Ross B M, Moszczynska A, Erlich J, Kish S J
Human Neurochemical Pathology Laboratory, Clarke Institute of Psychiatry, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
J Neurochem. 1998 Feb;70(2):786-93. doi: 10.1046/j.1471-4159.1998.70020786.x.
Damage to brain membrane phospholipids may play an important role in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease (AD); however, the critical metabolic processes responsible for the generation and repair of membrane phospholipids affected by the disease are unknown. We measured the activity of key phospholipid catabolic and anabolic enzymes in morphologically affected and spared areas of autopsied brain of patients with AD and in matched control subjects. The activity of the major catabolic enzyme phospholipase A2 (PLA2), measured in both the presence and absence of Ca2+, was significantly decreased (-35 to -53%) in parietal and temporal cortices of patients with AD. In contrast, the activities of lysophospholipid acyltransferase, which recycles lysophospholipids into intact phospholipids, and glycerophosphocholine phosphodiesterase, which returns phospholipid catabolites to be used in phospholipid resynthesis, were increased by approximately 50-70% in the same brain areas. Brain activities of enzymes involved in de novo phospholipid synthesis (ethanolamine kinase, choline kinase, choline phosphotransferase, phosphoethanolamine cytidylyltransferase, and phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase) were either normal or only slightly altered. The activities of PLA2 and acyltransferase were normal in the degenerating cerebellum of patients with spinocerebellar atrophy type 1, whereas the activity of glycerophosphocholine phosphodiesterase was reduced, suggesting that the alterations in AD brain were not nonspecific consequences of neurodegeneration. Our data suggest that compensatory phospholipid metabolic changes are present in AD brain that reduce the rate of phospholipid loss via both decreased catabolism (PLA2) and increased phospholipid resynthesis (acyltransferase and glycerophosphocholine phosphodiesterase).
脑膜磷脂损伤可能在阿尔茨海默病(AD)的发病机制中起重要作用;然而,负责该疾病所影响的膜磷脂生成和修复的关键代谢过程尚不清楚。我们测量了AD患者尸检脑形态学上受影响和未受影响区域以及匹配对照组中关键磷脂分解代谢和合成代谢酶的活性。在有和没有Ca2+存在的情况下测量的主要分解代谢酶磷脂酶A2(PLA2)的活性,在AD患者的顶叶和颞叶皮质中显著降低(-35%至-53%)。相比之下,将溶血磷脂再循环为完整磷脂的溶血磷脂酰基转移酶以及将磷脂分解代谢物返回用于磷脂再合成的甘油磷酸胆碱磷酸二酯酶的活性,在相同脑区增加了约50%-70%。参与从头合成磷脂的酶(乙醇胺激酶、胆碱激酶、胆碱磷酸转移酶、磷酸乙醇胺胞苷酰转移酶和磷酸胆碱胞苷酰转移酶)的脑活性正常或仅略有改变。1型脊髓小脑萎缩患者退化的小脑中PLA2和酰基转移酶的活性正常,而甘油磷酸胆碱磷酸二酯酶的活性降低,这表明AD脑中的改变不是神经退行性变的非特异性后果。我们的数据表明,AD脑中存在代偿性磷脂代谢变化,通过降低分解代谢(PLA2)和增加磷脂再合成(酰基转移酶和甘油磷酸胆碱磷酸二酯酶)来降低磷脂损失率。