Neurobiology of Disease (Jun 2008)

Postsynaptic density protein PSD-95 expression in Alzheimer's disease and okadaic acid induced neuritic retraction

  • Geneviève Leuba,
  • Claude Walzer,
  • André Vernay,
  • Béatrice Carnal,
  • Rudolf Kraftsik,
  • Françoise Piotton,
  • Pascale Marin,
  • Constantin Bouras,
  • Armand Savioz

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 30, no. 3
pp. 408 – 419

Abstract

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In order to understand how plasticity is related to neurodegeneration, we studied synaptic proteins with quantitative immunohistochemistry in the entorhinal cortex from Alzheimer patients and age-matched controls. We observed a significant decrease in presynaptic synaptophysin and an increase in postsynaptic density protein PSD-95, positively correlated with β amyloid and phosphorylated Tau proteins in Alzheimer cases. Furthermore, Alzheimer-like neuritic retraction was generated in okadaic acid (OA) treated SH-SY5Y neuroblastoma cells with no decrease in PSD-95 expression. However, in a SH-SY5Y clone with decreased expression of transcription regulator LMO4 (as observed in Alzheimer's disease) and increased neuritic length, PSD-95 expression was enhanced but did not change with OA treatment. Therefore, increased PSD-95 immunoreactivity in the entorhinal cortex might result from compensatory mechanisms, as in the SH-SY5Y clone, whereas increased Alzheimer-like Tau phosphorylation is not related to PSD-95 expression, as suggested by the OA-treated cell models.

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