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Home: Papers of the Week
Annotation


Uehara T, Nakamura T, Yao D, Shi ZQ, Gu Z, Ma Y, Masliah E, Nomura Y, Lipton SA. S-nitrosylated protein-disulphide isomerase links protein misfolding to neurodegeneration. Nature. 2006 May 25;441(7092):513-7. PubMed Abstract

  
Comments on Paper and Primary News
  Primary News: NO Laughing Matter—Nitrosylation of Isomerase Spells Trouble for Neurons

Comment by:  Veer Bala Gupta, K.S. Jagannatha Rao
Submitted 31 May 2006  |  Permalink Posted 9 June 2006

Amyloid-β peptides induce DNA fragmentation: an alternative pathway yet to be understood in Alzheimer disease pathology
The paper (Prestwich et al., 2005) has fascinated us and made us believe that we are in the right direction toward exploring an alternative pathway for the pathogenesis of the Alzheimer disease. Our earlier finding of amyloid-β peptides binding to and inducing conformational change in DNA (Hegde et al., 2004) led us to study the effect of amyloid-β peptides on DNA integrity. That other amyloidogenic peptides, such as α-synuclein and prion, also were found to bind to DNA (Veer Bala Gupta et al., 2006), made us argue that there is a common mechanism of action of these peptides at work in neurodegeneration. In this perspective, we highlighted an interesting mechanism of different molecular forms (monomer-oligomer aggregates) of amyloid-β and α-synuclein binding to DNA and inducing DNA damage (Hegde et al., 2004, Abstract). It also gives us insight into understanding the different events taking place at different stages of the disease in view of the...  Read more

  Primary News: NO Laughing Matter—Nitrosylation of Isomerase Spells Trouble for Neurons

Comment by:  sumit gupta
Submitted 10 June 2006  |  Permalink Posted 13 June 2006
  I recommend this paper

I partially agree with the suggestion that villagers in India who consume mustard oil didn't have AD in old age, also because it was found in current research that turmeric and mustard oil users are less susceptible to AD, but I disagree with his query that we can't relate AD with age as we have certain data for its proof. Age is the most important known risk factor for AD. The number of people with the disease doubles every 5 years beyond age 65. Middle-aged women are at greater risk than men (AD). A recent study shows that high blood pressure dramatically increases this risk, foretelling a potential epidemic of dementia as baby boomers enter their later years. Research at Boston University School of Medicine tracked 4,883 people under evaluation for the Framingham Heart Study. Forty years' worth of data revealed that one in four suffers from AD. Men of the same age are slightly less susceptible, having a one in six chance of AD. Combined, these risk factors threaten one out of every two older women and one in three of their male peers.

I agree with Mr. Ranganath Rao that...  Read more

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REAGENTS/MATERIAL:

Cells were incubated with antibodies to poly-Ub protein (BIOMOL) or MAP2 (Sigma)

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