Elevated plasma homocysteine accelerates myointimal hyperplasia and luminal narrowing after carotid endarterectomy. N-methyl D aspartate receptors (NMDAr) in rat cerebrovascular cells are involved in homocysteine uptake and receptor-mediated stimulation. In the vasculature, NMDAr subunits (NR1, 2A-2D) have been identified by sequence homology in rat aortic endothelial cells. Exposure of these cells to homocysteine increased expression of receptor subunits, an effect that was attenuated by dizocilpine (MK801), a noncompetitive NMDA inhibitor. The objective of this study was to investigate the existence of an NMDAr in rat vascular smooth muscle (A7r5) cells, and also the effect of homocysteine on vascular dysregulation as mediated by this receptor. Subunits of the NMDAr (NR1, 2A-2D) were detected in the A7r5 cells by using the reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction and Western blotting. Homocysteine induced an increase in A7r5 cell proliferation, which was blocked by MK801. Homocysteine, in a dose and time dependent manner, increased expression of matrix metallinoproteinase-9 and interleukin-1beta, which have been implicated in vascular smooth muscle cell migration and/or proliferation. Homocysteine reduced the vascular elaboration of nitric oxide and increased the elaboration of the nitric oxide synthase inhibitor, asymmetric dimethylarginine. All of these homocysteine mediated effects were inhibited by MK801. NMDAr exist in vascular smooth muscle cells and appear to mediate, at least in part, homocysteine-induced dysregulation of vascular smooth muscle cell functions.
Our objectives included the identification of a homocysteine receptor in the peripheral vasculature. The possible inhibition of a homocysteine receptor to prevent intimal hyperplasia rather than treat established stenosis would make a significant clinical impact. This will open further avenues of study in determining the role of homocysteine in the pathogenesis of intimal hyperplasia.
Parkinson’s disease (PD) is characterized by a deficiency in motor cortex modulation due to degeneration of pigmented dopaminergic neurons of the substantia nigra projecting to the striatum. These neurons are particularly susceptible to oxidative stress, perhaps because of their dopaminergic nature. Like all catecholamines, dopamine is easily oxidized, first to a quinone intermediate and then to dopaminochrome (DAC), a 5-dihydroxyindole tautomer, that is cytotoxic in an oxidative stress-dependent manner. Here we show, using the murine mesencephalic cell line MN9D, that DAC causes cell death by apoptosis, illustrated by membrane blebbing, Annexin V, and propidium iodide labeling within 3 h. In addition, DAC causes oxidative damage to DNA within 3 h, and positive TUNEL fluorescence by 24 h. DAC, however, does not induce caspase 3 activation and its cytotoxic actions are not prevented by the pan-caspase inhibitor, Z-VAD-fmk. DAC-induced cytotoxicity is limited by the PARP1 inhibitor, 5-aminoisoquinolinone, supporting a role for apoptosis inducing factor (AIF) in the apoptotic process. Indeed, AIF is detected in the nuclear fraction of MN9D cells 3h after DAC exposure. Taken together these results demonstrate that DAC induces cytotoxicity in MN9D cells in a caspase-independent apoptotic manner, likely triggered by oxidative damage to DNA, and involving the translocation of AIF from the mitochondria to the nucleus.
Parkinson's disease (PD) is characterized by progressive neurodegeneration of nigrastriatal dopaminergic neurons leading to clinical motor dysfunctions. Many animal models of PD have been developed using exogenous neurotoxins and pesticides. Evidence strongly indicates that the dopaminergic neurons of the substantia nigra pars compacta (SNpc) are highly susceptible to neurodegeneration due to a number of factors including oxidative stress and mitochondrial dysfunction. Oxidation of DA to a potential endogenous neurotoxin, dopaminochrome (DAC), may be a potential contributor to the vulnerability of the nigrostriatal tract to oxidative insult. In this study, we show that DAC causes slow and progressive degeneration of dopaminergic neurons in contrast to 1-methyl-4-phenylpyridinium (MPP+), which induces rapid lesions of the region. The DAC model may be more reflective of early stresses that initiate the progressive neurodegenerative process of PD, and may prove a useful model for future neurodegenerative studies.
Our lab has observed that dopaminochrome (DAC), an oxidized form of dopamine, is cytotoxic to the mesencephalic cell line MN9D and induces an inflammatory response in the microglial cell line BV2. Dopamine is highly susceptible to oxidation and may form DAC when exposed to an oxidizing environment, leading to polymerization of DAC into neuromelanin, of which DAC is a major component. We believe the formation of DAC and its subsequent aggregation to neuromelanin may play a role in the progression of Parkinson's disease due to its proinflammatory and cytotoxic properties. In this study, we examined the effect of DAC in vivo. DAC (10 nmoles) was stereotaxically injected into the substantia nigra pars compacta (SNpc) of Sprague Dawley rats. Five, ten, and twenty days post‐surgery, the brains were harvested and assessed for inflammation and neurodegeneration. Results to date suggest that acute administration of 10 nmoles DAC is sufficient to induce activation of SNpc resident microglia without any apparent neurodegeneration. The profile of the resulting inflammation and the effect of microglial inhibition prior to DAC injection will be further assessed. (Supported in part by NIGMS 008306)
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