Activation of proteolytic enzymes, including the caspase family of proteinases, is a feature characteristic of the apoptotic program. In the present study, we examined a potential role of intracellular proteinases in the death of neuronal PC12 and primary cultured rat microglial cells induced by 6-h
Ceramide-induced cell death in primary neuronal cultures: Upregulation of ceramide levels during neuronal apoptosis
โ Scribed by Rachelle E. Toman; Vilen Movsesyan; Shvetha K. Murthy; Sheldon Milstien; Sarah Spiegel; Alan I. Faden
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2002
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 172 KB
- Volume
- 68
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0360-4012
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โฆ Synopsis
Ceramide is a sphingolipid that has been implicated both in apoptosis and protection from cell death. We show that in both rat cerebellar granule cells and cortical neuronal cultures application of C(2)-ceramide causes cell death in a dose- and time-dependent manner. Similar effects were observed with the exogenous application of bacterial sphingomyelinase, which hydrolyzes sphingomyelin located on the outer leaflet of the plasma membrane and leads to endogenous ceramide accumulation. Furthermore, endogenous ceramide levels were increased during apoptosis induced by nutrient deprivation or etoposide treatment. These findings suggest that upregulation of ceramide levels, which may be generated through activation of sphingomyelinase, contributes to neuronal apoptosis.
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