AI Article Synopsis

  • * Researchers used glycoprotein detection methods to study changes in glycosylation in mice models of Rett syndrome, finding significant alterations in a specific 50kDa protein known as NPP-5.
  • * The study suggests that the amount of MECP2 impacts the N-glycosylation of NPP-5, and these changes can be reversed by reactivating the MECP2 gene in the brain.

Article Abstract

Neurological disorders can be associated with protein glycosylation abnormalities. Rett syndrome is a devastating genetic brain disorder, mainly caused by de novo loss-of-function mutations in the methyl-CpG binding protein 2 (MECP2) gene. Although its pathogenesis appears to be closely associated with a redox imbalance, no information on glycosylation is available. Glycoprotein detection strategies (i.e., lectin-blotting) were applied to identify target glycosylation changes in the whole brain of Mecp2 mutant murine models of the disease. Remarkable glycosylation pattern changes for a peculiar 50kDa protein, i.e., the N-linked brain nucleotide pyrophosphatase-5 were evidenced, with decreased N-glycosylation in the presymptomatic and symptomatic mutant mice. Glycosylation changes were rescued by selected brain Mecp2 reactivation. Our findings indicate that there is a causal link between the amount of Mecp2 and the N-glycosylation of NPP-5.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neures.2015.10.002DOI Listing

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