Widespread Activation of Calcium-Activated Neutral Proteinase (Calpain) in the Brain in Alzheimer Disease: A Potential Molecular Basis for Neuronal Degeneration

Calcium-activated neutral proteinases (CANPs or calpains) are believed to be key enzymes in intracellular signaling cascades and potential mediators of calcium induced neuronal degeneration. To investigate their involvement in Alzheimer disease, we identified three isoforms of μCANP (calpain I) in h...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 1993-04, Vol.90 (7), p.2628-2632
Hauptverfasser: Saito, Ken-Ichi, Elce, John S., Hamos, James E., Nixon, Ralph A.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Calcium-activated neutral proteinases (CANPs or calpains) are believed to be key enzymes in intracellular signaling cascades and potential mediators of calcium induced neuronal degeneration. To investigate their involvement in Alzheimer disease, we identified three isoforms of μCANP (calpain I) in human postmortem brain corresponding to an 80-kDa precursor and two autolytically activated isoforms (78 and 76 kDa). As an index of changes in the in vivo activity of μCANP in Alzheimer disease, the ratio of the 76-kDa activated isoform of μCANP to its 80-kDa precursor was measured by immunoassay in selected brain regions from 22 individuals with Alzheimer disease and 18 normal controls. This μCANP activation ratio was elevated 3-fold in the prefrontal cortex from patients with Alzheimer disease but not from patients with Huntington disease. The activation ratio was also significantly elevated, but to a lesser degree, in brain regions where Alzheimer pathology is milder and has not led to overt neuronal degeneration. These findings indicate that μCANP activation is not simply a consequence of cellular degeneration but may be associated with dysfunction in many neurons before gross structural changes occur. The known influences of CANPs on cytoskeleton and membrane dynamics imply that persistent CANP activation may contribute to neurofibrillary pathology and abnormal amyloid precursor protein processing prior to causing synapse loss or cell death in the most vulnerable neuronal populations. Pharmacological modulation of the CANP system may merit consideration as a potential therapeutic strategy in Alzheimer disease.
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.90.7.2628