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Home: Papers of the Week
Annotation


Syntichaki P, Xu K, Driscoll M, Tavernarakis N. Specific aspartyl and calpain proteases are required for neurodegeneration in C. elegans. Nature. 2002 Oct 31;419(6910):939-44. PubMed Abstract

  
Comments on Paper and Primary News
  Primary News: In C. Elegans, Aspartyl Proteases and Calpain, Not Caspases, Play the Grim Reaper

Comment by:  Li-Huei Tsai
Submitted 31 October 2002  |  Permalink Posted 31 October 2002

This intriguing paper uses a well-executed genetic approach to demonstrate the significance of the calcium-dependent cysteine protease calpains and the cathepsin-like aspartyl proteases in neurodegeneration. It has been postulated that, in mammalian systems, calpains and lysosomal enzymes such as cathepsins play a role in acute (such as ischemic brain damage) and chronic (such as Alzheimer's disease) neurodegeneration. However, due to the complexity of the mammalian nervous system and the lack of suitable pharmacologic inhibitors, it has been difficult to unambiguously demonstrate the importance of these enzymes in neurodegeneration. This study not only shows that these enzymes play an essential role in neuronal death, but also offers a cascade of events initiating from Ca influx to activation of calpains and the aspartyl proteases.

This study also suggests that caspases are responsible for apoptosis during development, whereas calpains and the aspartyl proteases are more responsible for neurodegeneration in C. elegans. The picture may not be as black and white in...  Read more


  Primary News: In C. Elegans, Aspartyl Proteases and Calpain, Not Caspases, Play the Grim Reaper

Comment by:  Ralph Nixon
Submitted 2 November 2002  |  Permalink Posted 2 November 2002

In their careful genetic analysis in C. elegans, Syntichaki and colleagues present a compelling case that calpains and aspartyl proteases are essential participants in a form of neurodegeneration that occurs independently of CED-3 and several related proteases important to programmed cell death in the nematode. The study provides the most direct evidence to date that activation of these two proteolytic systems can execute death of mature neurons in situ, and offers a valuable window into the still-murky realm of "necrotic" cell death.

Although the genetic perturbations were not intended to model a specific human disease, the cellular pathways involved and the outcomes invite interesting comparisons to findings in Alzheimer’s disease. In AD, calpain activation and high expression of certain lysosomal proteases, including the aspartyl protease cathepsin D, develop very early in neurons in vulnerable areas and become robust as the neurons begin to show other signs of metabolic compromise. Growing evidence links the actions of these two proteolytic systems in the...  Read more

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