𝔖 Bobbio Scriptorium
✦   LIBER   ✦

Selective coupling of μ-calpain activation with the NMDA receptor is independent of translocation and autolysis in primary cortical neurons

✍ Scribed by Kimberley E. Hewitt; Howard J. Lesiuk; Joseph S. Tauskela; Paul Morley; Jon P. Durkin


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1998
Tongue
English
Weight
251 KB
Volume
54
Category
Article
ISSN
0360-4012

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


Excessive mu-calpain activation has been linked to several cellular pathologies including excitotoxicity and ischemia. In erythrocytes and other non-central nervous system (CNS) cells, calpain activation is thought to occur following a Ca2+-induced translocation of inactive cytosolic enzyme to membranes and subsequent autolysis. In the present report, we show that transiently exposing primary rat cortical neurons to lethal (50 microM) N-methyl-D-aspartic acid (NMDA) caused protracted calpain activation, measured as increased spectrin hydrolysis, but this was independent of translocation or autolysis of the protease. An anti-mu-calpain antibody showed that calpain was largely membrane associated in cortical neurons, and, consequently, neither translocation nor autolysis of the protease was observed following ionomycin or lethal NMDA treatment. By contrast, in rat erythrocytes, calpain was largely cytosolic and underwent rapid translocation and autolysis in response to ionomycin. Calpain-mediated spectrin hydrolysis was specifically coupled to Ca2+ entry through the NMDA receptor because nonspecific Ca2+ influx via ionomycin or KCl-mediated depolarization failed to activate the enzyme. Thus, calpain appears selectively linked to glutamate receptors in cortical neurons and regulated by mechanisms distinct from that occurring in many non-CNS cells. The data suggest that intracellular signals coupled to the NMDA receptor are responsible for activating calpain already associated with cellular membranes in cortical cells.