| First Author | Lewén A | Year | 2001 |
| Journal | Neurobiol Dis | Volume | 8 |
| Issue | 3 | Pages | 380-90 |
| PubMed ID | 11447995 | Mgi Jnum | J:121295 |
| Mgi Id | MGI:3709757 | Doi | 10.1006/nbdi.2001.0396 |
| Citation | Lewen A, et al. (2001) Oxidative cellular damage and the reduction of APE/Ref-1 expression after experimental traumatic brain injury. Neurobiol Dis 8(3):380-90 |
| abstractText | The DNA repair enzyme, apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease (or redox effector factor-1, APE/Ref-1), is involved in base excision repair of apurinic/apyrimidinic sites after oxidative DNA damage. We investigated the expression of APE/Ref-1 and its relationship to oxidative stress after severe traumatic brain injury produced by controlled cortical impact in normal mice, and in mice over- or underexpressing copper-zinc superoxide dismutase (SOD1TG and SOD1KO, respectively). Oxygen free radical-mediated cellular injury was visualized with 8-hydroxyguanine immunoreactivity as a marker for DNA oxidation, and in situ hydroethidine oxidation as a marker for superoxide production. After trauma there was a reduced expression of APE/Ref-1 in the ipsilateral cortex and hippocampus that correlated with the gene dosage levels of cytosolic superoxide dismutase. The decrease in APE/Ref-1 expression preceded DNA fragmentation. There was also a close correlation between APE/Ref-1 protein levels 4 h after trauma and the volume of the lesion 1 week after injury. Our data have demonstrated that reduction of APE/Ref-1 protein levels correlates closely with the level of oxidative stress after traumatic brain injury. We suggest that APE/Ref-1 immunoreactivity is a sensitive marker for oxidative cellular injury. |