4.3 Article

Evidence for the interaction of D-amino acid oxidase with pLG72 in a glial cell line

Journal

MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 48, Issue 1, Pages 20-28

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.mcn.2011.06.001

Keywords

D-serine; Neurotransmission; Schizophrenia; Flavoprotein; NMDA receptor; Subcellular localization

Categories

Funding

  1. MIUR [prot. 2008N2FM4A_001]
  2. Fondo di Ateneo per la Ricerca
  3. Fondazione CARIPLO

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Accumulating genetic evidence indicates that the primate-specific gene locus G72/G30 is related to schizophrenia: it encodes for the protein pLG72, whose function is still the subject of controversy. We recently demonstrated that pLG72 negatively affects the activity of human D-amino acid oxidase (hDAAO, also related to schizophrenia susceptibility), which in neurons and (predominantly) in glia is expected to catabolize the neuromodulator D-serine. The D-serine regulation mechanism relying on hDAAO-pLG72 interaction does not match with the subcellular localizations proposed for hDAAO (peroxisomes) and pLG72 (mitochondria). By using glioblastoma U87 cells transfected with plasmids encoding for hDAAO and/or pLG72 we provide convergent lines of evidence that newly synthesized hDAAO, transitorily present in cytosol before being delivered to the peroxisomes, colocalizes and interacts with pLG72 which we propose to be exposed on the external membrane of mitochondria. We also report that newly synthesized cytosolic hDAAO is catalytically active, and therefore pLG72 binding-and ensuing hDAAO inactivation-plays a protective role against D-serine depletion. (C) 2011 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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