Amounts of glutamate metabolizing enzymes such as glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH), glutamine synthetase (GS), GS-like protein (GSLP), and phosphate-activated glutaminase (PAG) were compared in prefrontal cortex of control subjects and patients with Alzheimer disease (AD). The target proteins were quantified by ECL-Western immunoblotting in extracts from brain tissue prepared by two different techniques separating enzymes preferentially associated with cytoplasm (GDH I and II isoenzymes, GS, and partially GSLP) and membrane (GDH III, PAG, and partially GSLP) fractions. Amounts of all listed enzymes were found significantly increased in the patient group compared with controls. Some links between the measured values were observed in the control, but not in the AD patient group. The results may suggest for the pathological interruption of regulatory relations between distinct enzymes of glutamate metabolism in brain of AD patients.
Glutamine synthetase (GS; EC 6.3.1.2), a key enzyme of glutamate metabolism, and another enzyme possessing high hydroxylamine-L-glutamine transferase activity comparable to that of GS and termed GS-like protein (GSLP) were purified from human brain concurrently. In two-dimensional electrophoresis, GS subunits migrate to at least six different positions (44 Ϯ 1 kDa, pI ϭ 6.4 -6.7), whereas GSLP subunits migrate to at least four different positions (54 Ϯ 1 kDa, pI ϭ 5.9 -6.2). Dependences of enzymatic activity in the transferase reaction on concentrations of Mn 2ϩ and Mg 2ϩ for GS and GSLP are different. High immunological cross-reactivity between GS and GSLP was observed in ELISA. Nevertheless, antisera were raised to GS and GSLP, and a method was developed for the separate detection of GS and GSLP in brain extracts by enzyme-chemiluminescent amplified (ECL) immunoblotting. The distribution of GS and GSLP immunoreactivities between soluble protein and crude mitochondrial fractions indicates tighter association with the particulate fraction for GSLP than for GS. The results from activity measurements suggest that the hydroxylamine-L-glutamine transferase activity measured routinely in protein extracts from brain is the sum of GS and GSLP activities. Similarly, immunoreactivity evaluated by ELISA is a sum of immunoreactivities of GS and GSLP. The relative contributions of GS and GSLP to the total immunoreactivity can be evaluated by ECL-immunoblotting. Key Words: Glutamine synthetase -Hydroxylamine-L-glutamine transferase -Human brain.
Enzymes of glutamate and GABA metabolism in postmortem cerebellum from patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) have not been comprehensively studied. The present work reports results of original comparative study on levels of phosphate-activated glutaminase (PAG) and glutamic acid decarboxylase isoenzymes (GAD65/67) in autopsied cerebellum samples from AD patients and matched controls (13 cases in each group) as well as summarizes published evidence for altered levels of PAG and GAD65/67 in AD brain. Altered (decreased) levels of these enzymes and changes in links between amounts of these enzymes and other glutamate-metabolizing enzymes (such as glutamate dehydrogenase and glutamine synthetase-like protein) in AD cerebella suggest significantly impaired glutamate and GABA metabolism in this brain region, which was previously regarded as not substantially involved in AD pathogenesis.
We have used a systemic approach to establish a relationship between enzyme measures of glial glutamate and energy metabolism (glutamine synthetase and glutamine synthetase-like protein, glutamate dehydrogenase isoenzymes, brain isoform creatine phosphokinase) and two major glial proteins (glial fibrillary acidic protein and myelin basic protein) in autopsied brain samples taken from patients with schizophrenia (SCH) and mentally healthy subjects (23 and 22 cases, respectively). These biochemical parameters were measured in tissue extracts in three brain areas (prefrontal cortex, caudate nucleus, and cerebellum). Significant differences in the level of at least one of the glutamate metabolizing enzymes were observed between two studied groups in all studied brain areas. Different patterns of correlative links between the biochemical parameters were found in healthy and schizophrenic brains. These findings give a new perspective to our understanding of the impaired regulation of enzyme levels in the brain in SCH.
This review is devoted to Klotho protein and recent evidences for its functions in the brain. Information on transcriptional regulation of the klotho gene and posttranslational modifications of the protein resulting in multiple forms of Klotho is reviewed. Evidence is summarized that Klotho regulates the activity of protein factors, enzymes, and receptors, including data suggesting the importance of its glycosidase activity. Effects of Klotho on components of the glutamatergic neurotransmitter system, signal cascades involving protein kinases and protein phosphorylation, as well as oligodendrocyte differentiation and myelination are discussed. A possible contribution is proposed for Klotho levels in the development of central nervous system pathologies including mental disorders.
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