4.3 Article Proceedings Paper

No superoxide dismutase activity of cellular prion protein in vivo

Journal

BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 384, Issue 9, Pages 1279-1285

Publisher

WALTER DE GRUYTER GMBH
DOI: 10.1515/BC.2003.142

Keywords

prion disease; PrPC; SOD; synaptosomes; transgenic mice

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Prion diseases are characterized by the deposition of PrP[Sc], an abnormal form of the cellular prion protein PrP[C], which is encoded by the Prnp gene. PrP[C] is highly expressed on neurons and its function is unknown. Recombinant PrP[C] was claimed to possess superoxide dismutase (SOD) activity, and it was hypothesized that abrogation of this function may contribute to neurodegeneration in prion diseases. We tested this hypothesis in vivo by studying copper/zinc and manganese SOD activity in genetically defined crosses of mice lacking the Sod1 gene with mice lacking PrP[C], and with hemizygous or homozygous tga20 transgenic mice overexpressing various levels of PrP[C]. We failed to detect any influence of the Prnp genotype and gene dosage on SOD1 or SOD2 activity in heart, spleen, brain, and synaptosomeenriched brain fractions. Control experiments included crosses of mice lacking or overexpressing PrP[C] with mice overexpressing human Cu[2+]/Zn[2+]superoxide dismutase, and confirmed that SOD enzymatic activity correlated exclusively with the gene dosage of bona fide human or murine SOD. We conclude that PrP[C] in vivo does not discernibly contribute to total SOD activity and does not possess an intrinsic dismutase activity.

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