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Hydrocortisone regulates arylsulfatase A (cerebroside-3-sulfate-3-sulfohydrolase) by decreasing the quantity of the enzyme in cultures of cells dissociated from embryonic mouse cerebra
Authors:Alvaro J Marcelo  Ronald A Pieringer
Institution:(1) Department of Biochemistry, Temple University School of Medicine, 19140 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
Abstract:Previous work from our laboratory (Biochem. J. 219:689–697 (1984) had shown that hydrocortisone stimulated the net accumulation of the myelin-specific sulfolipid in cultures of cells dissociated from embryonic mouse cerebra. This accumulation caused by hydrocortisone was shown to be due to a decrease of sulfolipid degradation by arylsulfatase A (ASA) and not due to a stimulation of its synthesis by a sulfotransferase. Both ASA activity and the turnover of sulfolipid were decreased by hydrocortisone to 60–62% of untreated cells. In current work the same decrease in enzyme activity was obtained and enzyme linked immunosorbent assays demonstrate that hydrocortisone decreased the number of ASA protein molecules to 61% of untreated cells (-)hydrocorcortisone 0.31±0.06 ng ASA/mgrg protein; (+)hydrocortisone: 0.18±0.04 ng ASA/mgrg protein]. This decrease in the number of ASA molecules correlates well with the decrease in both the enzyme activity and the sulfolipid turnover, which suggests that the major mode of inhibition of ASA activity by hydrocortisone involves a decrease in the concentration of ASA in the cells rather than some other mechanism of inhibition.The material in this paper has been included in a dissertation submitted by A.J.M. in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. Temple University.
Keywords:Arylsulfatase A  cortisol  hydrocortisone  sulfolipid  brain cells
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