Literature DB >> 21361959

Pharmacological inhibition of lipid peroxidation attenuates calpain-mediated cytoskeletal degradation after traumatic brain injury.

Ayman G Mustafa1, Juan A Wang, Kimberly M Carrico, Edward D Hall.   

Abstract

Free radical-induced lipid peroxidation (LP) is critical in the evolution of secondary injury following traumatic brain injury (TBI). Previous studies in our laboratory demonstrated that U-83836E, a potent LP inhibitor, can reduce post-TBI LP along with an improved maintenance of mouse cortical mitochondrial bioenergetics and calcium (Ca(2+)) buffering following severe (1.0 mm; 3.5 m/s) controlled cortical impact TBI (CCI-TBI). Based upon this preservation of a major Ca(2+) homeostatic mechanism, we have now performed dose-response and therapeutic window analyses of the ability of U-83836E to reduce post-traumatic calpain-mediated cytoskeletal (α-spectrin) proteolysis in ipsilateral cortical homogenates at its 24 h post-TBI peak. In the dose-response analysis, mice were treated with a single i.v. dose of vehicle or U-83836E (0.1, 0.3, 1.3, 3.0, 10.0 or 30.0 mg/kg) at 15 min after injury. U-83836E produced a dose-related attenuation of α-spectrin degradation with the maximal decrease being achieved at 3.0 mg/kg. Next, the therapeutic window was tested by delaying the single 3 mg/kg i.v. dose from 15 min post-injury out to 1, 3, 6 or 12 h. No reduction in α-spectrin degradation was observed when the treatment delay was 1 h or longer. However, in a third experiment, we re-examined the window with repeated U-83836E dosing (3.0 mg/kg i.v. followed by 10 mg/kg i.p. maintenance doses at 1 and 3 h after the initial i.v. dose) which significantly reduced 24 h α-α-spectrin degradation even when treatment initiation was withheld until 12 h post-TBI. These results demonstrate the relationship between post-TBI LP, disruptions in neuronal Ca(2+) homeostasis and calpain-mediated cytoskeletal damage.
© 2011 The Authors. Journal of Neurochemistry © 2011 International Society for Neurochemistry.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21361959      PMCID: PMC3076544          DOI: 10.1111/j.1471-4159.2011.07228.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurochem        ISSN: 0022-3042            Impact factor:   5.372


  72 in total

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Review 6.  Free radical pathways in CNS injury.

Authors:  A Lewén; P Matz; P H Chan
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  33 in total

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Review 2.  Axonal pathology in traumatic brain injury.

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4.  Nrf2-ARE activator carnosic acid decreases mitochondrial dysfunction, oxidative damage and neuronal cytoskeletal degradation following traumatic brain injury in mice.

Authors:  Darren M Miller; Indrapal N Singh; Juan A Wang; Edward D Hall
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5.  Time courses of post-injury mitochondrial oxidative damage and respiratory dysfunction and neuronal cytoskeletal degradation in a rat model of focal traumatic brain injury.

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Journal:  Neurochem Int       Date:  2017-03-23       Impact factor: 3.921

6.  CLARITY reveals a more protracted temporal course of axon swelling and disconnection than previously described following traumatic brain injury.

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7.  Phenelzine mitochondrial functional preservation and neuroprotection after traumatic brain injury related to scavenging of the lipid peroxidation-derived aldehyde 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal.

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8.  Therapy development for diffuse axonal injury.

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9.  Effects of Phenelzine Administration on Mitochondrial Function, Calcium Handling, and Cytoskeletal Degradation after Experimental Traumatic Brain Injury.

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Review 10.  Chronic traumatic encephalopathy-integration of canonical traumatic brain injury secondary injury mechanisms with tau pathology.

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