Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1910559 | Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2008 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
The basic molecular underpinnings of the pathological changes that unfold in prion disease remain elusive. A key role of increased oxidative stress has been hypothesized. Given the transient nature of most intermediate molecules implicated, increased oxidative stress is better assessed by quantitating the damage it causes to macromolecules. We used mass spectrometry-based methods to measure specific products of protein oxidation, glycoxidation, and lipoxidation in brains from patients suffering from Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease and Syrian hamsters affected by scrapie. In both cases, increased amounts of glutamic and aminoadipic semialdehydes, products of metal-catalyzed oxidation, malondialdehydelysine (a product of lipoxidation), N-É-carboxyethyllysine (a product of glycoxidation), and N-É-carboxymethyllysine (generated by lipoxidation and glycoxidation) were measured. PrPSc, the infectious isoform of the prion protein that accumulates in prion disease, was itself shown to be a target of increased oxidative modification. These changes were accompanied by alterations in fatty acid composition and increased phosphorylation of ERK1/2 and p38, protein kinases known to respond to increased flows of ROS. These data support an important role of oxidative damage in the pathology of prion disease.
Keywords
MUFAAASAPrPscPrPcCJDDBIPrPCMLSFACarboxyethyllysineGSAMDALMCOBSECelAminoadipic SemialdehydeROSPolyunsaturated fatty acidsPUFAmonounsaturated fatty acidsProtein oxidationMetal-catalyzed oxidationCreutzfeldt-Jakob diseasePrion diseaseBovine spongiform encephalopathydouble bond indexPeroxidizability indexMass spectrometryglutamic semialdehydePrion proteinCarboxymethyllysineReactive oxygen species
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Authors
Reinald Pamplona, Alba NaudÃ, Rosalina GavÃn, Miguel A. Pastrana, Gustavo Sajnani, Ekaterina V. Ilieva, José Antonio del RÃo, Manuel Portero-OtÃn, Isidre Ferrer, Jesús R. Requena,