Defective Neuropeptide Processing and Ischemic Brain Injury: A Study on Proprotein Convertase 2 and its Substrate Neuropeptide in Ischemic Brains

Author:

Zhan Shuqin1,Zhao Hongbo1,White Aaron J1,Minami Manabu1,Pignataro Giuseppe1,Yang Tao1,Zhu Xiaorong2,Lan Jingquan1,Xiong Zhigang1,Steiner Donald F2,Simon Roger P1,Zhou An1

Affiliation:

1. Robert S. Dow Neurobiology Laboratories, Legacy Research, Portland, Oregon, USA

2. Department of Biochemistry, The University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, USA

Abstract

Using a focal cerebral ischemia model in rats, brain ischemia-induced changes in expression levels of mRNA and protein, and activities of proprotein convertase 2 (PC2) in the cortex were examined. In situ hybridization analyses revealed a transient upregulation of the mRNA level for PC2 at an early reperfusion hour, at which the level of PC2 protein was also high as determined by immunocytochemistry and western blotting. When enzymatic activities of PC2 were analyzed using a synthetic substrate, a significant decrease was observed at early reperfusion hours at which levels of PC2 protein were still high. Also decreased at these reperfusion hours were tissue levels of dynorphin-A(1-8) (DYN-A(1-8)), a PC2 substrate, as determined by radioimmunoassay. Further examination of PC2 protein biosynthesis by metabolic labeling in cultured neuronal cells showed that in ischemic cells, the proteolytic processing of PC2 was greatly attenuated. Finally, in mice, an intracerebroventricular administration of synthetic DYN-A(1-8) significantly reduced the extent of ischemic brain injury. In mice those lack an active PC2, exacerbated brain injury was observed after an otherwise non-lethal focal ischemia. We conclude that brain ischemia attenuates PC2 and PC2-mediated neuropeptide processing. This attenuation may play a role in the pathology of ischemic brain injury.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Clinical Neurology,Neurology

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