Upregulation of the Anti-apoptotic Protein Bcl-2 May Be an Early Event in Neurodegeneration: Studies on Parkinson's and Incidental Lewy Body Disease — Karyn‐Ann Marshall (1997) | RDL Network
Upregulation of the Anti-apoptotic Protein Bcl-2 May Be an Early Event in Neurodegeneration: Studies on Parkinson's and Incidental Lewy Body Disease
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications 240(1): 84-87
Article 1997 English
Authors
KM
Karyn‐Ann Marshall
SD
Susan E. Daniel
NC
Nigel J. Cairns
Abstract
1 min read
Apoptosis and oxidative stress have been suggested to be involved in Parkinson's disease (PD). However, whether this is a cause or consequence of neurodegeneration is unknown. Incidental Lewy Body disease (ILBD) appears to be a presymptomatic form of Parkinson's disease where individuals are neurologically normal, but after post-mortem examination pathology similar to Parkinson's disease is present. Thus, ILBD can be used to examine the early stages of the pathological process in PD. We investigated the levels of Bcl-2, an anti-apoptotic protein known to decrease cell death induced by several mechanisms, including oxidative stress. Our data show that Bcl-2 is significantly raised in the basal ganglia regions of PD patients as compared to age-matched controls. A similar trend is also found in ILBD. We propose that Bcl-2 increases in some brain regions as an early event and that these brain regions are under a stress for perhaps many years before any symptomatic changes occur.
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