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Project Title:
The Nrf2-ARE Pathway in Modulating Parkinson’s Disease Principal Investigator: Jeffrey Johnson, PhD
Oxidative stress is an imbalance in which free radicals and their products
exceed the capacity of antioxidant defense mechanisms. The harmful reactive
compounds generated by oxidative stress are associated with neuronal cell death
following acute insults and are also believed to be a principle factor in the
development of many chronic neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s,
Parkinson’s (PD), Huntington’s and Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis. The expression
of many neuroprotective phase II detoxification enzymes and/or antioxidant genes
is governed by the antioxidant responsive element (ARE). ARE-dependent gene
expression is induced by the transcriptional factor, Nrf2, and is considered to
be a novel and important pathway that confers protection to a variety of
oxidative stress-related neurodegenerative insults. The long-range objective of
the laboratory is to evaluate the regulation and cell-specific expression of
ARE-driven genes and the potential role of these genes in prevention of
neurodegeneration. In order to develop potential therapeutic strategies
targeting Parkinson's disease through activation of the ARE, small molecules
that penetrate the blood-brain barrier and robustly activate ARE will be
required. We will use primary cortical cultures from Nrf2 knockout and wild-type
mice as an in vitro system to examine potential chemical activators of the ARE.
We will test whether compounds idenitified as potent ARE activators can
attenuate nigrostriatal lesions in both 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA) and MPTP
induced Parkinson's models in Nrf2-/- and wild-type mice. Finally, we will
examine Nrf2-mediated neuroprotection by infecting astrocyte cultures with
adenovirus Nrf2 constructs and transplanting those cells into the striata of
Nrf2-/- and wildtype mice after 6-OHDA or MPTP lesions. The specific aims of
this proposal are: |
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