Biomedicine & pharmacotherapy = Biomédecine & pharmacothérapie
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Biomed. Pharmacother. · Jan 1998
Direct evidence for glutathione as mediator of apoptosis in neuronal cells.
Recent evidence has focused attention on the role of oxidative stress in various acute and chronic neurodegenerative diseases. Particularly, a decrease in the level of the powerful antioxidant glutathione (GSH) and death of dopaminergic neurons in substantia nigra are prominent features in Parkinson's disease. The mode of neuronal death is uncertain; however, apoptosis has been hypothesized to be mediated through the induction of free radicals via oxidative pathways. ⋯ A direct cause/effect relationship between GSH depletion and apoptosis was evidenced in this neuronal cell type. GSH depletion induced the death of NS20Y and promoted nuclear alterations of apoptosis as demonstrated by the in situ staining of DNA fragmentation after 5 days of BSO treatment (by terminal-deoxynucleotide transferase-mediated dUTP-nick end labeling), and the appearance of DNA laddering on agarose gel. These results suggested that redox desequilibrium induced by GSH depletion may serve as a general trigger for apoptosis in neuronal cells, and are consistent with the hypothesis that GSH depletion contribute to neuronal death in Parkinson's disease.
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Due to short relaxation times, fat has a high signal on magnetic resonance images (MRI). This high signal, easily recognized on MRI, may be useful to characterize a lesion. However, small amounts of lipids are more difficult to detect on conventional MRI. ⋯ Fat may be suppressed on the basis of its difference in resonance frequency with water by means of frequency selective pulses or phase contrast techniques, or on the basis of its short T1 relaxation time by means of inversion recovery sequences. Lastly, hybrid techniques combining several of these fat suppression techniques are also possible. The aim of this paper is to review the basic principles of all these fat suppression techniques and to exemplify their clinical use.