| Literature DB >> 28442549 |
Xuefang Pan1, Camila De Britto Pará De Aragão1,2, Juan P Velasco-Martin3, David A Priestman4, Harry Y Wu1, Kohta Takahashi5, Kazunori Yamaguchi6, Luisella Sturiale7, Domenico Garozzo7, Frances M Platt4, Nathalie Lamarche-Vane2, Carlos R Morales2, Taeko Miyagi6, Alexey V Pshezhetsky8,2.
Abstract
Gangliosides (sialylated glycolipids) play an essential role in the CNS by regulating recognition and signaling in neurons. Metabolic blocks in processing and catabolism of gangliosides result in the development of severe neurologic disorders, including gangliosidoses manifesting with neurodegeneration and neuroinflammation. We demonstrate that 2 mammalian enzymes, neuraminidases 3 and 4, play important roles in catabolic processing of brain gangliosides by cleaving terminal sialic acid residues in their glycan chains. In neuraminidase 3 and 4 double-knockout mice, GM3 ganglioside is stored in microglia, vascular pericytes, and neurons, causing micro- and astrogliosis, neuroinflammation, accumulation of lipofuscin bodies, and memory loss, whereas their cortical and hippocampal neurons have lower rate of neuritogenesis in vitro Double-knockout mice also have reduced levels of GM1 ganglioside and myelin in neuronal axons. Furthermore, neuraminidase 3 deficiency drastically increased storage of GM2 in the brain tissues of an asymptomatic mouse model of Tay-Sachs disease, a severe human gangliosidosis, indicating that this enzyme is responsible for the metabolic bypass of β-hexosaminidase A deficiency. Together, our results provide the first in vivo evidence that neuraminidases 3 and 4 have important roles in CNS function by catabolizing gangliosides and preventing their storage in lipofuscin bodies.-Pan, X., De Britto Pará De Aragão, C., Velasco-Martin, J. P., Priestman, D. A., Wu, H. Y., Takahashi, K., Yamaguchi, K., Sturiale, L., Garozzo, D., Platt, F. M., Lamarche-Vane, N., Morales, C. R., Miyagi, T., Pshezhetsky, A. V. Neuraminidases 3 and 4 regulate neuronal function by catabolizing brain gangliosides. © FASEB.Entities:
Keywords: Tay-Sach disease; gangliosidosis; lipofuscin; lysosomal storage; neuroinflammation; sialidase
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28442549 DOI: 10.1096/fj.201601299R
Source DB: PubMed Journal: FASEB J ISSN: 0892-6638 Impact factor: 5.191