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Publication : Neuropathy target esterase is required for adult vertebrate axon maintenance.

First Author  Read DJ Year  2009
Journal  J Neurosci Volume  29
Issue  37 Pages  11594-600
PubMed ID  19759306 Mgi Jnum  J:152759
Mgi Id  MGI:4359949 Doi  10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3007-09.2009
Citation  Read DJ, et al. (2009) Neuropathy target esterase is required for adult vertebrate axon maintenance. J Neurosci 29(37):11594-600
abstractText  The enzyme neuropathy target esterase (NTE) is present in neurons and deacylates the major membrane phospholipid, phosphatidylcholine (PtdCho). Mutation of the NTE gene or poisoning by neuropathic organophosphates--chemical inhibitors of NTE--causes distal degeneration of long spinal axons in humans. However, analogous neuropathological changes have not been reported in nestin-cre:NTEfl/fl mice with NTE-deficient neural tissue. Furthermore, altered PtdCho homeostasis has not been detected in NTE-deficient vertebrates. Here, we describe distal degeneration of the longest spinal axons in approximately 3-week-old nestin-cre:NTEfl/fl mice and in adult C57BL/6J mice after acute dosing with a neuropathic organophosphate: in both groups early degenerative lesions were followed by swellings comprising accumulated axoplasmic material. In mice dosed acutely with organophosphate, maximal numbers of lesions, in the longest spinal sensory axon tract, were attained within days and were preceded by a transient rise in neural PtdCho. In nestin-cre:NTEfl/fl mice, sustained elevation of PtdCho over many months was accompanied by progressive degeneration and massive swelling of axons in sensory and motor spinal tracts and by increasing hindlimb dysfunction. Axonal lesion distribution closely resembled that in hereditary spastic paraplegia (HSP). The importance of defective membrane trafficking in HSP and the association of NTE with the endoplasmic reticulum--the starting point for the constitutive secretory pathway and transport of neuronal materials into axons--prompted investigation for a role of NTE in secretion. Cultured NTE-deficient neurons displayed modestly impaired secretion, consistent with neuronal viability and damage in vivo initially restricted to distal parts of the longest axons.
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