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Proteasome inhibition induces selective motor neuron death in organotypic slice cultures

✍ Scribed by Sachiko Tsuji; Seiji Kikuchi; Kazuyoshi Shinpo; Jun Tashiro; Riichiro Kishimoto; Ichiro Yabe; Shoichi Yamagishi; Masayoshi Takeuchi; Hidenao Sasaki


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2005
Tongue
English
Weight
539 KB
Volume
82
Category
Article
ISSN
0360-4012

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✦ Synopsis


A dysfunctional ubiquitin-proteasome system recently has been proposed to play a role in the pathogenesis of neurodegenerative diseases, including amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). We have shown previously that spinal motor neurons are more vulnerable to proteasome inhibition-induced neurotoxicity, using a dissociated culture system. To confirm this toxicity, we used organotypic slice cultures from rat neonatal spinal cords, which conserve the structure of the spinal cord in a horizontal plane, enabling us to identify motor neurons more accurately than in dissociated cultures. Furthermore, such easy identifications make it possible to follow up the course of the degeneration of motor neurons. When a specific proteasome inhibitor, lactacystin (5 lM), was applied to slice cultures, proteasome activity of a whole slice was suppressed below 30% of control. Motor neurons were selectively damaged, especially in neurites, with the increase of phosphorylated neurofilaments. They were eventually lost in a dosedependent manner (1 lM, P < 0.05; 5 lM, P < 0.01). The low capacity of Ca 2ΓΎ buffering is believed to be one of the factors of selectivity for damaged motor neurons in ALS. In our system, negative staining of Ca 2ΓΎ -binding proteins supported this notion. An intracellular Ca 2ΓΎ chelator, BAPTA-AM (10 lM), exerted a significant protective effect when it was applied with lactacystin simultaneously (P < 0.01). We postulate that proteasome inhibition is an excellent model for studying the mechanisms underlying selective motor neuron death and searching for new therapeutic strategies in the treatment of ALS. V


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