Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1908869 Free Radical Biology and Medicine 2012 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

Lipid peroxidation generates reactive aldehydes, most notably hydroxynonenal (HNE), which covalently bind amino acid residue side chains leading to protein inactivation and insolubility. Specific adducts of lipid peroxidation have been demonstrated in intimate association with the pathological lesions of Alzheimer disease (AD), suggesting that oxidative stress is a major component of AD pathogenesis. Some HNE-protein products result in protein crosslinking through a fluorescent compound similar to lipofuscin, linking lipid peroxidation and the lipofuscin accumulation that commonly occurs in post-mitotic cells such as neurons. In this study, brain tissue from AD and control patients was examined by immunocytochemistry and immunoelectron microscopy for evidence of HNE-crosslinking modifications of the type that should accumulate in the lipofuscin pathway. Strong labeling of granulovacuolar degeneration (GVD) and Hirano bodies was noted but lipofuscin did not contain this specific HNE-fluorophore. These findings directly implicate lipid crosslinking peroxidation products as accumulating not in the lesions or the lipofuscin pathways, but instead in a distinct pathway, GVD, that accumulates cytosolic proteins.

► Fluorophore crosslinks of HNE are suggested to share chemical properties with lipofuscin. ► Fluorophore immunoreactivity marks granulovacuolar degeneration (GVD) and not lipofuscin in AD. ► Immunoelectron microscopy confirmed GVD and not lipofuscin contains fluorophore crosslinks. ► HNE crosslink modification of lysine targets proteins for degradation in GVD. ► Crosslinks accumulate in a lysosomal/proteasomal pathway distinct from lipofuscin.

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