Selective suppression of cathepsin L results from elevations in lysosomal pH and is followed by proteolysis of tau protein.
E Bednarski, G Lynch
Index: Neuroreport 9 , 2089-2094, (1998)
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Abstract
Incubation of cultured hippocampal slices with chloroquine, a compound that increases the pH of acidic subcellular organelles, for 10 h reduced the activity of cathepsin L by 83 +/- 0.87% (mean +/- s.e.m.) while only marginally suppressing cathepsin B. This effect was followed within 3 h by an increase in the concentration of mature, single-chain cathepsin D (up 61 +/- 28%). Selective depression of cathepsin L with N-CBZ-L-phenylalanyl-L-phenylalanine-diazomethylketone also resulted in increases in enzymatically active cathepsin D and the delayed appearance of a 29 kDa fragment of the tau protein. These findings demonstrate that the pattern of cathepsin L, B, and D changes found in the aged brain can be reproduced by reducing the acidity of the lysosomal milieu. They also indicate that such pH shifts initiate a sequence of linked disturbances (inactivation of cathepsin L > induction of cathepsin D > aberrant tau proteolysis) likely to play an important role in brain ageing.
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