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Annotation


Subramaniam JR, Lyons WE, Liu J, Bartnikas TB, Rothstein J, Price DL, Cleveland DW, Gitlin JD, Wong PC. Mutant SOD1 causes motor neuron disease independent of copper chaperone-mediated copper loading. Nat Neurosci. 2002 Apr;5(4):301-7. PubMed Abstract

  
Comments on Paper and Primary News
  Primary News: Disputing the Dismuting—What Is the Real Role of SOD in ALS?

Comment by:  Li-Huei Tsai
Submitted 15 March 2002  |  Permalink Posted 15 March 2002

The paper by Subramaniam et al. demonstrates for the first time that chaperone-mediated copper loading is not required for mutant SOD protein to produce ALS-like disease. Mutant SOD protein-mediated motor neuron disease was not affected in the absence of the SOD copper chaperone (CCS), although copper-loading was reduced by 85 percent. However, since a residual 15 percent of copper loading remains, it cannot be ruled out for certain that copper-mediated toxicity does not contribute to mutant SOD protein-mediated disease. It is formally possible that the residual CCS-independent copper loading is insufficient for normal SOD-mediated reactions, but sufficient for the aberrant oxidative chemistry implicated with the mutant SOD protein. Although overall SOD activity in spinal cord tissue was dramatically reduced, it remains to be clarified whether aberrant SOD-mediated reactions were altered.

Some small notes on the data in the paper:

(1) The number of animals for disease onset are very small in the survival table.

(2) G85R is included in the survival table, although no...  Read more


  Primary News: Disputing the Dismuting—What Is the Real Role of SOD in ALS?

Comment by:  Tennore Ramesh
Submitted 18 March 2002  |  Permalink Posted 18 March 2002

Contrary to assumptions that mutant superoxide dismutase (mSOD) causes ALS via peroxynitrite-mediated oxidative injury, Subramaniam et al. provide compelling evidence that mSOD toxicity is not due to the copper-dependent catalytic activity of peroxynitrite-mediated tyrosine nitration. Although a great deal of basic research and drug discovery in ALS has been predicated on the former assumption, the work of several researchers in the last several years has cast doubt on it. Studies have indicated that neuronal nitric oxide synthase is not directly involved in ALS pathogenesis, and the lack of evidence for the efficacy of NOS inhibitors in vivo supports this view. In addition, Doroudchi et al. have demonstrated that inhibiting nitrotyrosine production and protein nitration has little effect on the lifespan of motor neurons carrying the mSOD gene. Subramaniam's article provides more concrete and elegant evidence that the toxic gain of function of mSOD is not related to its pro-oxidative capacity.

It can be argued that the small amount of altered SOD activity still present in...  Read more

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REAGENTS/MATERIAL:

Generated knockout mice without CCS (copper chaperone for SOD1). Initially, the mutant or wild-type (WT) human SOD1 mice were crossbred with CCS+/- mice to generate mutant or WT SOD1 with a single functional CCS allele. These mice were then crossbred with CCS+/- mice to generate mutant or WT SOD1 mice with two (CCS+/+), one (CCS+/-) or no (CCS-/-) functional CCS alleles.

Western blots were probed with antibody against CCS or human or H/M SOD1 or antibody against actin.

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