Mercury is an extremely dangerous environmental contaminant responsible for episodes of human intoxication throughout the world. Methylmercury, the most toxic compound of this metal, mainly targets the central nervous system, accumulating preferentially in cells of glial origin and causing oxidative stress. Despite studies demonstrating the current exposure of human populations, the consequences of mercury intoxication and concomitant use of drugs targeting the central nervous system (especially drugs used in long-term treatments, such as analgesics) are completely unknown.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMolecular chaperones (or heat shock proteins) are evolutionarily conserved and essential proteins that play a key role in cell survival through cytoprotective mechanisms. Despite their possible clinical applications, the understanding of these structures is still quite limited. The aim of the present study is to review the literature to understand the physiological importance, implication in various diseases (especially in cancer and neurodegenerative diseases), possible applicability, and future prospects of heat shock proteins.
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