Oxidative stress as a cause of nigral cell death in Parkinson s disease and incidental Lewy body disease The Royal Kings and Queens Parkinson s Disease Research Group


     Related Videos
ME C117 Lecture 10: Contact Stress in Devices; Stress... - YouTube
Contact Stress in Devices Stress - ME C117 Lecture 10
Stress Inc 2 Truth About Stress
Stress Inc 1 Truth About Stress
How To Use Stress! Can Stress be Good Austin Wellness

     Related Hubpages

    •  Doc. Url:    Embed Code: 

    • PubMed  status
      (0) (0 Votes)
      Views: (1043)   Date: (13-03-09)   Pages: ()
    • Author:  Jenner P  Dexter DT  Sian J  Schapira AH  Marsden CD.  

    • Abstract:  Oxidative stress as a cause of nigral cell death in Parkinson's disease and incidental Lewy body disease. The Royal Kings and Queens Parkinson's Disease Research Group. Jenner P, Dexter DT, Sian J, Schapira AH, Marsden CD. Parkinson's Disease Society Experimental Research Laboratories, King's College London, UK. We examine the evidence for free radical involvement and oxidative stress in the pathological process underlying Parkinson's disease, from postmortem brain tissue. The concept of free radical involvement is supported by enhanced basal lipid peroxidation in substantia nigra in patients with Parkinson's disease, demonstrated by increased levels of malondialdehyde and lipid hydroperoxides. The activity of many of the protective mechanisms against oxidative stress does not seem to be significantly altered in the nigra in Parkinson's disease. Thus, activities of catalase and glutathione peroxidase are more or less unchanged, as are concentrations of vitamin C and vitamin E. The activity of mitochondrial superoxide dismutase and the levels of the antioxidant ion zinc are, however, increased, which may reflect oxidative stress in substantia nigra. Levels of reduced glutathione are decreased in nigra in Parkinson's disease; this decrease does not occur in other brain areas or in other neurodegenerative illnesses affecting this brain region (i.e., multiple system atrophy, progressive supranuclear palsy). Altered glutathione metabolism may prevent inactivation of hydrogen peroxide and enhance formation of toxic hydroxyl radicals. In brain material from patients with incidental Lewy body disease (presymptomatic Parkinson's disease), there is no evidence for alterations in iron metabolism and no significant change in mitochondrial complex I function. The levels of reduced glutathione in substantia nigra, however, are reduced to the same extent as in advanced Parkinson's disease. These data suggest that changes in glutathione function are an early component of the pathological process of Parkinson's disease.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS) PMID: 1510385 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

         Related Documents

           Related Groups

             Related Science News

               More on Sciencestage

                 Answers

                 News

                 Related on Wikipedia




























             

            Powered free by PHPmotion