Zimmer D B, Chaplin J, Baldwin A, Rast M
Department of Veterinary Pathobiology, College of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, Texas A & M University, College Station, TX 77845-4467, USA.
Cell Mol Biol (Noisy-le-grand). 2005 Sep 5;51(2):201-14.
This article presents new information regarding the complement/level of S100 family members expressed in the brain and reviews the contribution of brain S100 family members to nervous system function and disease. A total of ten S100 family members are reported in the literature to be expressed in brain -S100A1, S100A2, S100A4, S100A5, S100A6, S100A10, S100A11, S100A13, S100B, and S100Z. Quantitative Northern blot analysis detected no S100A3, S100A8, S100A9 or S100A14 mRNA in mouse brain suggesting that these family members are not expressed in the brain. In addition, there was a 100-fold range in the mRNA levels for the six family members that were detected in mouse brain: S100A1/S100B levels were 5-fold higher than S100A6/S100A10 levels and 100-fold higher than S100A4/S100A13 levels. Five of these six family members (S1100A1, S100A6, S100A10, S100A13, and S100B) exhibited age-dependent increases in expression in adult mice that ranged from 5- to 20-fold. Although previous studies on S100 function in the nervous system have focused on S100B, other family members (S100A1, S100A3, S100A4, S100A5) have been implicated in neurological diseases. Like S100B, intra- and inter-cellular forms of these family members have been linked to cell growth, cell differentiation, and apoptotic pathways. Studies presented here demonstrate that ablation of S100A1 expression in PC12 cells results in increased resistance to Abeta peptide induced cell death, stabilization of intracellular [Ca2+] homeostasis, and reduced amyloid precursor protein expression. Altogether, these results confirm that S100-mediated signal transduction pathways play an important role in nervous system function/disease and implicate S100A1 in the neuronal cell dysfunction/death that occurs in Alzheimer's disease.
本文介绍了有关大脑中表达的补体/S100家族成员水平的新信息,并综述了大脑S100家族成员对神经系统功能和疾病的作用。文献报道共有10种S100家族成员在大脑中表达——S100A1、S100A2、S100A4、S100A5、S100A6、S100A10、S100A11、S100A13、S100B和S100Z。定量Northern印迹分析在小鼠大脑中未检测到S100A3、S100A8、S100A9或S100A14 mRNA,表明这些家族成员在大脑中不表达。此外,在小鼠大脑中检测到的6种家族成员的mRNA水平有100倍的差异:S100A1/S100B水平比S100A6/S100A10水平高5倍,比S100A4/S100A13水平高100倍。这6种家族成员中的5种(S1100A1、S100A6、S100A10、S100A13和S100B)在成年小鼠中的表达呈现年龄依赖性增加,增幅在5至20倍之间。尽管先前关于S100在神经系统中功能的研究主要集中在S100B上,但其他家族成员(S100A1、S100A3、S100A4、S100A5)也与神经疾病有关。与S100B一样,这些家族成员的细胞内和细胞间形式都与细胞生长、细胞分化和凋亡途径有关。本文的研究表明,PC12细胞中S100A1表达的缺失导致对β淀粉样肽诱导的细胞死亡的抗性增加、细胞内[Ca2+]稳态的稳定以及淀粉样前体蛋白表达的降低。总之,这些结果证实S—100介导的信号转导途径在神经系统功能/疾病中起重要作用,并表明S100A1与阿尔茨海默病中发生的神经元细胞功能障碍/死亡有关。