Muchukunte Mukunda Srinivas Bharath
National Institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences
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Journal of Neurochemistry | 2015
Gangadharappa Harish; Anita Mahadevan; Nupur Pruthi; Sreelakshmi K. Sreenivasamurthy; Vinuth N. Puttamallesh; Thottethodi Subrahmanya Keshava Prasad; Susarla K. Shankar; Muchukunte Mukunda Srinivas Bharath
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) contributes to fatalities and neurological disabilities worldwide. While primary injury causes immediate damage, secondary events contribute to long‐term neurological defects. Contusions (Ct) are primary injuries correlated with poor clinical prognosis, and can expand leading to delayed neurological deterioration. Pericontusion (PC) (penumbra), the region surrounding Ct, can also expand with edema, increased intracranial pressure, ischemia, and poor clinical outcome. Analysis of Ct and PC can therefore assist in understanding the pathobiology of TBI and its management. This study on human TBI brains noted extensive neuronal, astroglial and inflammatory changes, alterations in mitochondrial, synaptic and oxidative markers, and associated proteomic profile, with distinct differences in Ct and PC. While Ct displayed petechial hemorrhages, thrombosis, inflammation, neuronal pyknosis, and astrogliosis, PC revealed edema, vacuolation of neuropil, axonal loss, and dystrophic changes. Proteomic analysis demonstrated altered immune response, synaptic, and mitochondrial dysfunction, among others, in Ct, while PC displayed altered regulation of neurogenesis and cytoskeletal architecture, among others. TBI brains displayed oxidative damage, glutathione depletion, mitochondrial dysfunction, and loss of synaptic proteins, with these changes being more profound in Ct. We suggest that analysis of markers specific to Ct and PC may be valuable in the evaluation of TBI pathobiology and therapeutics. We have characterized the primary injury in human traumatic brain injury (TBI). Contusions (Ct) – the injury core displayed hemorrhages, inflammation, and astrogliosis, while the surrounding pericontusion (PC) revealed edema, vacuolation, microglial activation, axonal loss, and dystrophy. Proteomic analysis demonstrated altered immune response, synaptic and mitochondrial dysfunction in Ct, and altered regulation of neurogenesis and cytoskeletal architecture in PC. Ct displayed more oxidative damage, mitochondrial, and synaptic dysfunction compared to PC.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2014
Renjini Ramadasan-Nair; Narayanappa Gayathri; Sudha Mishra; B. Sunitha; Rajeswara Babu Mythri; Atchayaram Nalini; Yashwanth Subbannayya; H. C. Harsha; Ullas Kolthur-Seetharam; Muchukunte Mukunda Srinivas Bharath
Background: Human muscular dystrophies and inflammatory myopathies share common pathological events. Results: The cardiotoxin (CTX) model displayed acute and transient muscle degeneration and all the cellular events usually implicated in human muscle pathology. Conclusion: Mitochondrial alterations and oxidative stress significantly contribute to muscle pathogenesis. Significance: The CTX model is valuable in understanding the mechanistic and therapeutic paradigms of muscle pathology. Muscular dystrophies (MDs) and inflammatory myopathies (IMs) are debilitating skeletal muscle disorders characterized by common pathological events including myodegeneration and inflammation. However, an experimental model representing both muscle pathologies and displaying most of the distinctive markers has not been characterized. We investigated the cardiotoxin (CTX)-mediated transient acute mouse model of muscle degeneration and compared the cardinal features with human MDs and IMs. The CTX model displayed degeneration, apoptosis, inflammation, loss of sarcolemmal complexes, sarcolemmal disruption, and ultrastructural changes characteristic of human MDs and IMs. Cell death caused by CTX involved calcium influx and mitochondrial damage both in murine C2C12 muscle cells and in mice. Mitochondrial proteomic analysis at the initial phase of degeneration in the model detected lowered expression of 80 mitochondrial proteins including subunits of respiratory complexes, ATP machinery, fatty acid metabolism, and Krebs cycle, which further decreased in expression during the peak degenerative phase. The mass spectrometry (MS) data were supported by enzyme assays, Western blot, and histochemistry. The CTX model also displayed markers of oxidative stress and a lowered glutathione reduced/oxidized ratio (GSH/GSSG) similar to MDs, human myopathies, and neurogenic atrophies. MS analysis identified 6 unique oxidized proteins from Duchenne muscular dystrophy samples (n = 6) (versus controls; n = 6), including two mitochondrial proteins. Interestingly, these mitochondrial proteins were down-regulated in the CTX model thereby linking oxidative stress and mitochondrial dysfunction. We conclude that mitochondrial alterations and oxidative damage significantly contribute to CTX-mediated muscle pathology with implications for human muscle diseases.
Journal of Neurochemistry | 2016
B. Sunitha; Narayanappa Gayathri; Manish Kumar; Thottethodi Subrahmanya Keshava Prasad; Atchayaram Nalini; Balasundaram Padmanabhan; Muchukunte Mukunda Srinivas Bharath
Muscle diseases are clinically and genetically heterogeneous and manifest as dystrophic, inflammatory and myopathic pathologies, among others. Our previous study on the cardiotoxin mouse model of myodegeneration and inflammation linked muscle pathology with mitochondrial damage and oxidative stress. In this study, we investigated whether human muscle diseases display mitochondrial changes. Muscle biopsies from muscle disease patients, represented by dysferlinopathy (dysfy) (dystrophic pathology; n = 43), polymyositis (PM) (inflammatory pathology; n = 24), and distal myopathy with rimmed vacuoles (DMRV) (distal myopathy; n = 31) were analyzed. Mitochondrial damage (ragged blue and COX‐deficient fibers) was revealed in dysfy, PM, and DMRV cases by enzyme histochemistry (SDH and COX‐SDH), electron microscopy (vacuolation and altered cristae) and biochemical assays (significantly increased ADP/ATP ratio). Proteomic analysis of muscle mitochondria from all three muscle diseases by isobaric tag for relative and absolute quantitation labeling and liquid chromatography‐tandem mass spectrometry (LC‐MS/MS) analysis demonstrated down‐regulation of electron transport chain (ETC) complex subunits, assembly factors and Krebs cycle enzymes. Interestingly, 80 of the under‐expressed proteins were common among the three pathologies. Assay of ETC and Krebs cycle enzyme activities validated the MS data. Mitochondrial proteins from muscle pathologies also displayed higher tryptophan (Trp) oxidation and the same was corroborated in the cardiotoxin model. Molecular modeling predicted Trp oxidation to alter the local structure of mitochondrial proteins. Our data highlight mitochondrial alterations in muscle pathologies, represented by morphological changes, altered mitochondrial proteome and protein oxidation, thereby establishing the role of mitochondrial damage in human muscle diseases.
Bioactive Nutraceuticals and Dietary Supplements in Neurological and Brain Disease#R##N#Prevention and Therapy | 2015
Rajeswara Babu Mythri; Apurva Kumar Joshi; Muchukunte Mukunda Srinivas Bharath
Parkinson’s disease (PD) is a neurodegenerative disease involving the degeneration of nigral dopaminergic neurons and consequent depletion of striatal dopamine (DA). The current PD drugs replenish brain DA, leading only to symptomatic relief. However, most drugs elicit adverse motor complications and fail to prevent disease progression. There have been continued efforts to find alternative approaches to improve clinical outcome among PD patients. The differential susceptibility of ethnic populations to PD, probably due to distinct dietary patterns, prompted researchers to examine food supplements, nutraceuticals, and natural products in PD pharmacotherapy. Clinical studies have associated vitamins, omega fatty acids, coenzyme Q-10, and so on with the risk for PD. Retrospective studies on healthy subjects and PD patients consuming tea, a healthy diet, and so on have provided clues about their importance in the susceptibility to PD. This chapter investigates the clinical relevance of dietary practices in neuroprotection and the use of dietary supplements/natural products as therapeutic agents.
Journal of Neurochemistry | 2018
Bandopadhyay Debashree; Manish Kumar; Thottethodi Subrahmanya Keshava Prasad; Archana Natarajan; Rita Christopher; Atchayaram Nalini; Parayil Sankaran Bindu; Narayanappa Gayathri; Muchukunte Mukunda Srinivas Bharath
Mitochondria regulate the balance between lipid metabolism and storage in the skeletal muscle. Altered lipid transport, metabolism and storage influence the bioenergetics, redox status and insulin signalling, contributing to cardiac and neurological diseases. Lipid storage disorders (LSDs) are neurological disorders which entail intramuscular lipid accumulation and impaired mitochondrial bioenergetics in the skeletal muscle causing progressive myopathy with muscle weakness. However, the mitochondrial changes including molecular events associated with impaired lipid storage have not been completely understood in the human skeletal muscle. We carried out morphological and biochemical analysis of mitochondrial function in muscle biopsies of human subjects with LSDs (n = 7), compared to controls (n = 10). Routine histology, enzyme histochemistry and ultrastructural analysis indicated altered muscle cell morphology and mitochondrial structure. Protein profiling of the muscle mitochondria from LSD samples (n = 5) (vs. control, n = 5) by high‐throughput mass spectrometric analysis revealed that impaired metabolic processes could contribute to mitochondrial dysfunction and ensuing myopathy in LSDs. We propose that impaired fatty acid and respiratory metabolism along with increased membrane permeability, elevated lipolysis and altered cristae entail mitochondrial dysfunction in LSDs. Some of these mechanisms were unique to LSD apart from others that were common to dystrophic and inflammatory muscle pathologies. Many differentially regulated mitochondrial proteins in LSD are linked with other human diseases, indicating that mitochondrial protection via targeted drugs could be a treatment modality in LSD and related metabolic diseases.
Journal of Neurochemistry | 2017
Rajeswara Babu Mythri; Narayana Reddy Raghunath; Santosh C. Narwade; Mirazkar Dasharatha Rao Pandareesh; Kollarkandi Rajesh Sabitha; Mohamad Aiyaz; Bipin Chand; Manas Sule; Krittika Ghosh; Senthil Kumar; Bhagyalakshmi Mallapura Shankarappa; Soundarya Soundararajan; Phalguni Anand Alladi; Meera Purushottam; Narayanappa Gayathri; Deepti D. Deobagkar; Thenkanidiyoor Rao Laxmi; Muchukunte Mukunda Srinivas Bharath
Archive | 2015
Rajeswara Babu Mythri; Apurva Kumar Joshi; Muchukunte Mukunda Srinivas Bharath
Journal of the Neurological Sciences | 2013
Anil Ramakrishna; Atchayaram Nalini; Narayanappa Gayathri; Muchukunte Mukunda Srinivas Bharath; B. Sunitha; Kiran Polavarapu
Journal of the Neurological Sciences | 2013
Sailesh Modi; Atchayaram Nalini; Narayanappa Gayathri; Muchukunte Mukunda Srinivas Bharath; B. Sunitha; Kiran Polavarapu
Journal of the Neurological Sciences | 2013
Sailesh Modi; Atchayaram Nalini; Narayanappa Gayathri; Muchukunte Mukunda Srinivas Bharath; B. Sunitha; Kiran Polavarapu