Alterations in Cyclin-Dependent Protein Kinase 5 (CDK5) Protein Levels, Activity and Immunocytochemistry in Canine Motor Neuron Disease

Hereditary canine spinal muscular atrophy (HCSMA) is a dominantly inherited motor neuron disease in Brittany spaniels that is clinically characterized by progressive muscle weakness leading to paralysis. Histopathologically, degeneration is confined to motor neurons with accumulation of phosphorylat...

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Published in:Journal of neuropathology and experimental neurology Vol. 57; no. 11; pp. 1070 - 1077
Main Authors: Green, Sherril L, Vulliet, P Richard, Pinter, Martin J, Cork, Linda C
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Hagerstown, MD American Association of Neuropathologists, Inc 01-11-1998
Lippincott Williams & Wilkins
Oxford University Press
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Summary:Hereditary canine spinal muscular atrophy (HCSMA) is a dominantly inherited motor neuron disease in Brittany spaniels that is clinically characterized by progressive muscle weakness leading to paralysis. Histopathologically, degeneration is confined to motor neurons with accumulation of phosphorylated neurofilaments in axonal internodes. Cyclin-dependent kinase 5 (CDK5), a kinase related to the cell cycle kinase cdc2, phosphorylates neurofilaments and regulates neurofilament dynamics. We examined CDK5 activity, protein levels, and cellular immunoreactivity in nervous tissue from dogs with HCSMA, from closely age-matched controls and from dogs with other neurological diseases. On immunoblot analysis, CDK5 protein levels were increased in the HCSMA dogs (by ~ 1.5-fold in both the cytosolic and the paniculate fractions). CDK5 activity was significantly increased (by ~3-fold) in the paniculate fractions in the HCSMA dogs compared to all controls. The finding that CDK5 activity was increased in the young HCSMA homozygotes with the accelerated form of the disease, who do not show axonal swellings histologically, suggests that alterations in CDK5 occurs early in the pathogenesis, prior to the development of significant neurofilament pathology. Immunocytochemically, there was strong CDK5 staining of the nuclei, cytoplasm and axonal processes of the motor neurons in both control dogs and dogs with HCSMA. Further immunocytochemical studies demonstrated CDK5 staining where neurofilaments accumulated, in axonal swellings in the dogs with HCSMA. Our observations suggest phosphorylation-dependent events mediated by CDK5 occur in canine motor neuron disease.
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ISSN:0022-3069
1554-6578
DOI:10.1097/00005072-199811000-00010