Perinatal asphyxia: current status and approaches towards neuroprotective strategies, with focus on sentinel proteins

DSpace/Manakin Repository

Perinatal asphyxia: current status and approaches towards neuroprotective strategies, with focus on sentinel proteins

xmlui.ArtifactBrowser.ItemViewer.citar_tesis
Cómo citar

Perinatal asphyxia: current status and approaches towards neuroprotective strategies, with focus on sentinel proteins

.
Copiar
Title: Perinatal asphyxia: current status and approaches towards neuroprotective strategies, with focus on sentinel proteins
Author: Herrera Marschitz, Mario; Morales, Paola; Leyton, Lisette; Bustamante, Diego; Klawitter, Verena; Espina Marchant, Pablo; Allende, Camilo; Lisboa, Francisco; Cunich, Gabriel; Jara Cavieres, Antonella; Neira, Tanya; Gutiérrez Hernández, Manuel A.; González Lira, Víctor; Simola, Nicola; Schmitt, Andrea; Morelli, Micaela; Tasker, R. Andrew; Gebicke Haerter, Peter J.
Abstract: Delivery is a stressful and risky event menacing the newborn. The mother-dependent respiration has to be replaced by autonomous pulmonary breathing immediately after delivery. If delayed, it may lead to deficient oxygen supply compromising survival and development of the central nervous system. Lack of oxygen availability gives rise to depletion of NAD? tissue stores, decrease of ATP formation, weakening of the electron transport pump and anaerobic metabolism and acidosis, leading necessarily to death if oxygenation is not promptly re-established. Re-oxygenation triggers a cascade of compensatory biochemical events to restore function, which may be accompanied by improper homeostasis and oxidative stress. Consequences may be incomplete recovery, or excess reactions that worsen the biological outcome by disturbed metabolism and/or imbalance produced by over-expression of alternative metabolic pathways. Perinatal asphyxia has been associated with severe neurological and psychiatric sequelae with delayed clinical onset. No specific treatments have yet been established. In the clinical setting, after resuscitation of an infant with birth asphyxia, the emphasis is on supportive therapy. Several interventions have been proposed to attenuate secondary neuronal injuries elicited by asphyxia, including hypothermia. Although promising, the clinical efficacy of hypothermia has not been fully demonstrated. It is evident that new approaches are warranted. The purpose of this review is to discuss the concept of sentinel proteins as targets for neuroprotection. Several sentinel proteins have been described to protect the integrity of the genome (e.g. PARP-1; XRCC1; DNA ligase IIIa; DNA polymerase b, ERCC2, DNA-dependent protein kinases). They act by eliciting metabolic cascades leading to (i) activation of cell survival and neurotrophic pathways; (ii) early and delayed programmed cell death, and (iii) promotion of cell proliferation, differentiation, neuritogenesis and synaptogenesis. It is proposed that sentinel proteins can be used as markers for characterising long-term effects of perinatal asphyxia, and as targets for novel therapeutic development and innovative strategies for neonatal care.
Description: Artículo de publicación ISI
URI: http://www.captura.uchile.cl/handle/2250/14919
Date: 2011
dc.identifier.citation: Neurotox Res (2011) 19 : 603–627


Files in this item

Files Size Format View
Herrera_Mario.pdf 946.3Kb PDF View/Open

The following license files are associated with this item:

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Compartir:
cargando...
Copiar