Psychosine-induced alterations in peroxisomes of twitcher mouse liver.

Collect this paper and discover other ones on Labmeeting. Learn more.
- Hide Abstract
Krabbe disease is a neuroinflammatory disorder in which galactosylsphingosine (psychosine) accumulates in nervous tissue. To gain insight into whether the psychosine-induced effects in nervous tissue extend to peripheral organs, we investigated the expression of cytokines and their effects on peroxisomal structure/functions in twitcher mouse liver (animal model of Krabbe disease). Immunofluorescence analysis demonstrated TNF-alpha and IL-6 expression, which was confirmed by mRNAs quantitation. Despite the presence of TNF-alpha, lipidomic analysis did not indicate a significant decrease in sphingomyelin or an increase in ceramide fractions. Ultrastructural analysis of catalase-dependent staining of liver sections showed reduced reactivity without significant changes in peroxisomal contents. This observation was confirmed by assaying catalase activity and quantitation of its mRNA, both of which were found significantly decreased in twitcher mouse liver. Western blot analysis demonstrated a generalized reduction of peroxisomal matrix and membrane proteins. These observations indicate that twitcher mouse pathobiology extends to the liver, where psychosine-induced TNF-alpha and IL-6 compromise peroxisomal structure and functions.
Archives of biochemistry and biophysics 477(2):211-8, 2008 Sep 15 - Who cited this? | PubMed ID: 18602885 | Fulltext


+ Click Here for Related Papers

Join Labmeeting

  • Organize and search your PDF collection
  • Collect papers
  • Search millions of papers
  • Keep up to date with paper alerts
  • Read your papers from anywhere
  • Recommend papers to colleagues
  • Manage your lab

Join Labmeeting

Labmeeting is a web service for researchers. Sign up with your academic email address.

Individuals or corporations not affiliated with an academic institution can request a trial subscription.