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Nitro-oxidative stress after neuronal ischemia induces protein nitrotyrosination and cell death.

Authors :
Tajes M
Ill-Raga G
Palomer E
Ramos-Fernández E
Guix FX
Bosch-Morató M
Guivernau B
Jiménez-Conde J
Ois A
Pérez-Asensio F
Reyes-Navarro M
Caballo C
Galán AM
Alameda F
Escolar G
Opazo C
Planas A
Roquer J
Valverde MA
Muñoz FJ
Source :
Oxidative medicine and cellular longevity [Oxid Med Cell Longev] 2013; Vol. 2013, pp. 826143. Date of Electronic Publication: 2013 Aug 01.
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

Ischemic stroke is an acute vascular event that obstructs blood supply to the brain, producing irreversible damage that affects neurons but also glial and brain vessel cells. Immediately after the stroke, the ischemic tissue produces nitric oxide (NO) to recover blood perfusion but also produces superoxide anion. These compounds interact, producing peroxynitrite, which irreversibly nitrates protein tyrosines. The present study measured NO production in a human neuroblastoma (SH-SY5Y), a murine glial (BV2), a human endothelial cell line (HUVEC), and in primary cultures of human cerebral myocytes (HC-VSMCs) after experimental ischemia in vitro. Neuronal, endothelial, and inducible NO synthase (NOS) expression was also studied up to 24 h after ischemia, showing a different time course depending on the NOS type and the cells studied. Finally, we carried out cell viability experiments on SH-SY5Y cells with H2O2, a prooxidant agent, and with a NO donor to mimic ischemic conditions. We found that both compounds were highly toxic when they interacted, producing peroxynitrite. We obtained similar results when all cells were challenged with peroxynitrite. Our data suggest that peroxynitrite induces cell death and is a very harmful agent in brain ischemia.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1942-0994
Volume :
2013
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Oxidative medicine and cellular longevity
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
23983901
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1155/2013/826143