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Chaperones, protein aggregation, and brain protection from hypoxic/ischemic injury
Author(s) -
Rona G. Giffard,
Lijun Xu,
Heng Zhao,
Whitney Carrico,
YiBing Ouyang,
Yanli Qiao,
Robert M. Sapolsky,
Gary K. Steinberg,
Bingren Hu,
Midori A. Yenari
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
journal of experimental biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.367
H-Index - 185
eISSN - 1477-9145
pISSN - 0022-0949
DOI - 10.1242/jeb.01034
Subject(s) - protein aggregation , ischemia , hsp70 , biology , astrocyte , apoptosis , programmed cell death , heat shock protein , hsp27 , microbiology and biotechnology , immunostaining , ubiquitin , in vivo , neuroscience , medicine , biochemistry , immunology , central nervous system , immunohistochemistry , gene
Chaperones, especially the stress inducible Hsp70, have been studied for their potential to protect the brain from ischemic injury. While they protect from both global and focal ischemia in vivo and cell culture models of ischemia/reperfusion injury in vitro, the mechanism of protection is not well understood. Protein aggregation is part of the etiology of chronic neurodegenerative diseases such as Huntington's and Alzheimer's, and recent data demonstrate protein aggregates in animal models of stroke. We now demonstrate that overexpression of Hsp70 in hippocampal CA1 neurons reduces evidence of protein aggregation under conditions where neuronal survival is increased. We have also demonstrated protection by the cochaperone Hdj-2 in vitro and demonstrated that this is associated with reduced protein aggregation identified by ubiquitin immunostaining. Hdj-2 can prevent protein aggregate formation by itself, but can only facilitate protein folding in conjunction with Hsp70. Pharmacological induction of Hsp70 was found to reduce both apoptotic and necrotic astrocyte death induced by glucose deprivation or oxygen glucose deprivation. Protection from ischemia and ischemia-like injury by chaperones thus involves at least anti-apoptotic, anti-necrotic and anti-protein aggregation mechanisms.

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