Aging lowers PEX5 levels in cortical neurons in male and female mouse brains

Peroxisomes exist in nearly every cell, oxidizing fats, synthesizing lipids and maintaining redox balance. As the brain ages, multiple pathways are negatively affected, but it is currently unknown if peroxisomal proteins are affected by aging in the brain. While recent studies have investigated a PE...

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Veröffentlicht in:Molecular and cellular neuroscience 2020-09, Vol.107, p.103536-103536, Article 103536
Hauptverfasser: Uzor, Ndidi-Ese, Scheihing, Diego Morales, Kim, Gab Seok, Moruno-Manchon, Jose Felix, Zhu, Liang, Reynolds, Caroline R., Stephenson, Jessica M., Holmes, Aleah, McCullough, Louise D., Tsvetkov, Andrey S.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Peroxisomes exist in nearly every cell, oxidizing fats, synthesizing lipids and maintaining redox balance. As the brain ages, multiple pathways are negatively affected, but it is currently unknown if peroxisomal proteins are affected by aging in the brain. While recent studies have investigated a PEX5 homolog in aging C. elegans models and found that it is reduced in aging, it is unclear if PEX5, a mammalian peroxisomal protein that plays a role in peroxisomal homeostasis and degradation, is affected in the aging brain. To answer this question, we first determined the amount of PEX5, in brain homogenates from young (3 months) and aged (26 through 32+ months of age) wild-type mice of both sexes. PEX5 protein was decreased in aged male brains, but this reduction was not significant in female brains. RNAScope and real-time qPCR analyses showed that Pex5 mRNA was also reduced in aged male brain cortices, but not in females. Immunohistochemistry assays of cortical neurons in young and aged male brains showed that the amount of neuronal PEX5 was reduced in aged male brains. Cortical neurons in aged female mice also had reduced PEX5 levels in comparison to younger female mice. In conclusion, total PEX5 levels and Pex5 gene expression both decrease with age in male brains, and neuronal PEX5 levels lower in an age-dependent manner in the cortices of animals of both sexes. •PEX5 protein is lower in aged mouse neurons than in young mouse neurons.•Pex5 gene expression is lower in aged mouse brains than young mouse brains.•Aging's effect on PEX5 may highlight peroxisome changes that happen in aging brain.
ISSN:1044-7431
1095-9327
DOI:10.1016/j.mcn.2020.103536