: 1021-7770            Impact factor:   8.410


  102 in total

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5.  Antioxidant or neurotrophic factor treatment preserves function in a mouse model of neovascularization-associated oxidative stress.

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6.  Exercise pretraining protects against cerebral ischaemia induced by heat stroke in rats.

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Review 7.  Molecular mechanisms of apoptosis in cerebral ischemia: multiple neuroprotective opportunities.

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9.  Loss of vascular early response gene reduces edema formation after experimental stroke.

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10.  Antioxidant-Based Therapy Reduces Early-Stage Intestinal Ischemia-Reperfusion Injury in Rats.

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