Publications by authors named "Allan Sherwin"

Animal data show that high doses of the stimulant drug methamphetamine can damage brain dopamine neurones; however, it is still uncertain whether methamphetamine, at any dose, is neurotoxic to human brain. Since gliosis is typically associated with brain damage and is observed in animal models of methamphetamine exposure, we measured protein levels (intact protein and fragments, if any) of markers of microgliosis (glucose transporter-5, human leukocyte antigens HLA-DRα [TAL.1B5] and HLA-DR/DQ/DPβ [CR3/43]) and astrogliosis (glial fibrillary acidic protein, vimentin, and heat shock protein-27) in homogenates of autopsied brain of chronic methamphetamine users (n=20) and matched controls (n=23).

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There is much controversy regarding the extent of axon regeneration/sprouting ability in adult human brain. However, intrinsic differences in axon/neurite growth capability amongst striatal (caudate, putamen, nucleus accumbens) subdivisions could conceivably underlie, in part, their differential vulnerability in degenerative human brain disorders. To establish whether the distribution of axon growth markers in mature human striatum might be uniform or heterogeneous, we measured the intra-striatal pattern, in autopsied brain of normal subjects (n=40, age 18-99), of proteins involved in regulating axon growth.

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Rationale: Research on methamphetamine (MA) toxicity primarily focuses on the possibility that some of the behavioural problems in human MA users might be caused by damage to brain dopamine neurones. However, animal data also indicate that MA can damage brain serotonin neurones, and it has been suggested that cognitive problems and aggression in MA users might be explained by serotonergic damage. As information on the brain serotonin system in human MA users is fragmentary, our objective was to determine whether protein levels of serotonin transporter (SERT), a key marker of serotonin neurones, are decreased in brain of chronic MA users.

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Animal data suggest that the widely abused psychostimulant methamphetamine can damage brain dopamine neurones by causing dopamine-dependent oxidative stress; however, the relevance to human methamphetamine users is unclear. We measured levels of key antioxidant defences [reduced (GSH) and oxidized (GSSG) glutathione, six major GSH system enzymes, copper-zinc superoxide dismutase (CuZnSOD), uric acid] that are often altered after exposure to oxidative stress, in autopsied brain of human methamphetamine users and matched controls. Changes in the total (n = 20) methamphetamine group were limited to the dopamine-rich caudate (the striatal subdivision with the most severe dopamine loss) in which only activity of CuZnSOD (+ 14%) and GSSG levels (+ 58%) were changed.

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Hughlings Jackson at the turn of the century defined epilepsy as a disorder originating in a "morbid nutrition" of the neuron. With the advances in modern neurochemistry, it is becoming increasingly clear that a chronic seizure predisposition or a lowering of the brain's discharge threshold can be demarcated by a number of biochemical markers. They include a tendency for an increased release of glutamate with or without GABAergic impairment, (intra)neural tissue alterations in water redistribution/osmolarity or other distortions of the cytoarchitecture, and an elevation of ionic calcium inside the cell.

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