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Reduced Expression of the Inhibitory Synapse Scaffolding Protein Gephyrin in Alzheimer's Disease
50
Citations
23
References
2008
Year
Gephyrin StandardSynaptic TransmissionNeurochemical BiomarkersSocial SciencesAlzheimer's DiseaseNeurobiology Of DiseaseDegenerative PathologyProtein MisfoldingNeurologyNeuropathologyMolecular NeuroscienceGephyrin ProteinNeuroprotectionNeurodegenerationCell BiologyNeurodegenerative DiseasesSynaptic PlasticityDementiaNeuroscienceMolecular NeurobiologyGephyrin AbundanceMedicine
Excitotoxicity may contribute to neuronal and synaptic loss in Alzheimer's disease (AD). Aberrant levels of gephyrin, a post-synaptic receptor-stabilizing protein, could affect the inhibitory modulation of excitatory impulses. We assayed gephyrin protein in two brain areas susceptible to neuronal loss in AD, and in a spared area, in autopsy tissue from normal subjects (n=15) and AD patients (n=5). Quantification was by in-gel immunodetection against known concentrations of a recombinant truncated gephyrin standard. Gephyrin abundance was significantly reduced (P<0.01) in AD. Area-wise analysis showed that gephyrin levels were reduced in both spared and susceptible regions, indicating a global phenomenon. When samples were categorized on an index of pathological severity, gephyrin levels decreased with increasing severity until a moderate index was reached, and then increased, suggesting that higher gephyrin levels might compensate for excitotoxic damage in late stages of the disease. AD males showed a more pronounced reduction in gephyrin levels than AD females cf same-sex controls. A major splice variant of gephyrin was detected in all cases and in all three brain areas. This is the first study of gephyrin expression in AD.
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