calpain and Glaucoma

calpain has been researched along with Glaucoma* in 9 studies

Reviews

2 review(s) available for calpain and Glaucoma

ArticleYear
Mechanisms of retinal ganglion cell injury and defense in glaucoma.
    Experimental eye research, 2010, Volume: 91, Issue:1

    Glaucoma is a disease in which retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) die leading ultimately to blindness. Over the past decade and a half, information has begun to emerge regarding specific molecular responses of the retina to conditions of elevated intraocular pressure (IOP). It is now clear that the state of the RGC in glaucoma depends on a balance of pro-survival and pro-death pathways in the retina and details of these responses are still being worked out. In this review, we will discuss the evidence supporting the involvement of specific apoptotic cascades as well as the insults that trigger RGC apoptosis. In addition, we will present evidence supporting the existence of endogenous protective mechanisms as well as exogenous neuroprotective strategies.

    Topics: Apoptosis; Apoptosis Regulatory Proteins; Calcineurin; Calpain; Caspases; Cell Survival; Cytoprotection; Glaucoma; Humans; Retinal Ganglion Cells

2010
Neuroprotection in glaucoma using calpain-1 inhibitors: regional differences in calpain-1 activity in the trabecular meshwork, optic nerve and implications for therapeutics.
    CNS & neurological disorders drug targets, 2008, Volume: 7, Issue:3

    Glaucoma is a group of irreversible blinding eye diseases affecting over 70 million people worldwide. Systemic delivery of calpain-1 inhibitors was proposed as a neuroprotection strategy for the prevention of progressive optic nerve damage in glaucoma. We present a general review of calpain-1 and an account of vast differences in processing of calpain-1 in the trabecular meshwork (TM) and the optic nerve. Calpain-1 accumulates in the glaucomatous TM tissues in vivo. However, calpain-1 activity is substantially lower in the glaucomatous TM compared to controls, apparently owing to partial degradation, and modification by lipid oxidation products such as iso [4]levuglandin E2 (iso [4]LGE(2)). Treatment of calpain-1 with iso [4]LGE(2) in vitro results in covalent modification, inactivation, and resistance to protease digestion. Iso [4]LGE(2)-modified calpain-1 appeared to undergo ubiquitination in the TM by cellular degradation machinery mediated by ubch1-2, ubch5,6 and E6-AP, E2 and E3 enzymes respectively. In the TM, iso [4]LGE(2)-modified calpain-1 loading impairs the cellular proteasome activity consistent with competitive inhibition and formation of suicidal high molecular weight aggregates. In contrast, higher calpain-1 activity, that appears to be under translational control, was observed in glaucomatous optic nerve compared to control. Therapeutic neuroprotection strategies using calpain-1 inhibitors will require consideration of such anatomic differences in its activity and biosynthesis.

    Topics: Animals; Calpain; Glaucoma; Glycoproteins; Humans; Neuroprotective Agents; Optic Nerve; Trabecular Meshwork

2008

Other Studies

7 other study(ies) available for calpain and Glaucoma

ArticleYear
Role of CAST-Drp1 Pathway in Retinal Neuron-Regulated Necrosis in Experimental Glaucoma.
    Current medical science, 2023, Volume: 43, Issue:1

    Numerous studies have indicated that excitatory amino acid toxicity, such as glutamate toxicity, is involved in glaucoma. In addition, excessive glutamate can lead to an intracellular calcium overload, resulting in regulated necrosis. Our previous studies have found that the calpastatin (CAST)-calpain pathway plays an important role in retinal neuron-regulated necrosis after glutamate injury. Although inhibition of the calpain pathway can decrease regulated necrosis, necrotic cells remain. It has been suggested that there are other molecules that participate in retinal neuron-regulated necrosis. CAST is an important regulator of dynamin-related protein 1 (Drp1)-mediated mitochondrial defects. Thus, the aim of this study was to determine whether the CAST-Drp1 pathway may be an underlying signaling axis in neuron-regulated necrosis.. Using cultured retinal neurons and in an in-vivo glaucoma model induced by glutamate overload, members of the CAST-Drp1 pathway were assessed by immunofluorescence, Western blotting, Phos-tag. We found that more retinal neuron-regulated necrosis and Drp1 activation as well as lower CAST levels were present in the glutamate-induced glaucoma model. Rats with glutamate-induced glaucoma exhibited impaired visual function. We also observed retinal neuron-regulated necrosis and Drp1 activity decreased, and impaired vision recovered after CAST active peptide application, indicating that the CAST-Drp1 pathway plays a critical role in retinal neuron-regulated necrosis and visual function.. The results of this study indicate that the CAST-Drp1 pathway protects against retinal neuron-regulated necrosis, which may expand the therapeutic targets for the treatment of neurodegenerative disorders involving dysfunction of glutamate metabolism, such as glaucoma.

    Topics: Animals; Calpain; Dynamins; Glaucoma; Glutamic Acid; Necrosis; Rats; Retinal Neurons

2023
Calpain-1 and calpain-2 play opposite roles in retinal ganglion cell degeneration induced by retinal ischemia/reperfusion injury.
    Neurobiology of disease, 2016, Volume: 93

    Calpain has been shown to be involved in neurodegeneration, and in particular in retinal ganglion cell (RGC) death resulting from increased intraocular pressure (IOP) and ischemia. However, the specific roles of the two major calpain isoforms, calpain-1 and calpain-2, in RGC death have not been investigated. Here, we show that calpain-1 and calpain-2 were sequentially activated in RGC dendrites after acute IOP elevation. By combining the use of a selective calpain-2 inhibitor (C2I) and calpain-1 KO mice, we demonstrated that calpain-1 activity supported survival, while calpain-2 activity promoted cell death of RGCs after IOP elevation. Calpain-1 activation cleaved PH domain and leucine-rich repeat protein phosphatase 1 (PHLPP1) and activated the Akt pro-survival pathway, while calpain-2 activation cleaved striatal-enriched protein tyrosine phosphatase (STEP) and activated STEP-mediated pro-death pathway in RGCs after IOP elevation. Systemic or intravitreal C2I injection to wild-type mice 2h after IOP elevation promoted RGC survival and improved visual function. Our data indicate that calpain-1 and calpain-2 play opposite roles in high IOP-induced ischemic injury and that a selective calpain-2 inhibitor could prevent acute glaucoma-induced RGC death and blindness.

    Topics: Animals; Calpain; Cell Death; Cell Survival; Disease Models, Animal; Glaucoma; Intraocular Pressure; Mice, Inbred C57BL; Reperfusion Injury; Retina; Retinal Ganglion Cells; Signal Transduction

2016
The protection of rat retinal ganglion cells from ischemia/reperfusion injury by the inhibitory peptide of mitochondrial μ-calpain.
    Biochemical and biophysical research communications, 2016, 09-30, Volume: 478, Issue:4

    Intracellular Ca(2+)-dependent cysteine proteases such as calpains have been suggested as critical factors in retinal ganglion cell (RGC) death. However, it is unknown whether mitochondrial calpains are involved in RGC death. The purpose of the present study was to determine whether the inhibition of mitochondrial μ-calpain activity protects against RGC death during ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) injury. This study used a well-established rat model of experimental acute glaucoma involving I/R injury. A specific peptide inhibitor of mitochondrial μ-calpain, Tat-μCL, was topically applied to rats via eye drops three times a day for 5 days after I/R. RGC death was determined by the terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase dUTP nick end labeling assay. The truncation of apoptosis-inducing factor (AIF) was determined by western blot analyses. Retinal morphology was determined after staining with hematoxyline and eosin. In addition, the number of Fluoro Gold-labeled RGCs in flat-mounted retinas was used to determine the percentage of surviving RGCs after I/R injury. After 1 day of I/R, RGC death was observed in the ganglion cell layer. Treatment with Tat-μCL eye drops significantly prevented the death of RGCs and the truncation of AIF. After 5 days of I/R, RGC death decreased by approximately 40%. However, Tat-μCL significantly inhibited the decrease in the retinal sections and flat-mounted retinas. The results suggested that mitochondrial μ-calpain is associated with RGC death during I/R injury via truncation of AIF. In addition, the inhibition of mitochondrial μ-calpain activity by Tat-μCL had a neuroprotective effect against I/R-induced RGC death.

    Topics: Amino Acid Sequence; Animals; Apoptosis; Apoptosis Inducing Factor; Blotting, Western; Calpain; Glaucoma; Microscopy, Confocal; Mitochondrial Proteins; Ophthalmic Solutions; Peptides; Protective Agents; Rats, Sprague-Dawley; Reperfusion Injury; Retina; Retinal Ganglion Cells

2016
Calpain activation in experimental glaucoma.
    Investigative ophthalmology & visual science, 2010, Volume: 51, Issue:6

    Glaucoma is a neurodegenerative disease in which elevated intraocular pressure (IOP) leads to progressive loss of retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) and blindness. Calcium dyshomeostasis has been suggested to play a role in the pathologic events that lead to RGC loss, though the details of these events are not well understood. Calcium-induced activation of calpain has been shown to contribute to neuronal death in a wide variety of neurodegenerative diseases. The authors hypothesize that similar events occur in glaucoma.. The authors used a well-established rat model of experimental glaucoma. Retinal tissues were harvested after 5 or 10 days of elevated IOP and were subjected to immunoblot analysis, immunoprecipitation, and MALDI-ProTOF/MS peptide fingerprint mapping. Immunohistochemistry was used to localize calpain activation.. The authors present four independent lines of evidence that calpain is activated in experimental glaucoma. First, they showed that a 55-kDa autocatalytic active form of calpain is detected on immunoblot analysis. Second, they demonstrated the cleavage of two well-established calpain substrates, spectrin and calcineurin, only in eyes with elevated IOP. Third, they used MALDI-ProTOF to analyze cleaved calcineurin and immunoblot analysis of spectrin cleavage products and showed that both substrates were cleaved by calpain in experimental glaucoma. Fourth, they used immunohistochemistry to show that calpain-mediated spectrin cleavage occurs in RGCs under conditions of elevated IOP.. These data support the hypothesis that calpain is activated under conditions of elevated intraocular pressure and provide further details of the pathologic events leading to RGC loss in glaucoma.

    Topics: Animals; Blotting, Western; Calcinosis; Calpain; Disease Models, Animal; Enzyme Activation; Glaucoma; Immunoenzyme Techniques; Immunoprecipitation; Intraocular Pressure; Male; Proteomics; Rats; Rats, Inbred BN; Retinal Ganglion Cells; Spectrin; Spectrometry, Mass, Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption-Ionization

2010
Rational basis for the development of coenzyme Q10 as a neurotherapeutic agent for retinal protection.
    Progress in brain research, 2008, Volume: 173

    Glaucoma is a worldwide leading cause of irreversible vision loss characterized by progressive death of retinal ganglion cells (RGCs). In the course of glaucoma, RGC death may be the consequence of energy impairment that triggers secondary excitotoxicity and free radical generation. There is substantial evidence also that a number of free radical scavengers and/or agents that improve mitochondrial function may be useful as therapies to ameliorate cell death in various neurological disorders including glaucoma. Coenzyme Q10 (CoQ10), an essential cofactor of the electron transport chain, has been reported to afford neuroprotection in neurodegenerative diseases, such as Alzheimer's and Parkinson's diseases, and its protective effect has been attributed in part to its free radical scavenger ability and to a specific regulation of the mitochondrial permeability transition pore. Using an established animal model of transient retinal ischemia, we have conclusively identified a role for abnormal elevation of extracellular glutamate in the mechanisms underlying RGC death that occurs, at least in part, via activation of the apoptotic program. Under these experimental conditions, N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) and non-NMDA subtype of glutamate receptor antagonists, nitric oxide synthase inhibitors, and CoQ10 afford retinal protection supporting an important role for excitotoxicity in the mechanisms underlying RGC death.

    Topics: Animals; Calpain; Cell Death; Glaucoma; Glutamic Acid; Humans; Intraocular Pressure; Neuroprotective Agents; Oxidative Stress; Rats; Reperfusion Injury; Retina; Retinal Ganglion Cells; Ubiquinone

2008
Characterization of the intracellular proteolytic cleavage of myocilin and identification of calpain II as a myocilin-processing protease.
    The Journal of biological chemistry, 2007, Sep-21, Volume: 282, Issue:38

    MYOC, a gene involved in different types of glaucoma, encodes myocilin, a secreted glycoprotein of unknown function, consisting of an N-terminal leucine-zipper-like domain, a central linker region, and a C-terminal olfactomedin-like domain. Recently, we have shown that myocilin undergoes an intracellular endoproteolytic processing. We show herein that the proteolytic cleavage in the linker region splits the two terminal domains. The C-terminal domain is secreted to the culture medium, whereas the N-terminal domain mainly remains intracellularly retained. In transiently transfected 293T cells, the cleavage was prevented by calpain inhibitors, such as calpeptin, calpain inhibitor IV, and calpastatin. Since calpains are calcium-activated proteases, we analyzed how changes in either intra- or extracellular calcium affected the cleavage of myocilin. Intracellular ionomycin-induced calcium uptake enhanced myocilin cleavage, whereas chelation of extracellular calcium by EGTA inhibited the proteolytic processing. Calpains I and II cleaved myocilin in vitro. However, in cells in culture, only RNA interference knockdown of calpain II reduced myocilin processing. Subcellular fractionation and digestion of the obtained fractions with proteinase K showed that full-length myocilin resides in the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum together with a subpopulation of calpain II. These data revealed that calpain II is responsible for the intracellular processing of myocilin in the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum. We propose that this cleavage might regulate extracellular interactions of myocilin, contributing to the control of intraocular pressure.

    Topics: Calcium-Binding Proteins; Calpain; Cell Line; Cytoskeletal Proteins; Dipeptides; Egtazic Acid; Endopeptidase K; Eye Proteins; Glaucoma; Glycoproteins; Humans; Ionomycin; Mutation, Missense; Protein Conformation; Protein Structure, Tertiary; Transfection

2007
A key role for calpains in retinal ganglion cell death.
    Investigative ophthalmology & visual science, 2007, Volume: 48, Issue:12

    The purpose of this study was to examine the importance of calpains in retinal ganglion cell (RGC) apoptosis and the protection afforded by calpain inhibitors against cell death.. Two different models of RGC apoptosis were used, namely the RGC-5 cell line after either intracellular calcium influx or serum withdrawal and retinal explant culture involving optic nerve axotomy. Flow cytometry analysis with Annexin V/PI staining was used to identify RGC-5 cells undergoing apoptosis after treatment. TdT-mediated dUTP nick end labeling (TUNEL) was used to identify cells undergoing apoptosis in retinal explant sections under various conditions. Serial sectioning was used to isolate the cell population of the ganglion cell layer (GCL). Western blotting was used to demonstrate calpain cleavage and activity by detecting cleaved substrates.. In the RGC-5 cell line, the authors reported the activation of mu-calpain and m-calpain after serum starvation and calcium ionophore treatment, with concurrent cleavage of known calpain substrates. They found that the inhibition of calpains leads to the protection of cells from apoptosis. In the second model, after a serial sectioning method to isolate the cells of the ganglion cell layer (GCL) on a retinal explant paradigm, protein analysis indicated the activation of calpains after axotomy, with concomitant cleavage of calpain substrates. The authors found that inhibition of calpains significantly protected cells in the GCL from cell death.. These results suggest that calpains are crucial for apoptosis in RGCs after calcium influx, serum starvation, and optic nerve injury.

    Topics: Animals; Annexin A5; Apoptosis; Axotomy; Blotting, Western; Calcimycin; Calcium; Calpain; Cell Survival; Cells, Cultured; Cysteine Proteinase Inhibitors; Dipeptides; Flow Cytometry; Glaucoma; In Situ Nick-End Labeling; Mice; Mice, Inbred C57BL; Optic Nerve; Organ Culture Techniques; Propidium; Retina; Retinal Ganglion Cells

2007