Sasabe Jumpei, Suzuki Masataka, Imanishi Nobuaki, Aiso Sadakazu
Department of Anatomy, Keio University School of Medicine Shinjuku-ku, Tokyo, Japan.
Front Synaptic Neurosci. 2014 Jun 10;6:14. doi: 10.3389/fnsyn.2014.00014. eCollection 2014.
It has been proposed that D-amino acid oxidase (DAO) plays an essential role in degrading D-serine, an endogenous coagonist of N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) glutamate receptors. DAO shows genetic association with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and schizophrenia, in whose pathophysiology aberrant metabolism of D-serine is implicated. Although the pathology of both essentially involves the forebrain, in rodents, enzymatic activity of DAO is hindbrain-shifted and absent in the region. Here, we show activity-based distribution of DAO in the central nervous system (CNS) of humans compared with that of mice. DAO activity in humans was generally higher than that in mice. In the human forebrain, DAO activity was distributed in the subcortical white matter and the posterior limb of internal capsule, while it was almost undetectable in those areas in mice. In the lower brain centers, DAO activity was detected in the gray and white matters in a coordinated fashion in both humans and mice. In humans, DAO activity was prominent along the corticospinal tract, rubrospinal tract, nigrostriatal system, ponto-/olivo-cerebellar fibers, and in the anterolateral system. In contrast, in mice, the reticulospinal tract and ponto-/olivo-cerebellar fibers were the major pathways showing strong DAO activity. In the human corticospinal tract, activity-based staining of DAO did not merge with a motoneuronal marker, but colocalized mostly with excitatory amino acid transporter 2 and in part with GFAP, suggesting that DAO activity-positive cells are astrocytes seen mainly in the motor pathway. These findings establish the distribution of DAO activity in cerebral white matter and the motor system in humans, providing evidence to support the involvement of DAO in schizophrenia and ALS. Our results raise further questions about the regulation of D-serine in DAO-rich regions as well as the physiological/pathological roles of DAO in white matter astrocytes.
有人提出,D-氨基酸氧化酶(DAO)在降解D-丝氨酸(N-甲基-D-天冬氨酸(NMDA)谷氨酸受体的内源性协同激动剂)中起重要作用。DAO与肌萎缩侧索硬化症(ALS)和精神分裂症存在遗传关联,这两种疾病的病理生理学都涉及D-丝氨酸的异常代谢。尽管这两种疾病的病理本质上都涉及前脑,但在啮齿动物中,DAO的酶活性在后脑转移,在前脑区域则不存在。在这里,我们展示了与小鼠相比,DAO在人类中枢神经系统(CNS)中基于活性的分布。人类的DAO活性通常高于小鼠。在人类前脑中,DAO活性分布于皮质下白质和内囊后肢,而在小鼠的这些区域几乎检测不到。在较低的脑中枢,人类和小鼠的灰质和白质中均以协调的方式检测到DAO活性。在人类中,DAO活性沿皮质脊髓束、红核脊髓束、黑质纹状体系统、脑桥/橄榄小脑纤维以及前外侧系统较为突出。相比之下,在小鼠中,网状脊髓束和脑桥/橄榄小脑纤维是显示强烈DAO活性的主要通路。在人类皮质脊髓束中,基于活性的DAO染色与运动神经元标记物不重合,但大多与兴奋性氨基酸转运体2共定位,部分与GFAP共定位,这表明DAO活性阳性细胞主要是运动通路中的星形胶质细胞。这些发现确定了DAO活性在人类脑白质和运动系统中的分布,为支持DAO参与精神分裂症和ALS提供了证据。我们的结果进一步提出了关于富含DAO区域中D-丝氨酸调节以及DAO在白质星形胶质细胞中的生理/病理作用的问题。