143 results on '"Arsélio P. Carvalho"'
Search Results
2. Effect of cyclosporin-A on the blood–retinal barrier permeability in streptozotocin-induced diabetes
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Anália Carmo, José G. Cunha-Vaz, Arsélio P. Carvalho, and Maria Celeste Lopes
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Pathology ,RB1-214 - Abstract
Background: Our previous results showed that in retinas from streptozotocin (STZ)-induced diabetic rats there is an increased level of interleukin-1β (IL-1β ). This cytokine may be involved in the expression of the inducible isoform of the nitric oxide synthase (iNOS), with consequent synthesis of large amounts of NO and blood–retinal barrier (BRB) breakdown.
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- 2000
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3. Calpains and Delayed Calcium Deregulation in Excitotoxicity
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Inês M. Araújo, Bruno P. Carreira, Caetana M. Carvalho, and Arsélio P. Carvalho
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Proteases ,Programmed cell death ,biology ,Calpain ,Traumatic brain injury ,Neurodegeneration ,Glutamate receptor ,Excitotoxicity ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,medicine.disease_cause ,Biochemistry ,Neuroprotection ,Enzyme Activation ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Receptors, Glutamate ,medicine ,biology.protein ,Animals ,Homeostasis ,Humans ,Calcium ,Neuroscience - Abstract
Overactivation of glutamate receptors results in neurodegeneration in a variety of brain pathologies, including ischemia, epilepsy, traumatic brain injury and slow-progressing neurodegenerative disorders. In all these pathologies, it is well accepted that the calcium-dependent cysteine proteases calpains are key players in the mechanisms of neuronal cell death. Many research groups have been actively pursuing to establish a link between the deregulation of intracellular Ca(2+) homeostasis associated with excitotoxicity and calpain activity. It is well established that these two events are connected and interact synergistically to promote neurodegeneration, but whether calpain activity depends on or contributes to Ca(2+) deregulation is still under debate.
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- 2010
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4. Modulation of intracellular calcium changes and glutamate release by neuropeptide Y1 and Y2 receptors in the rat hippocampus: differential effects in CA1, CA3 and dentate gyrus
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João O. Malva, Caetana M. Carvalho, Ana P. Silva, and Arsélio P. Carvalho
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Dentate gyrus ,Metabotropic glutamate receptor 6 ,Glutamate receptor ,Biology ,Neuropeptide Y receptor ,Biochemistry ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Endocrinology ,nervous system ,Metabotropic glutamate receptor ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Receptor ,Long-term depression ,Endogenous agonist - Abstract
In the present work, we investigated the role of pre- and post-synaptic neuropeptide Y1 (NPY1) and Y2 receptors on the calcium responses and on glutamate release in the rat hippocampus. In cultured hippocampal neurones, we observed that only NPY1 receptors are involved in the modulation of intracellular free calcium concentration ([Ca(2+)](i)). In 88% of the neurones analysed, the increase in the [Ca(2+)](i), in response to depolarization with 50 mM KCl, was inhibited by 1 microM [Leu31,Pro34]NPY, whereas 300 nM NPY13-36 was without effect. However, studies with hippocampal synaptosomes showed that both NPY1 and Y2 receptors can modulate the [Ca(2+)](i) and glutamate release. The pharmacological characterization of the NPY-induced inhibition of glutamate release indicated that Y2 receptors play a predominant role, both in the modulation of Ca(2+)-dependent and -independent glutamate release. However, we could distinguish between Y1 and Y2 receptors by using [Leu31,Pro34]NPY and NPY13-36. Active pre-synaptic Y1 receptors are present in the dentate gyrus (DG) as well as in the CA3 subregion, but its activity was not revealed by using the endogenous agonist, NPY. Concerning the Y2 receptors, they are present in the three subregions (CA1, CA3 and DG) and were activated by either NPY13-36 or NPY. The present data support a predominant role for NPY2 receptors in mediating NPY-induced inhibition of glutamate release in the hippocampus, but the physiological relevance of the presently described DG and CA3 pre-synaptic NPY1 receptors remains to be clarified.
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- 2008
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5. Calpains are activated by photodynamic therapy but do not contribute to apoptotic tumor cell death
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Edgar R. Gomes, Carlos B. Duarte, Ramiro D. Almeida, and Arsélio P. Carvalho
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Cancer Research ,Indoles ,Time Factors ,Cell Survival ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Calpains ,Apoptosis ,Photodynamic therapy ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Enzyme activator ,Cell Line, Tumor ,Organometallic Compounds ,medicine ,Humans ,Caspase ,Photosensitizing Agents ,biology ,Calpain ,Singlet oxygen ,Lymphoblast ,Cancer ,medicine.disease ,Cell biology ,Enzyme Activation ,Photochemotherapy ,Oncology ,chemistry ,Caspases ,biology.protein - Abstract
Photodynamic therapy (PDT) of cancer is a promising technique based on the formation of singlet oxygen following irradiation of a sensitizer with visible light. In the present work we investigated the role of calpains in PDT, using the human lymphoblastoid CCRF-CEM cells and bisulfonated aluminum phthalocyanine (AlPcS2) as a sensitizer. Photosensitization induced apoptotic cell death and a time-dependent activation of calpains, as determined using the fluorogenic substrate succinyl-Leu-Leu-Val-Tyr-7-amido-4-methylcoumarin (SLLVY-AMC). However, inhibition of calpains with calpain inhibitor II or with PD 150606 did not affect the demise process. The results indicate that although calpains are activated in PDT, they do not play a major role in tumor cell death. http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/B6T54-4D7K70T-1/1/6ab9c47e98e82c782e8b8eebda86004d
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- 2004
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6. Early calpain-mediated proteolysis following AMPA receptor activation compromises neuronal survival in cultured hippocampal neurons
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Arsélio P. Carvalho, Ben A. Bahr, António F. Ambrósio, Maria João Verdasca, Ermelindo C. Leal, Inês M. Araújo, and Caetana M. Carvalho
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Neurotoxicity ,Glutamate receptor ,Kainate receptor ,Calpain ,AMPA receptor ,Biology ,medicine.disease ,Biochemistry ,Neuroprotection ,Cell biology ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,medicine ,biology.protein ,Cyclothiazide ,NBQX ,medicine.drug - Abstract
In this work, we investigated the involvement of calpains in the neurotoxicity induced by short-term exposure to kainate (KA) in non-desensitizing conditions of AMPA receptor activation (cyclothiazide present, CTZ), in cultured rat hippocampal neurons. The calpain inhibitor MDL28170 had a protective effect in cultures treated with KA plus CTZ (p
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- 2004
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7. Intracellular signaling mechanisms in photodynamic therapy
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Carlos B. Duarte, Ramiro D. Almeida, Bruno Manadas, and Arsélio P. Carvalho
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Cancer Research ,Programmed cell death ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Cell ,Apoptosis ,Photodynamic therapy ,Biology ,Necrosis ,Neoplasms ,Cyclic AMP ,Genetics ,medicine ,Homeostasis ,Humans ,FADD ,Phosphorylation ,E2F ,Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase Kinases ,Neovascularization, Pathologic ,Proteins ,Molecular biology ,eye diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Photochemotherapy ,Oncology ,Cancer research ,biology.protein ,Calcium ,Signal transduction ,Intracellular ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
In photodynamic therapy (PDT) a sensitizer, light and oxygen are used to induce death of tumor cells and in the treatment of certain noncancerous conditions. Cell death in PDT may occur by apoptosis or by necrosis, depending on the sensitizer, on the PDT dose and on the cell genotype. Some sensitizers that have been used in PDT are accumulated in the mitochondria, and this may explain their efficiency in inducing apoptotic cell death, both in vitro and in vivo. In this review we will focus on the events that characterize apoptotic death in PDT and on the intracellular signaling events that are set in motion in photosensitized cells. Activation of phospholipases, changes in ceramide metabolism, a rise in the cytosolic free Ca2+ concentration, stimulation of nitric oxide synthase (NOS), changes in protein phosphorylation and alterations in the activity of transcription factors and on gene expression have all been observed in PDT-treated cells. Although many of these metabolic reactions contribute to the demise process, some of them may antagonize cell death. Understanding the signaling mechanisms in PDT may provide means to modulate the PDT effects at the molecular level and potentiate its antitumor effectiveness. http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/B6T23-4CNXHDF-1/1/3985caebee735db34936ae02462172be
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- 2004
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8. Neuronal nitric oxide synthase proteolysis limits the involvement of nitric oxide in kainate-induced neurotoxicity in hippocampal neurons
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Ermelindo C. Leal, Arsélio P. Carvalho, António F. Ambrósio, Paulo Santos, Caetana M. Carvalho, and Inês M. Araújo
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Neurotoxicity ,Kainate receptor ,AMPA receptor ,Biology ,Pharmacology ,medicine.disease ,Biochemistry ,Nitric oxide ,Nitric oxide synthase ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,biology.protein ,medicine ,Neurotoxin ,NBQX ,Cyclothiazide ,medicine.drug - Abstract
In this work, we investigated the role of nitric oxide (NO) in neurotoxicity triggered by α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methylisoxazole-4-propionate (AMPA) receptor activation in cultured hippocampal neurons. In the presence of cyclothiazide (CTZ), short-term exposures to kainate (KA; 5 and 15 min, followed by 24-h recovery) decreased cell viability. Both NBQX and d-AP-5 decreased the neurotoxicity caused by KA plus CTZ. Long-term exposures to KA plus CTZ (24 h) resulted in increased toxicity. In short-, but not in long-term exposures, the presence of NO synthase (NOS) inhibitors (l-NAME and 7-NI) decreased the toxicity induced by KA plus CTZ. We also found that KA plus CTZ (15-min exposure) significantly increased cGMP levels. Furthermore, short-term exposures lead to decreased intracellular ATP levels, which was prevented by NBQX, d-AP-5 and NOS inhibitors. Immunoblot analysis revealed that KA induced neuronal NOS (nNOS) proteolysis, gradually lowering the levels of nNOS according to the time of exposure. Calpain, but not caspase-3 inhibitors, prevented this effect. Overall, these results show that NO is involved in the neurotoxicity caused by activation of non-desensitizing AMPA receptors, although to a limited extent, since AMPA receptor activation triggers mechanisms that lead to nNOS proteolysis by calpains, preventing a further contribution of NO to the neurotoxic process.
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- 2003
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9. [Untitled]
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Emília P. Duarte, Arsélio P. Carvalho, and Graça Baltazar
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Catecholaminergic ,endocrine system ,urogenital system ,Chemistry ,Adrenergic ,General Medicine ,Syntaxin 1 ,environment and public health ,Biochemistry ,Exocytosis ,Syntaxin 3 ,Cell biology ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,nervous system ,Chromaffin cell ,medicine ,Syntaxin ,biological phenomena, cell phenomena, and immunity ,Adrenal medulla - Abstract
The expression and localization of syntaxin isoforms 1A and 1B in adrenergic and noradrenergic chromaffin cells were examined by both immunoblot analysis and confocal immunofluorescence microscopy. Syntaxin 1A was found in higher levels in noradrenergic cells, whereas syntaxin 1B was similarly expressed in most noradrenergic and adrenergic cells. However, some heterogeneity was observed within each catecholaminergic phenotype. Although the majority of adrenergic cells appeared to express low levels of syntaxin 1A, about 7% was strongly stained for syntaxin 1A. A subpopulation of noradrenergic cells, about 17%, expressed greater levels of syntaxin 1B. Syntaxin 1B labeling showed a punctate appearance in the cytoplasm, whereas syntaxin 1A appeared predominantly localized to the plasma membrane. These data show differences in the exocytotic machinery of the two subtypes of chromaffin cells that may underlie some of the distinct characteristics of adrenaline and noradrenaline secretion.
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- 2003
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10. Role of nitric oxide in the activation of NF-κB, AP-1 and NOS II expression in articular chondrocytes
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Arsélio P. Carvalho, Alexandrina Ferreira Mendes, Maria do Carmo Lopes, and Maria Margarida Caramona
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Cartilage, Articular ,Cytoplasm ,Blotting, Western ,Immunology ,Nitric Oxide Synthase Type II ,Electrophoretic Mobility Shift Assay ,In Vitro Techniques ,S-Nitroso-N-Acetylpenicillamine ,Biology ,Nitric Oxide ,Nitric oxide ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Chondrocytes ,Western blot ,medicine ,Animals ,Nitric Oxide Donors ,Electrophoretic mobility shift assay ,Northern blot ,Cells, Cultured ,Cell Nucleus ,Pharmacology ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Activator (genetics) ,NF-kappa B ,Snap ,Blotting, Northern ,Molecular biology ,Transcription Factor AP-1 ,Blot ,chemistry ,Cattle ,Nitric Oxide Synthase ,Signal transduction ,Interleukin-1 ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
Objective and design: Determine the sources of nitric oxide (NO) and evaluate its role in the activation of nuclear Factor-kappaB (NF-κB) and activator protein-1 (AP-1) and in the expression of NO synthase II (NOS II), induced by interleukin-1β (IL-1).¶Material or subjects: Primary cultures of bovine articular chondrocytes.¶Treatment: The cells were treated with IL-1, 5 ng/ml with or without the NO donor S-nitroso-N-acetylpenicillamine (SNAP), in concentrations ranging from 10 to 300 μM.¶Methods: NF-κB and AP-1 activation were evaluated by electrophoretic mobility shift assay. Northern blot was used to detect NOS II mRNA levels and western blot to evaluate IκB-α, NOS I and NOS II protein levels.¶Results: Under basal conditions, chondrocytes expressed NOS I, which was lost upon IL-1 treatment. SNAP inhibited IL-1-induced NF-κB activation and NOS II expression. When added alone, SNAP induced AP-1 activation to approximately the same extent as IL-1.¶Conclusions: These results suggest that, in chondrocytes, NO is a key regulator of the signaling pathways leading from IL-1 to NF-κB and AP-1 activation and to the expression of genes that are involved in the pathophysiology of arthritic diseases.
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- 2002
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11. Diacerhein and Rhein Prevent Interleukin-1β-Induced Nuclear Factor-κB Activation by Inhibiting the Degradation of Inhibitor κB-α
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Arsélio P. Carvalho, Maria Margarida Caramona, Alexandrina Ferreira Mendes, and Maria do Carmo Lopes
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Pharmacology ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Biological activity ,Biology ,Toxicology ,Nitric oxide ,Proinflammatory cytokine ,Nitric oxide synthase ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Cytokine ,Mechanism of action ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,medicine ,biology.protein ,Electrophoretic mobility shift assay ,medicine.symptom ,Transcription factor - Abstract
Diacerhein and rhein are anthraquinone compounds that ameliorate the course of osteoarthritis. Recent reports also suggest that these compounds may have antiinflammatory properties, but the cellular mechanisms by which they exert antiosteoarthritic and possibly antiinflammatory effects are still incompletely understood. The purpose of this study was to investigate the ability of diacerhein and rhein to inhibit the activation of the transcription factor nuclear factor kappaB, induced by the proinflammatory cytokine interleukin-1beta, in primary monolayer cultures of bovine articular chondrocytes. We also studied the ability of diacerhein and rhein to prevent the expression of the inducible nitric oxide synthase gene, which is driven by nuclear factor-kappaB. We observed that interleukin-1beta induced the degradation of the inhibitor kappaB-alpha protein and the translocation of the protein p65 (a member of the nuclear factor-kappaB family) to the nucleus, which were inhibited by diacerhein and rhein, in a dose-dependent manner. Interleukin-1beta-induced nuclear factor-kappaB binding to a specific (gamma-(32)P)-labelled oligonucleotide probe was also inhibited by treatment of chondrocytes with diacerhein or rhein, as revealed by electrophoretic mobility shift assay. Inducible nitric oxide synthase mRNA and protein synthesis and nitric oxide production were also inhibited by diacerhein and rhein, in a dose-dependent manner. The half-maximal inhibitory concentrations of diacerhein and rhein, relative to nitric oxide production, were 8.2 microM ;and 7.7 microM, respectively. These results suggest that diacerhein and rhein inhibit nuclear factor-kappaB activation and, consequently, the expression of nuclear factor-kappaB-dependent genes, such as the inducible nitric oxide synthase gene, which can explain their antiosteoarthritic and antiinflammatory effects.
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- 2002
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12. Phosphorylation of GluR4 AMPA-type glutamate receptor subunit by protein kinase C in cultured retina amacrine neurons
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Susana S. Correia, Arsélio P. Carvalho, Ana Luísa Carvalho, Carlos B. Duarte, Carlos Faro, and Euclides Pires
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Chemistry ,General Neuroscience ,Glutamate receptor ,Kainate receptor ,Stimulation ,AMPA receptor ,Cell biology ,Endocrinology ,nervous system ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,SGK1 ,Phosphorylation ,Receptor ,Protein kinase C - Abstract
We have previously reported that the activity of alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazole propionate (AMPA) receptors is potentiated by protein kinase C (PKC) in cultured chick retina amacrine neurons, and that constitutive PKC activity is necessary for basal AMPA receptor activity (Carvalho et al., 1998). In this study, we evaluated the phosphorylation of the GluR4 subunit, which is very abundant in cultured amacrine neurons, to correlate it with the effects of PKC on AMPA receptor activity in these cells. 32P-labelling of GluR4 increased upon AMPA receptor stimulation or cell treatment with phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA) before stimulating with kainate. By contrast, phosphorylation of GluR4 was not changed when PKC was inhibited by treating the cells with the selective PKC inhibitor GF 109203X before stimulation with kainate. We conclude that GluR4 is phosphorylated upon PKC activation and/or stimulation of AMPA receptors in cultured amacrine cells. Additionally, AMPA receptor activation with kainate in cultured chick amacrine cells leads to translocation of conventional and novel PKC isoforms to the cell membrane, suggesting that PKC could be activated upon AMPA receptor stimulation in these cells.
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- 2002
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13. [Untitled]
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Arsélio P. Carvalho, António F. Ambrósio, Patrício Soares-da-Silva, and Caetana M. Carvalho
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Sodium channel activity ,Drug ,Chemistry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,media_common.quotation_subject ,General Medicine ,Carbamazepine ,Pharmacology ,medicine.disease ,Biochemistry ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Epilepsy ,Anticonvulsant ,Neuropathic pain ,medicine ,Oxcarbazepine ,Adverse effect ,medicine.drug ,media_common - Abstract
Carbamazepine (CBZ) has been extensively used in the treatment of epilepsy, as well as in the treatment of neuropathic pain and affective disorders. However, the mechanisms of action of this drug are not completely elucidated and are still a matter of debate. Since CBZ is not very effective in some epileptic patients and may cause several adverse effects, several antiepileptic drugs have been developed by structural variation of CBZ, such as oxcarbazepine (OXC), which is used in the treatment of epilepsy since 1990. (S)-(−)-10-acetoxy-10,11-dihydro-5H-dibenz[b,f]azepine-5-carboxamide (BIA 2-093) and 10,11-dihydro-10-hydroxyimino-5H-dibenz[b,f]azepine-5-carboxamide (BIA 2-024), which were recently developed by BIAL, are new putative antiepileptic drugs, with some improved properties. In this review, we will focus on the mechanisms of action of CBZ and its derivatives, OXC, BIA 2-093 and BIA 2-024. The available data indicate that the anticonvulsant efficacy of these AEDs is mainly due to the inhibition of sodium channel activity.
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- 2002
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14. Role of kainate receptor activation and desensitization on the [Ca2+]ichanges in cultured rat hippocampal neurons
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Arsélio P. Carvalho, Caetana M. Carvalho, António J. Salgado, Ana P. Silva, João O. Malva, and António F. Ambrósio
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Agonist ,0303 health sciences ,medicine.drug_class ,Long-term potentiation ,Kainate receptor ,Stimulation ,AMPA receptor ,Biology ,Hippocampal formation ,Receptor antagonist ,3. Good health ,Cell biology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,0302 clinical medicine ,nervous system ,medicine ,Viability assay ,Neuroscience ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,030304 developmental biology - Abstract
We investigated the role of kainate (KA) receptor activation and desensitization in inducing the increase in the intracellular free Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) in individual cultured rat hippocampal neurons. The rat hippocampal neurons in the cultures were shown to express kainate receptor subunits, KA2 and GluR6/7, either by immunocytochemistry or by immunoblot analysis. The effect of LY303070, an α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-isoxazole-4-propionate (AMPA) receptor antagonist, on the alterations in the [Ca2+]i caused by kainate showed cell-to-cell variability. The [Ca2+]i increase caused by kainate was mostly mediated by the activation of AMPA receptors because LY303070 inhibited the response to kainate in a high percentage of neurons. The response to kainate was potentiated by concanavalin A (Con A), which inhibits kainate receptor desensitization, in 82.1% of the neurons, and this potentiation was not reversed by LY303070 in about 38% of the neurons. Also, upon stimulation of the cells with 4-methylglutamate (MGA), a selective kainate receptor agonist, in the presence of Con A, it was possible to observe [Ca2+]i changes induced by kainate receptor activation, because LY303070 did not inhibit the response in all neurons analyzed. In toxicity studies, cultured rat hippocampal neurons were exposed to the drugs for 30 min, and the cell viability was evaluated at 24 hr using the 3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide (MTT) assay. The selective activation of kainate receptors with MGA, in the presence of Con A, induced a toxic effect, which was not prevented by LY303070, revealing a contribution of a small subpopulation of neurons expressing kainate receptors that independently mediate cytotoxicity. Taken together, these results indicate that cultured hippocampal neurons express not only AMPA receptors, but also kainate receptors, which can modulate the [Ca2+]i and toxicity. J. Neurosci. Res. 65:378–386, 2001. © 2001 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
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- 2001
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15. Inhibition of glutamate release by BIA 2-093 and BIA 2-024, two novel derivatives of carbamazepine, due to blockade of sodium but not calcium channels11Abbreviations: AED, antiepileptic drug; CBZ, carbamazepine; OXC, oxcarbazepine; and 4-AP, 4-aminopyridine
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Arsélio P. Carvalho, João O. Malva, Caetana M. Carvalho, Patrício Soares-da-Silva, António F. Ambrósio, and Ana P. Silva
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Pharmacology ,Voltage-dependent calcium channel ,Sodium ,Glutamate receptor ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Stimulation ,Endogeny ,Carbamazepine ,Biochemistry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,medicine ,Veratridine ,Oxcarbazepine ,medicine.drug - Abstract
We investigated the mechanism(s) of action of two new putative antiepileptic drugs (AEDs), (S)-(-)-10-acetoxy-10,11-dihydro-5H-dibenz[b,f]azepine-5-carboxamide (BIA 2-093) and 10,11-dihydro-10-hydroxyimino-5H-dibenz[b,f]azepine-5-carboxamide (BIA 2-024), by comparing their effects on the release of endogenous glutamate in hippocampal synaptosomes, with those of carbamazepine (CBZ) and oxcarbazepine (OXC). The AEDs inhibited the release of glutamate evoked by 4-aminopyridine (4-AP) or veratridine in a concentration-dependent manner, being CBZ more potent than the other AEDs. Using conditions of stimulation (30 mM KCl), where Na(+) channels are inactivated, the AEDs did not inhibit either the Ca(2+)-dependent or -independent release of glutamate. The results indicate that BIA 2-093 and BIA 2-024 have sodium channel-blocking properties, but CBZ and OXC are more potent than the new AEDs. Moreover, the present data also indicate that Ca(2+) channels coupled to the exocytotic release of glutamate and the activity of the glutamate transporter were not affected by the AEDs.
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- 2001
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16. LPS Induction of IκB-α Degradation and iNOS Expression in a Skin Dendritic Cell Line Is Prevented by the Janus Kinase 2 Inhibitor, Tyrphostin B42
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Carlos B. Duarte, Margarida Gonçalo, Maria do Carmo Lopes, Maria Teresa Cruz, and Arsélio P. Carvalho
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Lipopolysaccharides ,Cancer Research ,Pyrrolidines ,Physiology ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Nitric Oxide Synthase Type II ,Complement factor I ,Nitric Oxide ,Biochemistry ,Antioxidants ,Nitric oxide ,Ligases ,Mice ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,NF-KappaB Inhibitor alpha ,Thiocarbamates ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins ,Animals ,Enzyme Inhibitors ,Cells, Cultured ,Skin ,Janus kinase 2 ,biology ,Kinase ,NF-kappa B ,NF-κB ,Dendritic Cells ,Janus Kinase 2 ,Protein-Tyrosine Kinases ,Tyrphostins ,Molecular biology ,DNA-Binding Proteins ,Nitric oxide synthase ,Protein Transport ,chemistry ,Enzyme Induction ,biology.protein ,I-kappa B Proteins ,Nitric Oxide Synthase ,Signal transduction ,Janus kinase ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
The Janus kinase (JAK) family of protein tyrosine kinases are activated in response to a wide variety of external stimuli. Here we have investigated whether the janus kinase 2 (JAK2) is involved in the induction of nitric oxide synthase type II (iNOS) expression in a mouse fetal skin dendritic cell line (FSDC). In FSDC the expression of iNOS protein and nitric oxide production, in response to the lipopolysaccharide (LPS) stimulus (5 microg/ml), is inhibited by the specific inhibitor of the JAK2, tyrphostin B42 with an half maximal inhibitory concentration (IC(50)) of 9.65 microM. The antioxidant compound pyrrolidinedithiocarbamate (PDTC) inhibits both the nitrite production with an IC(50) of 16.6 microM and the iNOS protein expression in FSDC. In addition, LPS induces the activation of NF-kappa B, and tyrphostin B42 prevents the degradation of the cytosolic factor I kappa B-alpha and blocks the translocation of the NF-kappa B p65 protein subunit into the nucleus. These results indicate that the JAK family of protein kinases and the transcription factor NF-kappa B are involved in the induction of iNOS protein expression in FSDC stimulated with LPS.
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- 2001
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17. Differential contribution of syntaxin 1 and SNAP-25 to secretion in noradrenergic and adrenergic chromaffin cells
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Graça Baltazar, Ângelo R. Tomé, Arsélio P. Carvalho, and Emília P. Duarte
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Botulinum Toxins ,Histology ,Epinephrine ,Synaptosomal-Associated Protein 25 ,Chromaffin Cells ,Syntaxin 1 ,Adrenergic ,Nerve Tissue Proteins ,Exocytosis ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Norepinephrine ,Internal medicine ,Adrenal Glands ,medicine ,Animals ,Syntaxin ,Secretion ,Botulinum Toxins, Type A ,Cells, Cultured ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,Voltage-dependent calcium channel ,Chemistry ,Membrane Proteins ,Cell Biology ,General Medicine ,Endocrinology ,nervous system ,Antigens, Surface ,Catecholamine ,Cattle ,Calcium Channels ,medicine.drug - Abstract
We used botulinum neurotoxins (BoNT) to examine whether differences in the secretory activity of noradrenergic and adrenergic chromaffin cells are related to differences in the exocytotic machinery of these two types of bovine adrenal medulla cells. Cleavage of syntaxin and SNAP-25 by BoNT/C1 decreased in a dose-dependent way the release of both noradrenaline and adrenaline, but noradrenaline release was more sensitive to BoNT/C1. Cleavage of SNAP-25 by BoNT/A also had a larger inhibitory effect on noradrenaline release than on adrenaline release. Neither BoNT/C1 nor BoNT/A affected the intracellular Ca2+ responses induced by K+-depolarisation, and the extent of the inhibition of K+-evoked catecholamine release by selective blockers of voltage-gated Ca2+ channels was not affected by BoNT/C1. Therefore, our data do not support the hypothesis of a regulatory effect of syntaxin or SNAP-25 on the activity of Ca2+ channels. The lower sensitivity of adrenaline release to BoNT was not due to a reduced ability of the toxins to enter or to cleave their protein targets in adrenergic cells, since immunoblot analysis showed the cleavage of a larger fraction of syntaxin 1A in adrenergic cells, as compared to the cleavage in noradrenergic cells. The immunoblot analysis also showed larger amounts of syntaxin 1A in noradrenergic chromaffin cells than in adrenergic cells. Thus, in spite of a greater cleavage of syntaxin 1A in adrenergic cells by BoNT/C1, adrenaline release was less sensitive to BoNT/C1, suggesting that the release process in noradrenergic cells might be more dependent on syntaxin 1A and SNAP-25, as compared to adrenergic cells.
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- 2000
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18. Role of desensitization of AMPA receptors on the neuronal viability and on the [Ca2+]ichanges in cultured rat hippocampal neurons
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José F. Mesquita, Caetana M. Carvalho, Ana P. Silva, António F. Ambrósio, Arsélio P. Carvalho, and João O. Malva
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Chemistry ,General Neuroscience ,Neurotoxicity ,Kainate receptor ,Long-term potentiation ,AMPA receptor ,Pharmacology ,Hippocampal formation ,Cell morphology ,medicine.disease ,Neuroprotection ,nervous system ,medicine ,Cyclothiazide ,medicine.drug - Abstract
We investigated the role of desensitization of alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-isoxazole-4-propionate (AMPA) receptors on the neurotoxicity and on the [Ca2+]i changes induced by kainate or by AMPA in cultured rat hippocampal neurons. The neuronal viability was evaluated either by the 3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2, 5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide (MTT) assay, or by analysis of cell morphology. Short-term exposure of the neurons to kainate or AMPA (30 min) was not toxic, but the exposure for 24 h to the excitotoxic drugs caused a concentration-dependent neurotoxic effect which was prevented by LY 303070, a noncompetitive AMPA receptor antagonist. In the presence of cyclothiazide (CTZ), kainate or AMPA was toxic (30 min exposure), or the toxic effect was significantly enhanced (24 h exposure), but in this case LY 303070 did not completely protect the cells against kainate-induced toxicity. The alterations in the [Ca2+]i caused by kainate or AMPA showed a great cell-to-cell variability. LY 303070 completely or partially inhibited the responses stimulated by kainate. CTZ differentially affected the responses evoked by kainate or AMPA. In the majority of hippocampal neurons, CTZ did not potentiate, or only slightly potentiated, the kainate-stimulated responses but in 11% of neurons there was a great potentiation. In AMPA-stimulated neurons, the responses were slightly or greatly potentiated in the majority of neurons, but not in all of them. The results show that AMPA and kainate may be toxic, depending on the time of exposure and on the blockade of the desensitization of the AMPA receptors. Overall, our results clearly show that there exist different populations of hippocampal neurons with different sensitivities to kainate, AMPA, CTZ and LY 303070. Moreover, the effects of CTZ on both [Ca2+]i alterations and neurotoxicity are not fully correlated.
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- 2000
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19. [Untitled]
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Carlos B. Duarte, Ana Luísa Carvalho, and Arsélio P. Carvalho
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Chemistry ,musculoskeletal, neural, and ocular physiology ,Kainate receptor ,General Medicine ,AMPA receptor ,Biochemistry ,Cell biology ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,nervous system ,Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase ,Silent synapse ,Synaptic plasticity ,SGK1 ,Long-term depression ,Ion channel linked receptors - Abstract
The AMPA receptors for glutamate are oligomeric structures that mediate fast excitatory responses in the central nervous system. Phosphorylation of AMPA receptors is an important mechanism for short-term modulation of their function, and is thought to play an important role in synaptic plasticity in different brain regions. Recent studies have shown that phosphorylation of AMPA receptors by cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) and Ca2+ - and calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII) potentiates their activity, but phosphorylation of the receptor subunits may also affect their interaction with intracellular proteins, and their expression at the plasma membrane. Phosphorylation of AMPA receptor subunits has also been investigated in relation to processes of synaptic plasticity. This review focuses on recent advances in understanding the molecular mechanisms of regulation of AMPA receptors, and their implications in synaptic plasticity.
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- 2000
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20. l-Arginine transport in retinas from streptozotocin diabetic rats: correlation with the level of IL-1β and NO synthase activity
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Maria do Carmo Lopes, José Cunha-Vaz, Arsélio P. Carvalho, and Anália do Carmo
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Arginine ,Retina ,Diabetes Mellitus, Experimental ,Nitric oxide ,Pathogenesis ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Internal medicine ,Diabetes mellitus ,medicine ,Extracellular ,Animals ,Rats, Wistar ,biology ,Nitric oxide synthase ,Biological Transport ,Hydrogen-Ion Concentration ,medicine.disease ,Streptozotocin ,Interleukin-1β ,Sensory Systems ,Rats ,Ophthalmology ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Streptozotocin-induced diabetes ,biology.protein ,l-arginine uptake ,Intracellular ,Interleukin-1 ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Several evidences suggest that the pro-inflammatory cytokines IL-1b and the radical NO are implicated as effectors molecules in the pancreatic b-cells dysfunction; an event preceding the pathogenesis of diabetes. IL-1b induces the expression of the inducible isoform of NO synthase (iNOS), which use L-arginine as substrate to overproduce NO. However, it is not known whether these events may participate in the development of diabetic retinopathy, which is the main cause of blindness. In this work, we found an increased level of IL-1b in retinas from streptozotocin-induced (STZ) diabetic rats. We also observed that the activity of the NO synthase (NOS) and the L-arginine uptake are enhanced in retinas from STZ-induced diabetic rats as compared to retinas from control rats. We found that the uptake of L-arginine in retinas from control and diabetic rats occurs through a transporter resembling the Y system, i.e. it is saturable, not affected over the pH range 6.5 to 7.4, and is independent of the extracellular Na. Nevertheless, the L-arginine transport in retinas from diabetic rats occurs through a carrier with lower affinity (Km25 mM) and higher capacity (Vmax295922.4 pmol L-arginine:mg protein) than in retinas from control rats (Km 5 mM and Vmax158912.8 pmol L-arginine:mg protein) which is correlated with the increased NOS activity and consequent depletion of the intracellular pool of L-arginine. © 1999 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.
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- 1999
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21. Corelease of two functionally opposite neurotransmitters by retinal amacrine cells: Experimental evidence and functional significance
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Paulo F. Santos, Carlos B. Duarte, and Arsélio P. Carvalho
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Voltage-gated ion channel ,Depolarization ,Biology ,Adenosine receptor ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Postsynaptic potential ,medicine ,Cholinergic ,Neuron ,Neurotransmitter ,Neuroscience ,Acetylcholine ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The Dale's law postulates that a neuron releases the same neurotransmitter from all its branches. In the case of mulitple neurotransmitters it would require all transmitters to be released from all branches. The retinal cholinergic amacrine cells contain and release &ggr;-aminobutyric (GABA) and, therefore, if GABA and acetylcholine (ACh) are released at the same sites, this could mean that amacrine cells simultaneously excite and inhibit postsynaptic cells. Conversely, if the two neurotransmitters are released at different synapses, or if their release is regulated in a distinct manner, they may play different physiological roles. Recent studies carried out in cultured cholinergic amacrine-like neurons showed that Ca2+-dependent release of ACh and GABA have a different sensitivity to membrane depolarization, to the effect of blockers of voltage gated Ca2+ channels (VGCC) and to the effect of presynaptic A1 adenosine receptors. Therefore, it is proposed that in retinal amacrine cells the Ca2+-dependent release of ACh and GABA occurs at distinct cellular locations. The possible nature of these release sites and the physiological significance of this model are discussed in this review.J. Neurosci. Res. 58: 475-479, 1999. © 1999 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
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- 1999
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22. Correlation between whole blood cholinesterase activity and cerebral cortex cholinesterase activity in rats treated with parathion
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Arsélio P. Carvalho, M. Celeste Lopes, Lúcia Guilhermino, and Amadeu M.V.M. Soares
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Male ,Insecticides ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Carbamate ,Erythrocytes ,Environmental Engineering ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,medicine.medical_treatment ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Cholinesterases ,Environmental Chemistry ,Rats, Wistar ,Whole blood ,Cholinesterase ,Cerebral Cortex ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,Parathion ,integumentary system ,biology ,Organophosphate ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,General Medicine ,General Chemistry ,Pollution ,Rats ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Biochemistry ,chemistry ,Enzyme inhibitor ,Cerebral cortex ,Toxicity ,biology.protein ,Regression Analysis ,Cholinesterase Inhibitors - Abstract
Organophosphate and carbamate insecticides are inhibitors of cholinesterases (ChE). The depression of blood ChE activity is frequently used as indicative of exposure to these chemicals. However, it is not known whether the inhibition of blood ChE activity reflects the inhibition of ChE in target tissues (e.g. brain and muscle). In this study we investigated the possibility of using whole blood ChE activity to predict frontal cerebral cortex ChE activity in rats treated with parathion. Twenty four hours after the intraperitoneal administration of several doses of parathion, the activity of ChE in whole blood and the activity of ChE in frontal cerebral cortex were determined in each animal. A high correlation between the two parameters was found (r = 0.96, p < 0.05) and the model of linear regression fitted to the data accounted for 93% of its variability. Thus, these results seem to indicate that 24 hours after the treatment with parathion the effects induced on whole blood ChE activity may be used to predict the effects caused on frontal cerebral cortex ChE activity.
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- 1998
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23. Differential acetylcholine and GABA release from cultured chick retina cells
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Ana Luísa Carvalho, Carlos B. Duarte, Arsélio P. Carvalho, and Paulo F. Santos
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General Neuroscience ,Immunocytochemistry ,Biology ,Choline acetyltransferase ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Nitrendipine ,medicine ,Tetrodotoxin ,Biophysics ,GABAergic ,Cholinergic ,Neurotransmitter ,Neuroscience ,Acetylcholine ,medicine.drug - Abstract
In the present work we investigated the mechanisms controlling the release of acetylcholine (ACh) and of gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) from cultures of amacrine-like neurons, containing a subpopulation of cells which are simultaneously GABAergic and cholinergic. We found that 81.2 +/- 2.8% of the cells present in the culture were stained immunocytochemically with an antibody against choline acetyltransferase, and 38.5 +/- 4.8% of the cells were stained with an antibody against GABA. Most of the cells containing GABA (87.0 +/- 2.9%) were cholinergic. The release of acetylcholine and GABA was mostly Ca2+-dependent, although a significant release of [3H]GABA occurred by reversal of its transporter. Potassium evoked the Ca2+-dependent release of [3H]GABA and [3H]acetylcholine, with EC50 of 31.0 +/- 1.0 mm and 21.6 +/- 1.1 mm, respectively. The Ca2+-dependent release of [3H]acetylcholine was significantly inhibited by 1 micrometer tetrodotoxin and by low (30 nm) omega-conotoxin GVIA (omega-CgTx GVIA) concentrations, or by high (300 nm) nitrendipine (Nit) concentrations. On the contrary, the release of [14C]GABA was reduced by 30 nm nitrendipine, or by 500 nm omega-CgTx GVIA, but not by this toxin at 30 nm. The release of either transmitters was unaffected by 200 nm omega-Agatoxin IVA (omega-Aga IVA), a toxin that blocks P/Q-type voltage-sensitive Ca2+ channels (VSCC). The results show that Ca2+-influx through omega-CgTx GVIA-sensitive N-type VSCC and through Nit-sensitive L-type VSCC induce the release of ACh and GABA. However, the significant differences observed regarding the Ca2+ channels involved in the release of each neurotransmitter suggest that in amacrine-like neurons containing simultaneously GABA and acetylcholine the two neurotransmitters may be released in distinct regions of the cells, endowed with different populations of VSCC.
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- 1998
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24. Culture medium components modulate retina cell damage induced by glutamate, kainate or 'chemical ischemia'
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Arsélio P. Carvalho, Carlos B. Duarte, Ildete L. Ferreira, and Ana Rute Neves
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Programmed cell death ,Kainic acid ,Excitotoxicity ,Ischemia ,Glutamic Acid ,Stimulation ,Kainate receptor ,Chick Embryo ,Pharmacology ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Retina ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Receptors, Kainic Acid ,Excitatory Amino Acid Agonists ,medicine ,Animals ,Receptors, AMPA ,Cell damage ,Cells, Cultured ,Neurons ,Kainic Acid ,Glutamate receptor ,Retinal Vessels ,Cell Biology ,medicine.disease ,Biochemistry ,chemistry ,Culture Media, Conditioned - Abstract
The aim of this study was to determine whether culture-conditioned medium (CCM) can prevent neuronal damage caused by excitotoxicity or by “chemical ischemia” in cultured chick retina cells. Excitotoxic conditions were obtained by incubating retina cells with glutamate or kainate and “chemical ischemia” was induced by metabolic inhibition. In this case, cultures were briefly exposed to sodium cyanide, to block oxidative phosphorylation and iodoacetic acid, to block glycolysis. The assessment of neuronal injury was made spectrophotometrically by quantification of cellularly reduced MTT. Stimulation of retina cells with glutamate or kainate in serum deprived culture medium (BME-FCS), lead to a decrease in the MTT metabolism that was dependent on the time of exposure to the toxic agents. CCM prevented cell damage, either when present during the stimulation period or during the recovery period. This protection was more prominent in the case of kainate-induced neuronal death. “Chemical ischemia” also lead to a decrease of the MTT metabolism in a time-dependent manner and CCM protected retina cells from “ischemia”-induced lesions when present during the stimulation period and during the recovery period. The protective effect of CCM was partially decreased by the tyrosine kinase inhibitor, genistein, when the cells were stimulated with kainate, but not with glutamate, or when the cells were subjected to “chemical ischemia”. CCM protected retina cells against both the acute and the delayed toxicity induced by either glutamate or kainate, or by “chemical ischemia”, when present during both the insult and the recovery period. The presence of survival factors in the media may effectively inhibit the cell death signals generated by glutamate receptor activation or by “chemical ischemia”.
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- 1998
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25. Nitric Oxide Synthase Activity and l-Arginine Metabolism in the Retinas from Streptozotocin-Induced Diabetic Rats*
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Celeste Lopes, Rui Proença, Maria S. Santos, Arsélio P. Carvalho, José Cunha-Vaz, and Anália do Carmo
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Arginine ,Biology ,Retina ,Streptozocin ,Diabetes Mellitus, Experimental ,Nitric oxide ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Citrulline ,Animals ,Rats, Wistar ,Pharmacology ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Metabolism ,Ornithine ,Streptozotocin ,eye diseases ,Rats ,Amino acid ,Nitric oxide synthase ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,biology.protein ,sense organs ,Nitric Oxide Synthase ,medicine.drug - Abstract
1. Nitric oxide synthase (NOS) activity was studied in the retinas from normal rats and in the retinas from two groups of streptozotocin-induced (8 days and 4 months) diabetic rats. In each animal group, the NOS activity was correlated to the concentration of amino acids related to L -arginine metabolism and to L -arginine uptake. 2. Retinas from both groups of streptozotocin-induced diabetes (8 days and 4 months) showed an increased NOS activity compared with the NOS activity in retinas from normal rats. In retinas lysate from normal rats, the NOS activity was most potently inhibited by NO-Arg (1 mM), whereas, in both groups of streptozotocin-induced diabetes, the NOS activity was most potently inhibited by the NOS inhibitor aminoguanidine (0.5 mM). 3. The basal levels of the amino acids related to L -arginine metabolism—namely, L -arginine, L -citrulline, L -ornithine and L -glutamine—in retinas from both groups of rats with streptozotocin-induced diabetes were decreased compared with the amino acid levels in retinas from normal rats. 4. The uptake of L -[3H]arginine in retinas from both groups of rats with streptozotocin-induced diabetes was increased compared with the uptake of of L -[3H]arginine in retinas from normal rats.
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- 1998
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26. Increase of the intracellular Ca2+ concentration mediated by transport of glutamate into rat hippocampal synaptosomes: characterization of the activated voltage sensitive Ca2+ channels
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António F. Ambrósio, Caetana M. Carvalho, João O. Malva, and Arsélio P. Carvalho
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Male ,Amino Acid Transport System X-AG ,Glutamic Acid ,Spider Venoms ,Kainate receptor ,Stimulation ,AMPA receptor ,Hippocampus ,omega-Conotoxins ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,omega-Agatoxin IVA ,Nitrendipine ,omega-Conotoxin GVIA ,medicine ,Animals ,Rats, Wistar ,Neurotransmitter ,alpha-Amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic Acid ,Synaptosome ,Aspartic Acid ,Kainic Acid ,Glutamate receptor ,nutritional and metabolic diseases ,Biological Transport ,Cell Biology ,Calcium Channel Blockers ,Rats ,Receptors, Glutamate ,Biochemistry ,chemistry ,Biophysics ,ATP-Binding Cassette Transporters ,Calcium ,Calcium Channels ,Peptides ,Synaptosomes ,Ionotropic effect ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The changes in the intracellular free Ca2+ concentration, [Ca2+]i, mediated by glutamate and D-aspartate into rat hippocampal synaptosomes was studied. Glutamate increased the [Ca2+]i in a dose-dependent manner with an EC50 of 1.87 [mu]M and a maximal increase of 31.5±0.9 nM. We also observed that stimulation of the synaptosomes with 100 [mu]M [alpha]-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid (AMPA), 100 [mu]M kainate, or 100 [mu]M D-aspartate increased the synaptosomal [Ca2+]i. The effect of either of these non-NMDA receptor agonists and of D-aspartate was additive, suggesting the activation of two different components (the ionotropic non-NMDA receptors or the glutamate transporters). Stimulation of synaptosomes with 100 [mu]M glutamate increased the [Ca2+]i and prevented the effect of either non-NMDA receptor agonists and the effect of D-aspartate. We also observed that incubation of the synaptosomes with D-aspartate induced the Ca2+-independent release of glutamate, possibly through the reversal of the glutamate carrier. The aim of incubating the synaptosomes with D-aspartate was to avoid undesirable secondary activation of glutamate receptors. After incubating the synaptosomes with 100 [mu]M D-aspartate (10 min at 37°C), the subsequent stimulation with D-aspartate increased the [Ca2+]i due to glutamate transport. this increase in [Ca2+]i induced by 100 [mu]M D-aspartate was insensitive to 1 [mu]M nitrendipine, but was inhibited by about 50% by the presence of both 500 nM [omega]-CgTx GVIA and 100 nM [omega]-Aga IVA or by 500 nM [omega]-CgTx MVIIC. We clearly identified two different processes by which glutamate increased the [Ca2+]i in rat hippocampal synaptosomes: activation of non-NMDA receptors and activation of the glutamate transporters. We also characterized the voltage sensitive Ca2+ channels (VSCC) activated as a consequence of the glutamate transport, and determined that class B (N-type) and class A (P or Q-type) Ca2+ channels were responsible for about 50% of the signal. http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/B6T0B-3TDPXHV-1W/1/c4f513cb79dab43fc097b11df729bf79
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- 1998
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27. Effects of Cadmium and Parathion Exposure on Hematology and Blood Biochemistry of Adult Male Rats
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Arsélio P. Carvalho, Lúcia Guilhermino, Amadeu M.V.M. Soares, and Maria do Carmo Lopes
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Male ,Insecticides ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Stereochemistry ,Sorbitol dehydrogenase ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Serum albumin ,Hematocrit ,Toxicology ,Transaminase ,Hemoglobins ,Leukocyte Count ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Internal medicine ,Lactate dehydrogenase ,medicine ,Animals ,Cholinesterases ,Rats, Wistar ,No-Observed-Adverse-Effect Level ,L-Lactate Dehydrogenase ,Parathion ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,biology ,Platelet Count ,General Medicine ,Pollution ,Blood proteins ,Rats ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Erythrocyte Count ,biology.protein ,Alkaline phosphatase ,Cholinesterase Inhibitors ,Cadmium - Abstract
Due to their toxicity, cadmium and parathion (0,0-diethyl 0-p-nitrophenyl phosphorothioate) have been extensively studied in the last decades. Although their acute effects on blood components are not completely known, increased levels of some serum enzymes [alanine aminotransferase (ALT), aspartate aminotransferase (AST), alkaline phosphatase (ALP), lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), sorbitol dehydrogenase (SDH)], total serum proteins, and serum albumin were found in rodents treated with acute doses of cadmium (Theocharis et al. 1994; Funakoshi et al. 1995). In addition, cadmium stimulates delta-aminolevulic acid dehydratase, which plays a crucial role in hemoglobin formation (Hogan and Razniak 1992). Inhibition of blood cholinesterases is a well known effect of parathion exposure in several species (Chaudhuri et al. 1993; Denga et al. 1995; Straus and Chambers 1995). Other described effects of parathion on blood include leukocytosis, hyperglycemia, increase of serum creatine, and elevated serum glutamic-oxaloacetic transaminase activity (Wyckoff et al. 1968; Gallo and Lawryk 1991).
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- 1998
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28. Ontogeny of the L-type voltage sensitive calcium channels in chick embryo retinospheroids
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Arsélio P. Carvalho, Alexandra N. Capela, A.J. Cristóvão, and Caetana M. Carvalho
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endocrine system ,medicine.medical_specialty ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Chick Embryo ,Calcium ,Biology ,Tritium ,Retina ,Membrane Potentials ,Potassium Chloride ,Radioligand Assay ,Developmental Neuroscience ,Nitrendipine ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Cells, Cultured ,Voltage-dependent calcium channel ,Antagonist ,Embryo ,Calcium Channel Blockers ,In vitro ,Logistic Models ,Membrane ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Biophysics ,Calcium Channels ,Intracellular ,Developmental Biology ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The L-type voltage sensitive calcium channels (VSCC) of chick embryo retinospheroids were characterized during the development in vitro. Functionally, the activity of VSCC was characterized by continuously monitoring the changes in the intracellular free Ca2+ concentration (delta[Ca2+]i) with indo-1, in response to 30 mM KCl. The contribution of the L-type VSCC was evaluated using the L-type VSCC antagonist, nitrendipine. We also characterized the binding of [3H]nitrendipine to retinospheroid membranes during development, and determined the Kd and Bmax values. We observed that the changes in [Ca2+]i in response to 30 mM KCl increased from 159.46 +/- 6.62 nM at 0 days in vitro (DIV) retinospheroids to 704.4 +/- 59.9 nM at 14 DIV retinospheroids. Nitrendipine (2 microM) blocked the delta[Ca2+]i response by approximately 67% in all ages tested. No significant difference in the Kd values for the nitrendipine binding was observed during in vitro development of the retinospheroids. However, the Bmax increased from 27.99 +/- 1.95 fmol/mg protein in 0 DIV retinospheroids to 131.09 +/- 14.24 fmol/mg protein in 14 DIV retinospheroids, supporting the delta[Ca2+]i results. The results presented suggest that the increase in [Ca2+]i during development was due to an increase in the number of L-type channels. Therefore, the expression of L-type VSCC is developmentally regulated during retinogenesis in vitro and accompanies neuronal maturation, probably regulating the Ca2+ input crucial to the onset of important intracellular Ca2+-dependent functions.
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- 1997
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29. 'Chemical ischemia' in cultured retina cells: the role of excitatory amino acid receptors and of energy levels on cell death
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Arsélio P. Carvalho, Carlos B. Duarte, and Ildete L. Ferreira
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Potassium Channels ,Iodoacetic acid ,Kainate receptor ,Chick Embryo ,AMPA receptor ,Membrane Potentials ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Ischemia ,Animals ,Amino Acids ,Molecular Biology ,Cells, Cultured ,gamma-Aminobutyric Acid ,Sodium cyanide ,Cell Death ,Adenine Nucleotides ,General Neuroscience ,Glutamate receptor ,Retinal Vessels ,Cell biology ,Receptors, Glutamate ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,CNQX ,NMDA receptor ,Neurology (clinical) ,Energy Metabolism ,Excitatory Amino Acid Antagonists ,Developmental Biology ,Ionotropic effect - Abstract
In this study, we determined whether the retina cell death observed in response to an ischemic-like insult is related to an overactivation of the ionotropic glutamate receptors and/or to a collapse of the energy levels. Cultured chick retina cells were submitted to `chemical ischemia' by metabolic inhibition with sodium cyanide and iodoacetic acid, which block oxidative phosphorylation and glycolysis, respectively. The assessment of neuronal injury was made spectrophotometrically by quantification of cellularly reduced MTT, which gives information about mitochondrial function, or by staining with fluorescein diacetate (FDA), which correlates with changes in the plasma membrane permeability. `Chemical ischemia' induced both an acute and a delayed time-dependent degeneration of chick retina cells. We observed that 2 min after the ischemic insult, the levels of ATP were reduced to a minimum. On the other hand, the metabolic inhibition induced the release of aspartate, glutamate and γ-aminobutyric acid, and the activation of AMPA/kainate receptors during the period of metabolic arrest was partially responsible for the loss of mitochondrial function. However, the NMDA and non-NMDA receptor antagonists (MK-801 and CNQX) did not prevent the plasma membrane damage caused by sodium cyanide and iodoacetic acid. The results show that the collapse of the energy levels, rather than the increase in excitatory amino acids, appears to underlie the observed cell injury, suggesting an important relationship between ischemia-induced depletion of high-energy metabolites and retina cell degeneration.
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- 1997
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30. Two types of ω-agatoxin IVA-sensitive Ca 2+ channels are coupled to adrenaline and noradrenaline release in bovine adrenal chromaffin cells
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Arsélio P. Carvalho, Emília P. Duarte, Idalina Ladeira, and Graça Baltazar
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Epinephrine ,Physiology ,Chromaffin Cells ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Spider Venoms ,Adrenergic ,Stimulation ,omega-Conotoxins ,Exocytosis ,Norepinephrine ,omega-Agatoxin IVA ,Physiology (medical) ,Internal medicine ,Adrenal Glands ,medicine ,Animals ,Voltage-dependent calcium channel ,Chemistry ,Depolarization ,Calcium Channel Blockers ,Omega-Conotoxins ,Electrophysiology ,Endocrinology ,Potassium ,Catecholamine ,Cattle ,Calcium Channels ,Peptides ,medicine.drug - Abstract
To clarify the role of P-type Ca2+ channels in catecholamine release from adrenal chromaffin cells we examined the concentration dependence of the effect of omega-agatoxin IVA on the release both of adrenaline and noradrenaline induced by a K(+)-evoked depolarization. omega-Agatoxin IVA caused a biphasic dose-dependent inhibition of secretion with a high-potency component (IC50 < 1 nM), responsible for 10-15% of catecholamine release evoked by 70 mM K+, and a low-potency component that accounted for about 40% of release, with IC50 values of 57 nM and 48 nM for noradrenaline and adrenaline release, respectively. The release of catecholamines from chromaffin cells was also inhibited dose dependently by omega-conotoxin MVIIC with IC50 values of 182 and 218 nM for noradrenaline and adrenaline release, respectively. The effects of 3 nM omega-agatoxin IVA and 3 microM omega-conotoxin MVIIC were additive, indicating that at the concentrations used the toxins were acting at independent sites, presumably, P- and Q-type Ca2+ channels. The blockade of Q-type channels inhibited the release of adrenaline (72 +/- 4.1%) significantly more than the release of noradrenaline (50 +/- 2.7%), suggesting a higher density or a closer coupling of these channels to exocytosis in adrenergic chromaffin cells. The blockade of P-type channels caused a greater inhibition of catecholamine secretion at low levels of K(+)-evoked depolarization and shorter times of stimulation than that observed at higher levels of stimulation. The contribution of Q-type channels to catecholamine secretion did not change significantly with the intensity of stimulation. The data show that two types of omega-agatoxin IVA-sensitive Ca2+ channels are coupled to catecholamine release in chromaffin cells, and that the contribution of P-type channels to secretion is larger at low levels of depolarization.
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- 1997
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31. On-line Detection of Glutamate Release from Culture Chick Retinospheroids
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José Sánchez-Prieto, Carlos B. Duarte, Arsélio P. Carvalho, and Paulo Santos
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Retinospheroids ,Amino Acid Transport System X-AG ,Chick Embryo ,Retina ,Potassium Chloride ,Calcium Chloride ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Glutamates ,Extracellular ,medicine ,Animals ,Fluorometry ,Neurotransmitter ,Cells, Cultured ,[3H]d-aspartate ,Aspartic Acid ,Neurotransmitter Agents ,Veratridine ,Glutamate receptor ,Biological Transport ,Depolarization ,Sensory Systems ,Ophthalmology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Cell culture ,Biophysics ,Intracellular Ca2+ ,Liberation ,ATP-Binding Cassette Transporters ,Calcium ,Glutamate release ,Neuroscience ,Retina cells - Abstract
A continuous fluorometric assay was adapted to measure the release of endogenous glutamate from cultured chick retinospheroids. The results obtained with this technique are compared with the release of [3H]d-aspartate from monolayer cultures of chick retina cells. It is shown that although excitatory amino acids may be released in a Ca2+-dependent manner, most of the neurotransmitter release from cultured retina cells occurs by reversal of the glutamate transporter. The presence of extracellular Ca2+ may actually inhibit glutamate release by the cells present in the retinospheroids, or the [3H]d-aspartate release by cells in monolayers, when veratridine is the depolarizing agent. Copyright © 1996 Elsevier Science Ltd.
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- 1996
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32. Glutamate release evoked by glutamate receptor agonists in cultured chick retina cells: Modulation by arachidonic acid
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Carlos B. Duarte, Arsélio P. Carvalho, Paulo Santos, and José Sánchez-Prieto
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Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Biochemistry ,Chemistry ,Biophysics ,Glutamate receptor ,Ionotropic glutamate receptor ,NMDA receptor ,Kainate receptor ,Stimulation ,Endogeny ,Arachidonic acid ,AMPA receptor - Abstract
We studied the effect of ionotropic glutamate receptor agonists on the release of endogenous glutamate or of [3H]D-aspartate from reaggregate cultures (retinospheroids) or from monolayer cultures of chick retinal cells, respectively. Kainate increased the fluorescence ratio of the Na+ indicator SBFI and stimulated a dose-dependent release of glutamate in low (0.1 mM) Ca2+ medium, as measured using a fluorometric assay. Under the same experimental conditions, the release evoked by N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA; 400 microM) was about half of that evoked by the same kainate concentration; alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxasolepropionic acid (AMPA; 400 microM) did not trigger a significant response. In the presence of 1 mM CaCl2, all of the agonists increased the [Ca2+]i, as determined with the fluorescence dye Indo-1, but the glutamate release evoked by NMDA and kainate was significantly lower than that measured in 0.1 mM CaCl2 medium. Inhibition by Ca2+ of the kainate-stimulated release of glutamate was partially reversed by the phospholipase A2 inhibitor oleiloxyethyl phosphorylcholine (OPC), suggesting that the effect was mediated by the release of arachidonic acid, which inhibits the glutamate carrier. Accordingly, kainate, NMDA, and AMPA stimulated a Ca(2+)-dependent release of [3H]arachidonic acid, and the direct addition of the exogenous fatty acid to the medium decreased the release of glutamate evoked by kainate in low (0.1 mM) CaCl2 medium. In monolayer cultures, we showed that NMDA, kainate, and AMPA also stimulated the release of [3H]D-aspartate, but in this case release in the presence of 1 mM CaCl2 was significantly higher than that evoked in media with no added Ca2+. The ranking order of efficacy for stimulation of Ca(2+)-dependent release of [3H]D-aspartate was NMDA > > kainate > AMPA.
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- 1996
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33. Domoic acid induces the release of glutamate in the rat hippocampal CA3 sub-region
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Arsélio P. Carvalho, Caetana M. Carvalho, and João O. Malva
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Glutamic Acid ,Hippocampus ,Kainate receptor ,AMPA receptor ,In Vitro Techniques ,Biology ,Hippocampal formation ,Receptors, Presynaptic ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Receptors, Kainic Acid ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Rats, Wistar ,alpha-Amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic Acid ,6-Cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione ,Synaptosome ,Kainic Acid ,General Neuroscience ,Dentate gyrus ,Glutamate receptor ,Domoic acid ,Rats ,Endocrinology ,nervous system ,Biochemistry ,chemistry ,Excitatory Amino Acid Antagonists ,Synaptosomes - Abstract
We investigated the role of kainate receptor activation in modulating the influx of Ca2+ coupled to the exocytotic release of glutamate in rat hippocampal synaptosomal fractions (P2). In whole hippocampus synaptosomes stimulation with domoic acid increased the intracellular free Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) in a dose-dependent manner with an EC50 of 0.16 microM, whereas the EC50 for kainate was 0.86 microM and for (+/-)-alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid (AMPA) was 43.04 microM. Stimulation of the synaptosomes with 10 microM domoic acid induced Ca(2+)-dependent release of endogenous glutamate. Also, in synaptosomes isolated from the CA3 sub-region of the hippocampus the domoic acid-induced release of glutamate was higher than that from the dentate gyrus (221.3%), from the CA1 (188.1%) or from the whole hippocampal synaptosomes (131.5%). These results support the existence of a presynaptic kainate receptor which may control the exocytotic release of glutamate in the CA3 sub-region of the rat hippocampus.
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- 1996
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34. Relationships Between ATP Depletion, Membrane Potential, and the Release of Neurotransmitters in Rat Nerve Terminals
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Arsélio P. Carvalho, Antonio Moreno, and Maria S. Santos
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Male ,Adenosine monophosphate ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Taurine ,Oligomycin ,Brain Ischemia ,Membrane Potentials ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Adenosine Triphosphate ,Catecholamines ,Adenine nucleotide ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Amino Acids ,Rats, Wistar ,Hypoxia, Brain ,Ouabain ,Neurotransmitter ,Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid ,Advanced and Specialized Nursing ,Neurotransmitter Agents ,business.industry ,Glutamate receptor ,Brain ,Adenosine Monophosphate ,Cell Hypoxia ,Hypoglycemia ,Rats ,Adenosine Diphosphate ,Kinetics ,Adenosine diphosphate ,Monoamine neurotransmitter ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Calcium ,Neurology (clinical) ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Synaptosomes - Abstract
Background and Purpose It is known that the extracellular accumulation of glutamate during anoxia/ischemia is responsible for initiating neuronal injury. However, little information is available on the release of monoamines and whether the mechanism of its release resembles that of glutamate, which may itself influence the release of monoamines by activating presynaptic receptors. This study was designed to characterize the release of both amino acids and monoamines under chemical conditions that mimic anoxia, hypoglycemia, and ischemia. Methods The contents of synaptosomes in adenine nucleotides (ATP, ADP, and AMP), amino acids (aspartate, glutamate, taurine, and γ-aminobutyric acid), and monoamines (dopamine, noradrenaline, and 5-hydroxytryptamine) were measured by high-performance liquid chromatography, after the synaptosomes were subjected to anoxia (KCN+oligomycin), hypoglycemia (2 mmol/L 2-deoxyglucose in glucose-free medium), and ischemia (anoxia plus hypoglycemia). Results The anoxia- and ischemia-induced release of noradrenaline, dopamine, 5-hydroxytryptamine, and glutamate correlated well with ATP depletion. The correlation observed between glutamate levels and the release of dopamine and 5-hydroxytryptamine in ischemic conditions suggests a functional linkage between the two transmitter systems. However, the antagonists of presynaptic glutamate receptors failed to alter the amount of monoamines released. The inhibition of Na + ,K + -ATPase by ouabain had an effect similar to that produced by ischemia. Conclusions The decrease in Na + and K + gradients resulting from the energy depletion of the synaptosomes under ischemic conditions or resulting from the inhibition of Na + ,K + -ATPase by ouabain promotes the reversal of the neurotransmitter transporters. The decrease in uptake of neurotransmitters may also contribute to the rise in the extracellular concentration of different transmitters observed during brain ischemia.
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- 1996
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35. [Ca2+]i regulation by glutamate receptor agonists in cultured chick retina cells
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Carlos B. Duarte, Paulo F. Santos, and Arsélio P. Carvalho
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N-Methylaspartate ,Inositol Phosphates ,ACPD receptors ,Kainate receptor ,Chick Embryo ,AMPA receptor ,Retina ,Excitatory Amino Acid Agonists ,Animals ,Cultured retina cells ,alpha-Amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic Acid ,Cells, Cultured ,Kainic Acid ,Chemistry ,Metabotropic glutamate receptor 5 ,Metabotropic glutamate receptor 7 ,Metabotropic glutamate receptor 6 ,Glutamate receptors ,Stimulation, Chemical ,Sensory Systems ,Cell biology ,Ophthalmology ,Metabotropic glutamate receptor ,Metabotropic glutamate receptor 1 ,NMDA receptor ,Calcium ,[Ca2+]i ,Calcium Channels ,Ca2+ channels ,Neuroscience - Abstract
The effect of glutamate receptor agonists on the intracellular free calcium concentration ([Ca2+]i), measured with Indo-1, was studied in populations of cultured chick embryonic retina cells. The agonists of the ionotropic glutamate receptors,N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA), kainate, and α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid (AMPA) increased the [Ca2+]i through a composite effect, comprising Ca2+ permeating the receptor-associated channels, and Ca2+ entering through voltage-gated Ca2+ channels. Furthermore, the [Ca2+i responses to NMDA and AMPA also involved Ca2+ release from intracellular stores, which could not be mobilized by stimulation of the metabotropic receptor.
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- 1996
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36. Ca2+ influx through glutamate receptor-associated channels in retina cells correlates with neuronal cell death
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Arsélio P. Carvalho, Carlos B. Duarte, and Ildete L. Ferreira
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Kainic acid ,N-Methylaspartate ,Excitotoxicity ,Glutamic Acid ,Kainate receptor ,Chick Embryo ,AMPA receptor ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Biochemistry ,Receptors, N-Methyl-D-Aspartate ,Retina ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Excitatory Amino Acid Agonists ,medicine ,Animals ,Long-term depression ,Cells, Cultured ,6-Cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione ,Pharmacology ,Kainic Acid ,Cell Death ,Neurotoxicity ,Glutamate receptor ,Depolarization ,medicine.disease ,Cell biology ,Neuroprotective Agents ,Receptors, Glutamate ,nervous system ,chemistry ,Metabotropic glutamate receptor ,SGK1 ,NMDA receptor ,Calcium ,Calcium Channels ,Dizocilpine Maleate ,Excitatory Amino Acid Antagonists ,Ionotropic effect - Abstract
We studied the effect of glutamate, N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA), kainate or K+ depolarization, on neurotoxicity in cultured chick retinal cells, under conditions in which we could discriminate between Ca2+ entering through ionotropic glutamate receptors and voltage-sensitive Ca2+ channels (VSCCs). When neurons were challenged with NMDA, kainate or glutamate, in Na(+)-containing medium, a decrease in cell survival was observed, whereas K+ depolarization did not affect the viability of the cells. The Mg2+ ion completely prevented the toxic effect mediated by the NMDA receptor, and had a small but significant protective effect at the alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid/kainate (AMPA/kainate) receptor-induced cell death. We observed that, in a Na(+)-free N-methyl-D-glucamine (NMG) medium, to avoid the activation of VSCCs indirectly by the glutamate receptor agonists, stimulation of the glutamate receptors causes Ca2+ influx only through NMDA and AMPA/kainate receptor-associated channels, and that Ca2+ entry correlates well with subsequent cell death. These results show that the activation of NMDA or AMPA/kainate receptors can cause excitotoxicity in retinal neurons by mechanisms not involving Na+ influx, but rather depending on the permeation of Ca2+ through glutamate receptor-associated channels. For small Ca2+ loads the entry of Ca2+ through the NMDA receptor-associated channel was more efficient in triggering cell death than the influx of Ca2+ through the AMPA/kainate receptor.
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- 1996
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37. Glutamate receptor agonists evoked Ca2+-dependent and Ca2+-independent release of [3H]d-Aspartate from cultured chick retina cells
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Carlos B. Duarte, Arsélio P. Carvalho, and Paulo Santos
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Agonist ,N-Methylaspartate ,medicine.drug_class ,Kainate receptor ,AMPA receptor ,Biology ,Tritium ,Biochemistry ,Retina ,Exocytosis ,Potassium Chloride ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Excitatory Amino Acid Agonists ,medicine ,Animals ,Receptor ,Neurotransmitter ,alpha-Amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic Acid ,Cells, Cultured ,Neurons ,Aspartic Acid ,Kainic Acid ,Glutamate receptor ,General Medicine ,Kinetics ,Receptors, Glutamate ,chemistry ,Biophysics ,NMDA receptor ,Calcium ,Chickens - Abstract
We studied the release of [3H]D-aspartate evoked by glutamate receptor agonists from monolayer cultures of chick retina cells, and found that activation of the glutamate receptors can evoke both Ca(2+)-dependent and Ca(2+)-independent release of [3H]D-aspartate. In Ca(2+)-free (no added Ca2+) Na+ medium, the agonists of the glutamate receptors induced the release of [3H]D-aspartate with the following rank order of potency: kainate > alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid (AMPA) approximately N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA). In media containing 1 mM CaCl2 the release of [3H]D-aspartate evoked by NMDA, kainate and AMPA was increased by about 112 percent, 20 percent and 39 percent, respectively, as compared to the release evoked by the same agonists in Ca(2+)-free medium. NMDA was the most potent agonist in stimulating the Ca(2+)-dependent release of [3H]D-aspartate, possibly by exocytosis, and AMPA was as potent as kainate. The Ca(2+)-dependent release of [3H]D-aspartate evoked by kainate was dependent on the influx of Ca2+ through the receptor associated channel, as well as through the N-(omega-Conotoxin GVIA-sensitive) and L- (nitrendipine-sensitive) type voltage-sensitive Ca2+ channels (VSCC). The exocytotic release of [3H]D-aspartate evoked by AMPA relied exclusively on Ca2+ entry through the L-type VSCC, whereas the effect of NMDA was partially mediated by the influx of Ca2+ through the receptor-associated channel, but not through L- or N-type VSCC. Thus, activation of these different glutamate receptors under physiological conditions is expected to cause the release of cytosolic and vesicular glutamate, and the routes of Ca2+ entry modulating vesicular release may be selectively recruited.
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- 1996
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38. Inhibition of acetylcholinesterase activity as effect criterion in acute tests with juvenile Daphnia Magna
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Lúcia Guilhermino, Arsélio P. Carvalho, M. Celeste Lopes, and Amadeu M.V.M. Soared
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Insecticides ,Environmental Engineering ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Daphnia magna ,Biology ,Toxicology ,Paraoxon ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,In vivo ,medicine ,Animals ,Environmental Chemistry ,Bioassay ,Aniline Compounds ,Parathion ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,General Medicine ,General Chemistry ,biology.organism_classification ,Pollution ,Acetylcholinesterase ,Enzyme assay ,Daphnia ,Biochemistry ,chemistry ,Toxicity ,biology.protein ,Cholinesterase Inhibitors ,Cadmium ,medicine.drug - Abstract
In this work we investigated the possibility of using the enzyme acetylcholinesterase (AChE) activity in Daphnia magna homogenates, both in vivo and in vitro conditions, as a specific method for rapid toxicity evaluations. The results from in vivo and in vitro AChE inhibition tests were compared with 48 hours EC50 values obtained in conventional acute bioassays. EC50 values from in vivo AChE inhibition tests were: 2.4 micrograms/l for parathion, 0.2 microgram/l for paraoxon; DCA and cadmium at the concentrations tested had no effects on enzyme activity. I50 values were 764 micrograms/l for parathion, 0.08 micrograms/l for paraoxon and 3367 micrograms/l for cadmium; DCA did not affect AChE activity measured in in vitro conditions. EC50 values from conventional acute tests were: 2.2 micrograms/l for parathion, 0.2 microgram/l for paraoxon, 163 micrograms/l for DCA and 9.5 micrograms/l for cadmium. Our results indicated that the in vivo AChE inhibition test is selective, being very sensitive to detect toxicity of the organophosphates tested. The in vitro AChE inhibition assay is less time consuming, requires less human effort and produces less toxic waste than conventional acute bioassays and the in vivo AChE inhibition test. However, it does not take into account the effect of the metabolization of the toxicants inside live organisms; since the organophosphate metabolism may be activative or degradative, the toxic potential of the parent compound may be under or over evaluated in in vitro conditions.
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- 1996
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39. Regulation of intracellular [Ca2+] and GABA release by presynaptic GABAB receptors in rat cerebrocortical synaptosomes
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Arsélio P. Carvalho, T.R.A. Macedo, Armanda E. Santos, and Caetana M. Carvalho
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Presynaptic Terminals ,Biology ,GABAB receptor ,Pertussis toxin ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Virulence Factors, Bordetella ,Rats, Wistar ,Receptor ,Neurotransmitter ,GABA Agonists ,gamma-Aminobutyric Acid ,Cerebral Cortex ,Synaptosome ,Calcium channel ,Osmolar Concentration ,Depolarization ,Intracellular Membranes ,Cell Biology ,Rats ,Electrophysiology ,Baclofen ,Endocrinology ,Pertussis Toxin ,Receptors, GABA-B ,nervous system ,chemistry ,Potassium ,Biophysics ,Calcium ,Calcium Channels ,Synaptosomes - Abstract
In this study we determined the changes in the intracellular free Ca2+ concentration, associated with the inhibitory modulation of the exocytotic release of GABA by GABAB receptor activation in rat cerebrocortical synaptosomes. We observed that SK&F 97541 and (-)baclofen both act as agonists of the presynaptic GABAB receptors in modulating GABA release and Ca2+ influx due to KCl (10 mM) depolarization, but SK&F 97541 is more potent than (-)baclofen in modulating both Ca2+ influx and GABA release. Thus, activation of GABAB receptors by either SK&F97541 (10 microM) or by (-)baclofen (100 microM) caused about 18% inhibition of the increase in [Ca2+]i, due to KCl depolarization, and inhibited the [3H]GABA release by about 30%. The pharmacological similarities of the GABAB receptor activation in producing inhibition of both calcium channel mediated influx of Ca2+ and transmitter release suggest that presynaptic inhibition of GABA release by GABAB receptor activation may result, at least in part, from inhibition of Ca2+ influx through P-type (or possibly Q-type) Ca2+ channels, sensitive to omega-Agatoxin IVA (200 nM). Furthermore, modulation of GABA release of GABAB receptors was abolished by preincubation with pertussis toxin, suggesting that a pertussis toxin sensitive G protein may be the coupling factor between GABAB receptors and the voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels associated with the exocytotic release of GABA in rat cerebrocortical nerve terminals.
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- 1995
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40. Dual role of K+ and Na+ on the transport of [3H]-γ-aminobutyric acid by synaptic plasma membrane vesicles
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Arsélio P. Carvalho and Paula Gonçalves
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Sodium ,Synaptic Membranes ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Biology ,Tritium ,Synaptic vesicle ,Aminobutyric acid ,Membrane Potentials ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Animals ,Neurotransmitter ,Molecular Biology ,gamma-Aminobutyric Acid ,Cerebral Cortex ,Membrane potential ,Sheep ,Vesicle ,Biological Transport ,Depolarization ,Membrane ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,Potassium ,Biophysics ,Synaptic Vesicles - Abstract
The influence of the monovalent cations (Na + and K + ) and of the electrical gradient on the high-affinity [ 3 H]-γ-aminobutyric acid ([ 3 H]GABA) transport was investigated in synaptic plasma membrane (SPM) vesicles isolated from sheep brain cortex. This process specifically requires internal K + , since when it is replaced by Li + , the Aψ remains of the same order of magnitude, but no uptake of [ 3 H]GABA occurs. The influence of the external (Na + concentration on the rate of [ 3 H]GABA uptake suggests that this mechanism exhibits two components, whose characteristics are determined by the Δψ Depolarization reduces the J max of [ 3 H]GABA influx and enhances the binding of (Na + associated to [ 3 H]GABA transport. Nevertheless, depolarization does not affect the K 0.5 of binding sites for Na + and the stoichiometry of translocation. These results suggest that intravesicular K + and external (Na + have a dual role on the mechanism of [ 3 H]GABA uptake: K + acts directly on the carrier and determines the membrane polarization; (Na + is cotransported with GABA and, according to the polarization state of the membrane, it modulates the operation of the carrier in its inward GABA translocation.
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- 1995
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41. Effect of myosin phosphorylation on actomyosin ATPase activity: a flow microcalorimetric study
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Arsélio P. Carvalho, Euclides Pires, Manuel Aureliano, Maria C. Pedroso, and de Lima
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chemistry.chemical_classification ,Myosin light-chain kinase ,Myosin ATPase ,Kinase ,Chemistry ,Phosphatase ,macromolecular substances ,musculoskeletal system ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Enzyme ,Biochemistry ,Myosin ,Biophysics ,Phosphorylation ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Instrumentation ,Actin - Abstract
A flow microcalorimetric technique was used for the first time to evaluate the effect of myosin phosphorylation on actomyosin ATPase activity. Using an actomyosin system containing myosin light-chain kinase and phosphatase, myosin phosphorylation affects the actomyosin ATPase activity positively or negatively depending upon the molar myosin:actin ratio used in the assay. Our results show that under conditions near physiological ones the phosphorylation of myosin light chains decreases the actomyosin ATPase activity.
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- 1995
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42. Glutamate Receptor Modulation of [3H]GABA Release and Intracellular Calcium in Chick Retina Cellsa
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Ana Luísa Carvalho, Ildete L. Ferreira, Carlos B. Duarte, and Arsélio P. Carvalho
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Nipecotic Acids ,Chick Embryo ,Retina ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Membrane Potentials ,Glutamates ,History and Philosophy of Science ,omega-Conotoxin GVIA ,Oximes ,Animals ,gamma-Aminobutyric Acid ,Metabotropic glutamate receptor 5 ,Ryanodine receptor ,Chemistry ,Nitrendipine ,General Neuroscience ,Metabotropic glutamate receptor 7 ,Nicotinic Acids ,Glutamate receptor ,Metabotropic glutamate receptor 6 ,Cell biology ,Receptors, Glutamate ,Potassium ,Metabotropic glutamate receptor 1 ,NMDA receptor ,Calcium ,Calcium Channels ,Metabotropic glutamate receptor 2 ,Peptides ,Ion Channel Gating - Published
- 1995
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43. Relation of [Ca2+]i to dopamine release in striatal synaptosomes: role of Ca2+ channels
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Ildete L. Ferreira, Arsélio P. Carvalho, Vera Adam-Vizi, Laszlo Tretter, João O. Malva, Caetana M. Carvalho, and Carlos B. Duarte
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Male ,Dopamine ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Stimulation ,Calcium ,Membrane Potentials ,Potassium Chloride ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,medicine ,Animals ,Channel blocker ,4-Aminopyridine ,Rats, Wistar ,Neurotransmitter ,Molecular Biology ,Membrane potential ,Synaptosome ,Nitrendipine ,General Neuroscience ,Calcium Channel Blockers ,Corpus Striatum ,Rats ,Nomifensine ,chemistry ,Biophysics ,3,4-Dihydroxyphenylacetic Acid ,Calcium Channels ,Neurology (clinical) ,Neuroscience ,Synaptosomes ,Developmental Biology ,medicine.drug - Abstract
We compared the effects of KCl and 4-aminopyridine (4-AP) stimulation on the coupling of Ca2+ channel activation to [3H]dopamine ([3H]DA) release in rat striatal synaptosomes and used specific Ca2+ channel blockers to discriminate between the different VSCC's activated by the two stimulatory agents. We found that whereas [3H]DA release is strictly Ca(2+)-dependent in the case of KCl depolarization, 4-AP, at concentrations above 100 microM, progressively causes a large Ca(2+)-independent release of [3H]DA. Thus, at 1 to 3 mM 4-AP, as much as 80-95% of the [3H]DA release is Ca(2+)-independent and can be partially blocked by nomifensine, indicating that some [3H]DA release is occurring through reversal of the DA carrier. Therefore, in the studies relating [Ca2+]i to [3H]DA release we selected 4-AP concentrations lower than 100 microM and corrected for the Ca(2+)-independent release. Under these conditions, we determined that: (1) Ca2+ entry through N-type VSCC's is involved in [3H]DA release both in the case of KCl depolarization (35% inhibition by omega-CgTx) and in 4-AP stimulation (23% inhibition by omega-CgTx); (2) Ca2+ entering through P-type and/or Q-type VSCC's is also involved in [3H]DA release due to 4-AP stimulation (26% inhibition by 200 nM omega-Aga IVA); (3) Neomycin (0.35 mM) inhibited the [3H]DA release due to 4-AP stimulation by about 20% and decreased the KCl induced [3H]DA release by 55%; the effects of neomycin (0.35 mM) and omega-CgTx were additive in both cases, indicating that, at this concentration, the antibiotic does not affect significantly N-type Ca2+ channels; (4) When applied together, omega-CgTx and omega-Aga IVA inhibited the 4-AP stimulated [3H]DA release by about 40-50%, suggesting that the remaining large fraction of the VSCC's activated by 4-AP stimulation are non-N, non-P VSCC's and are coupled to Ca(2+)-dependent [3H]DA release; (5) The contribution of L-type VSCC's is uncertain, since there seemed to be a small contribution in the case of KCl depolarization, but not in the case of 4-AP stimulation. On the whole, the results suggest that the release of [3H]DA in the rat striatal nerve terminals depends on Ca2+ entry through N-, P-, possibly Q-, and other non-N-, non-P-type VSCC's when either KCl or 4-AP stimulation is utilized.
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- 1995
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44. Activation of neuropeptide Y receptors is neuroprotective against excitotoxicity in organotypic hippocampal slice cultures
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João O. Malva, Birthe Jakobsen, Ana P. Silva, Jens Zimmer, Caetana M. Carvalho, Arsélio P. Carvalho, and Paulo S. Pinheiro
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Receptors, Neuropeptide ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Excitotoxicity ,Hippocampus ,Kainate receptor ,NPY ,AMPA receptor ,Hippocampal formation ,medicine.disease_cause ,Biochemistry ,Neuroprotection ,Organ Culture Techniques ,Internal medicine ,AMPA ,Genetics ,medicine ,Animals ,Neurodegeneration ,Receptor ,alpha-Amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic Acid ,Molecular Biology ,Kainic Acid ,Chemistry ,Pyramidal Cells ,Glutamate receptor ,Kainate ,Rats ,Receptors, Neuropeptide Y ,Neuroprotective Agents ,Endocrinology ,nervous system ,Dentate Gyrus ,Nerve Degeneration ,Biotechnology - Abstract
Glutamate and NPY have been implicated in hippocampal neuropathology in temporal lobe epilepsy. Thus, we investigated the involvement of NPY receptors in mediating neuroprotection against excitotoxic insults in organotypic cultures of rat hippocampal slices. Exposure of hippocampal slice cultures to 2 μM AMPA (α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-isoxazole-4- propionate) induced neuronal degeneration, monitored by propidium iodide uptake, of granule cells and CA1 pyramidal cells. For dentate granule cells, selective activation of Y1, Y2, or Y5 receptors with 1 μM [Leu31,Pro34]NPY, 300 nM NPY13–36 or 1 μM 500 nM NPY(19–23)- 1 3 4 6 31 32 34 (Gly ,Ser ,Gln ,Thr ,Ala ,Aib ,Gln )-PP, respectively, had a neuroprotective effect against AMPA, whereas only the activation of Y2 receptors was effective for CA1 pyramidal cells. When the slice cultures were exposed to 6 μM kainate, the CA3 pyramidal cells displayed significant degeneration, and in this case the activation of Y1, Y2, and Y5 receptors was neuroprotective. For the kainic acid-induced degeneration of CA1 pyramidal cells, it was again found that only the Y2 receptor activation was effective. Based on the present findings, it was concluded that Y1, Y2, and Y5 receptors effectively can modify glutamate receptor-mediated neurodegeneration in the hippocampus
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- 2003
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45. Amino acids differentially inhibit the l-[3H]arginine transport and nitric oxide synthase in rat brain synaptosomes
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Arsélio P. Carvalho, Susana A. Cardoso, Arne Schousboe, and Maria do Carmo Lopes
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Arginine ,Lysine ,Chick Embryo ,Nitric Oxide ,Tritium ,Nitroarginine ,Nitric oxide ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Cytosol ,Animals ,Amino Acids ,Rats, Wistar ,Synaptosome ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,omega-N-Methylarginine ,Arginine transport ,biology ,General Neuroscience ,Brain ,Biological Transport ,Rats ,Amino acid ,Nitric oxide synthase ,Enzyme ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,biology.protein ,Amino Acid Oxidoreductases ,Nitric Oxide Synthase ,Synaptosomes - Abstract
The nitric oxide synthase (NOS) present in the cytosol obtained from rat cerebral cortex synaptosomes was inhibited by N G -nitro- l -arginine ( l -NOArg) with an IC 50 value of ∼0.06 μ M. This compound did not affect the transport of l -arginine ( l -Arg) into synaptosomes at concentrations up to 100 μM but other potential inhibitors of NOS (N G -monomethyl- l -arginine, N G -amino- l -arginine and l -arginine methyl ester) inhibited l -Arg transport at a concentration μ M. We showed that concentrations of l -NOArg (0.001–3 μM) that did not block the uptake of tritiated arginine ( l -[ 3 H]Arg) inhibited the catalytic activity of NOS in intact synaptosomes. l -NOArg at a concentration of 1 μM inhibited the cytosolic enzyme by 98.0 ± 2.0% of the total NOS activity whereas the enzyme studied in the intact synaptosomes was only inhibited by 75 ± 5% which suggested that the NOS in synaptosomes is not fully accessible to the external l -NOArg. On the other hand, l -Lysine did not inhibit the cytosolic NOS activity of ruptured synaptosomes but at a concentration that blocked 50.0 ± 4.5% of l -[ 3 H]Arg uptake it inhibited the NOS activity in intact synaptosomes by 12.6 ± 3.6%, suggesting that the transport of l -Arg may be an important regulatory step in the pathway for nitric oxide generation.
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- 1994
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46. Domoic acid induced release of [3H]GABA in cultured chick retina cells
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R. Durán, Arsélio P. Carvalho, M. Alfonso, Carlos B. Duarte, and Ildete L. Ferreira
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Kainic acid ,Stereochemistry ,Neurotoxins ,Nipecotic Acids ,Kainate receptor ,Chick Embryo ,Retina ,GABA Antagonists ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Quinoxalines ,Oximes ,Extracellular ,Animals ,Cells, Cultured ,gamma-Aminobutyric Acid ,6-Cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione ,Kainic Acid ,Chemistry ,Nicotinic Acids ,Glutamate receptor ,Cell Biology ,nervous system ,Metabotropic glutamate receptor ,Biophysics ,CNQX ,NMDA receptor ,ACPD ,Calcium ,Excitatory Amino Acid Antagonists - Abstract
The effect of the neurotoxin domoic acid (DOM), a structural analogue of kainic acid, on the release of [3H]gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) and on the [Ca2+]i was studied in cultured chick retina cells. DOM stimulated dose-dependently the release of [3H]GABA with an EC50 of 2.5 microM. In Ca(2+)-containing medium (1 mM), DOM (5 microM) increased the [Ca2+]i by about 190 nM and evoked the release of 11.8 +/- 1.3% of the intracellular [3H]GABA, while in the absence of extracellular Ca2+ DOM induced the release of only 7.9 +/- 1.4% of the accumulated [3H]GABA. The Ca(2+)-independent release of [3H]GABA was blocked by the non-competitive inhibitor of the GABA carrier 1-(2-(((diphenylmethylene)amino)oxy)ethyl)-1,2,5,6-tetrahydro-3-py ridine- carboxylic acid hydrochloride (NNC-711), but a component of Ca(2+)-dependent release remains. DOM evoked Ca(2+)-independent release of [3H]GABA was significantly depressed in the absence of external Na+ and completely blocked by the non-selective antagonist of the non-NMDA glutamate receptors, 6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione (CNQX). Similarly, CNQX decreased the [Ca2+]i response to DOM, whereas L(+)-2-amino-3-phosphonopropionic acid (L-AP3), an antagonist of the metabotropic glutamate receptors, was without effect. MK-801 did not affect the release of [3H]GABA stimulated by DOM. Taken together our results indicate that DOM evokes both Ca(2+)-dependent and Ca(2+)-independent release of [3H]GABA, most likely by activating kainate receptors.
- Published
- 1994
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47. Glutamate increases the [Ca2+]i but stimulates Ca2+-independent release of [3H]GABA in cultured chick retina cells
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Ildete L. Ferreira, Carlos B. Duarte, Catarina R. Oliveira, Paulo F. Santos, and Arsélio P. Carvalho
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Nipecotic Acids ,Glutamic Acid ,Chick Embryo ,Biology ,Retina ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Glutamates ,omega-Conotoxin GVIA ,Oximes ,Animals ,Omega-Conotoxin GVIA ,Channel blocker ,Molecular Biology ,Cells, Cultured ,gamma-Aminobutyric Acid ,Veratridine ,Nitrendipine ,General Neuroscience ,Nicotinic Acids ,Glutamate receptor ,Glutamic acid ,Calcium Channel Blockers ,nervous system ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,CNQX ,Biophysics ,NMDA receptor ,Ligand-gated ion channel ,Calcium ,Neurology (clinical) ,Peptides ,Excitatory Amino Acid Antagonists ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
The effect of glutamate on [Ca2+]i and on [3H] gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) release was studied on cultured chick embryonic retina cells. It was observed that glutamate (100 microM) increases the [Ca2+]i by Ca2+ influx through Ca2+ channels sensitive to nitrendipine, but not to omega-conotoxin GVIA (omega-Cg Tx) (50%), and by other channels insensitive to either Ca2+ channel blocker. Mobilization of Ca2+ by glutamate required the presence of external Na+, suggesting that Na+ mobilization through the ionotropic glutamate receptors is necessary for the Ca2+ channels to open. The increase in [Ca2+]i was not related to the release of [3H]GABA induced by glutamate, suggesting that the pathway for the entry of Ca2+ triggered by glutamate does not lead to exocytosis. In fact, the glutamate-induced release of [3H]GABA was significantly depressed by Ca(2+)o, but it was dependent on Na(+)o, just as was observed for the [3H]GABA release induced by veratridine (50 microM). The veratridine-induced release could be fully inhibited by TTX, but this toxin had no effect on the glutamate-induced [3H]GABA release. Both veratridine- and glutamate-induced [3H]GABA release were inhibited by 1-(2-(((diphenylmethylene)amino)oxy)ethyl)-1,2,5,6-tetrahydro-3-py ridine- carboxylic acid (NNC-711), a blocker of the GABA carrier. Blockade of the NMDA and non-NMDA glutamate receptors with MK-801 and 6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione (CNQX), respectively, almost completely blocked the release of [3H]GABA evoked by glutamate.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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- 1993
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48. Relation of exocytotic release of ?-aminobutyric acid to Ca2+ entry through Ca2+ channels or by reversal of the Na+/Ca2+ exchanger in synaptosomes
- Author
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Arsélio P. Carvalho, Carlos B. Duarte, Ildete L. Ferreira, and Caetana M. Carvalho
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GABA Plasma Membrane Transport Proteins ,Physiology ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Nipecotic Acids ,Organic Anion Transporters ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Calcium ,Neurotransmission ,Exocytosis ,Sodium-Calcium Exchanger ,gamma-Aminobutyric acid ,Potassium Chloride ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,Physiology (medical) ,Oximes ,medicine ,Animals ,Egtazic Acid ,gamma-Aminobutyric Acid ,Ion transporter ,Cerebral Cortex ,Synaptosome ,Membrane potential ,Chemistry ,Nicotinic Acids ,Membrane Proteins ,Membrane Transport Proteins ,Depolarization ,Rats ,Biochemistry ,Biophysics ,Calcium Channels ,Carrier Proteins ,Synaptosomes ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The specific inhibitor of the gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) carrier, NNC-711, (1-[(2-diphenylmethylene)amino]oxyethyl)- 1,2,5,6-tetrahydro-3-pyridine-carboxylic acid hydrochloride, blocks the Ca(2+)-independent release of [3H]GABA from rat brain synaptosomes induced by 50 mM K+ depolarization. Thus, in the presence of this inhibitor, it was possible to study the Ca(2+)-dependent release of [3H]GABA in the total absence of carrier-mediated release. Reversal of the Na+/Ca2+ exchanger was used to increase the intracellular free Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) to test whether an increase in [Ca2+]i alone is sufficient to induce exocytosis in the absence of depolarization. We found that the [Ca2+]i may rise to values above 400 nM, as a result of Na+/Ca2+ exchange, without inducing release of [3H]GABA, but subsequent K+ depolarization immediately induced [3H]GABA release. Thus, a rise of only a few nanomolar Ca2+ in the cytoplasm induced by 50 mM K+ depolarization, after loading the synaptosomes with Ca2+ by Na+/Ca2+ exchange, induced exocytotic [3H]GABA release, whereas the rise in cytoplasmic [Ca2+] caused by reversal of the Na+/Ca2+ exchanger was insufficient to induce exocytosis, although the value for [Ca2+]i attained was higher than that required for exocytosis induced by K+ depolarization. The voltage-dependent Ca2+ entry due to K+ depolarization, after maximal Ca2+ loading of the synaptosomes by Na+/Ca2+ exchange, and the consequent [3H]GABA release could be blocked by 50 microM verapamil. Although preloading the synaptosomes with Ca2+ by Na+/Ca2+ exchange did not cause [3H]GABA release under any conditions studied, the rise in cytoplasmic [Ca2+] due to Na+/Ca2+ exchange increased the sensitivity to external Ca2+ of the exocytotic release of [3H]GABA induced by subsequent K+ depolarization. Thus, our results show that the vesicular release of [3H]GABA is rather insensitive to bulk cytoplasmic [Ca2+] and are compatible with the view that GABA exocytosis is triggered very effectively by Ca2+ entry through Ca2+ channels near the active zones.
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- 1993
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49. Quantitative concentration-toxicity relationship for the injury of rat thymocytes by chemical compounds used in inter-laboratory toxicity ring-tests
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A.M. Donato, Lúcia Guilhermino, Arsélio P. Carvalho, Amadeu M.V.M. Soares, L. Silveira, and Maria do Carmo Lopes
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Chemical compound ,General Medicine ,Biology ,Toxicology ,medicine.disease ,Molecular biology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Thymocyte ,chemistry ,Lactate dehydrogenase ,Toxicity ,Immunology ,medicine ,Trypan blue ,MTT assay ,Cytotoxicity ,Cell damage - Abstract
Rat thymic lymphocytes were used to determine the cytotoxic effect of the two toxicants, 3,4-dichloroaniline (DCA) and sodium bromide (NaBr), at concentrations that have effects in the 21-day reproduction test with Daphnia magna. To evaluate the effect of the chemical compounds on cell membrane integrity, we measured the permeability of the thymocytes to trypan blue and the leakage of lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) from the cells. The viability and metabolic activity of the thymocytes were quantified by the MTT assay. The DCA concentrations tested (from 31 to 310 nm) did not affect significantly the viability of thymocytes, as determined by trypan blue exclusion or by LDH leakage; however, with the MTT assay we could detect cytotoxicity at 62 nm. Both the trypan blue assay and the LDH assay indicated that concentrations of NaBr above 50 mm significantly affected the viability of the thymocytes. However, the MTT assay revealed a more pronounced toxic effect of NaBr, with significant cell damage being detected at 1 mm.
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- 2010
50. Ca2+-dependent release of [3H]GABA in cultured chick retina cells
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Paulo F. Santos, Catarina R. Oliveira, Ildete L. Ferreira, Carlos B. Duarte, and Arsélio P. Carvalho
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Indoles ,Hydrochloride ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Chick Embryo ,Calcium ,Biology ,Tritium ,Peptides, Cyclic ,Retina ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Nitrendipine ,omega-Conotoxin GVIA ,medicine ,Animals ,Molecular Biology ,Cells, Cultured ,gamma-Aminobutyric Acid ,Fluorescent Dyes ,General Neuroscience ,Depolarization ,Calcium Channel Blockers ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,Cell culture ,Potassium ,Biophysics ,Liberation ,GABAergic ,Neurology (clinical) ,Developmental Biology ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Depolarization by K+ (50 mM) of cultured chick retina cells released 1.14 ± 0.28% of the accumulated [3H]γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) in the absence of Ca2+, but when 1.0 mM Ca2+ was present, the internal free calcium ion concentration [Ca2+]i rose by about 750 nM and the [3H]GABA release about doubled to a value of 2.22 ± 0.2% of the total [3H]GABA. Nitrendipine (0.1 μM), a blocker of the L-type Ca2+ channels, blocked the [Ca2+]i response to K+ depolarization by about 65%, and the ω-Conotoxin GVIA (ω-CgTx) (0.5 μM), a blocker of the N-type of Ca2+ channels, inhibited by 27% the [Ca2+]i rise due to K+ depolarization. Parallel experiments showed that nitrendipine inhibits [3H]GABA release to the level observed in the absence of Ca2+, whereas ω-CgTx did not inhibit significantly the release of [3H]GABA. The results also show that the release of [3H]GABA due to K+-depolarization in the absence of Ca2+ can be totally blocked by 1-(2-(((Diphenylmethylene)amino)oxy)ethyl)-1,2,5,6-tetrahydro-3-pyridine-carboxylic acid hydrochloride (NNC-711), an inhibitor of the GABA carrier. However, in the presence of Ca2+, NNC-711 blocks the release only by about 66%, corresponding to the Ca2+-independent release. Thus, it is concluded that [3H]GABA is released in chick retina cells by the exocytotic mechanism, which is Ca2+-dependent, and by reversal of the carrier, which is Ca2+-independent, in much the same way as has been found for other GABAergic neurons. Previous reports that cultured chick retina cells show no Ca2+-dependent release of GABA should be re-examined in light of our results obtained with a superfusion system.
- Published
- 1992
- Full Text
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