Literature DB >> 8725908

Age-related loss of calcium binding proteins in rabbit hippocampus.

G I de Jong1, P A Naber, E A Van der Zee, L T Thompson, J F Disterhoft, P G Luiten.   

Abstract

Using immunocytochemistry hippocampal levels of the calcium binding proteins calbindin 28K (CB) and parvalbumin (PV) was studied in young (1 month) to very old (60 month) Albino rabbits. Young (3 month) and senescent (30 month) Wistar rats were also examined to compare the distribution and age dependency of PV and CB in both species. The distribution of PV-ir is similar in the rabbit and rat hippocampus. Aging in both species yielded a small loss of PV-ir in axon terminals. The presence of CB-ir interneurons throughout the hippocampus, and the heavy investment of the dentate gyrus (DG) granular cells with CB-ir was also similar in both species. In rabbits, the number of CB-ir interneurons in the CA1, as well as the density of CB-ir in the DG decreased in the first year of life, and did not change between 12-48 months of age. A secondary reduction in the density of CB-ir in the DG was observed at ages beyond 48 months. A similar loss of CB-ir in the DG occurred in the rat. In the CA1, however, the density of CB-ir was similar in young and aged rats. Another remarkable finding was the total absence of CB-ir in CA1 pyramidal neurons of rabbits at any age. Thus, the distribution and age dependency of PV-ir in the hippocampus is similar in both species. The decline of CB-ir in the DG with advancing age is very prominent and may be related to an altered calcium homeostasis in these cells. However, the absence of CB-ir in the CA1 of rabbits makes a causal role for CB in the functional decline of CA1 pyramidal cells during aging unlikely.

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Year:  1996        PMID: 8725908     DOI: 10.1016/0197-4580(96)00030-9

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neurobiol Aging        ISSN: 0197-4580            Impact factor:   4.673


  17 in total

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5.  Selective neuronal vulnerability to oxidative stress in the brain.

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7.  Parvalbumin immunoreactivity and protein level are altered in the gerbil hippocampus during normal aging.

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8.  Aging-related changes in calcium-binding proteins in rat perirhinal cortex.

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10.  Altered calcium metabolism in aging CA1 hippocampal pyramidal neurons.

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