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Murine cathepsin D deficiency is associated with dysmyelination/myelin disruption and accumulation of cholesteryl esters in the brain
Authors:Aino-Liisa Mutka  Aleksi Haapanen†  Reijo Käkel䆠 Maria Lindfors†  Ann K Wright‡  Teija Inkinen†  Martin Hermansson†  Anne Rokka§  Garry Corthals§  Matti Jauhiainen¶  Thomas H Gillingwater‡  Elina Ikonen  Jaana Tyynelä†
Institution:Institute of Biomedicine/Anatomy, Biomedicum, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland;
Institute of Biomedicine/Biochemistry, Biomedicum, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland;
Centre for Integrative Physiology, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK;
Turku Centre for Biotechnology, University of Turku and Åbo Akademi University, Turku, Finland;
National Institute for Health and Welfare and FIMM, Institute for Molecular Medicine Finland, Biomedicum, Helsinki, Finland
Abstract:Cathepsin D (CTSD) deficiencies are fatal neurological diseases that in human infants and in sheep are characterized by extreme loss of neurons and myelin. To date, similar morphological evidence for myelin disruption in CTSD knockout mice has not been reported. Here, we show that CTSD deficiency leads to pronounced myelin changes in the murine brain: myelin-related proteolipid protein and myelin basic protein were both markedly reduced at postnatal day 24, and the amount of lipids characteristically high in myelin (e.g. plasmalogen-derived alkenyl chains and glycosphingolipid-derived 20- and 24-carbon acyl chains) were significantly lowered compared with controls. These changes were accompanied by ultrastructural alterations of myelin, including significant thinning of myelin sheaths. Furthermore, in CTSD knockout brains there was a pronounced accumulation of cholesteryl esters and abnormal levels of proteins related to cholesterol transport, with an increased content of apolipoprotein E and a reduced content of ATP-binding cassette transporter A1. These results provide evidence for dysmyelination and altered trafficking of cholesterol in brains of CTSD knockout mice, and warrant further studies on the role of lipid metabolism in the pathogenesis of CTSD deficiencies.
Keywords:cathepsin D  lipidomics  mouse model  myelin  proteomics  ultrastructure
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