ABSTRACT
Increasing evidence links Alzheimer's disease (AD) with misbalanced Cu homeostasis. Recently, we have shown that dietary Cu supplementation in a transgenic mouse model for AD increases bioavailable brain Cu levels, restores Cu, Zn-super oxide-1 activity, prevents premature death, and lowers A beta levels. In the present report we investigated AD patients with normal levels of A beta 42, Tau and Phospho-Tau in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) in comparison with AD patients exhibiting aberrant levels in these CSF biomarkers. The influence of these cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) diagnostic markers with primary dependent variables blood Cu, Zn and ceruloplasmin (CB) and secondary with CSF profiles of Cu, Zn and neurotransmitters was determined. Multivariate tests revealed a significant effect of factor diagnostic group (no AD diagnosis in CSF or AD diagnosis in CSF) for variables plasma Cu and CB (F=4.80; df=2, 23; p=0.018). Subsequent univariate tests revealed significantly reduced plasma Cu (-12.7%; F=7.05; df=1, 25; p=0.014) and CB (-14.1%; F=9.44; df=1, 24; p=0.005) levels in patients with aberrant CSF biomarker concentrations. Although only AD patients were included, the reduced plasma Cu and CB levels in patients with a CSF diagnosis of advanced AD supports previous observations that a mild Cu deficiency might contribute to AD progression.
Subject(s)
Alzheimer Disease/cerebrospinal fluid , Amyloid beta-Peptides/cerebrospinal fluid , Ceruloplasmin/cerebrospinal fluid , Copper/blood , tau Proteins/cerebrospinal fluid , Aged , Alzheimer Disease/blood , Biomarkers/cerebrospinal fluid , Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid , Copper/cerebrospinal fluid , Female , Humans , Male , Neurotransmitter Agents/cerebrospinal fluid , Spectrophotometry, Atomic , Zinc/bloodABSTRACT
Studies were undertaken to investigate vitellogenesis and its regulation in female adults of the fall armyworm, Spodoptera frugiperda. A single female-specific protein, likely to be the S. frugiperda vitellogenin (Vg), appeared approximately 5 h after adult eclosion in the hemolymph of virgin females. The concentration of the protein increased with age as sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) revealed. A protein with the same relative molecular mass was also present in egg extracts, but absent from hemolymph samples from male moths. The relative molecular mass of the designated S. frugiperda Vg was determined as 164.5+/-2.5 kDa. Vitellogenic oocytes became visible 36-48 h after emergence and egg deposition began on day 3 of adult life. Vg could not be detected in the hemolymph of females decapitated directly after eclosion. When decapitated virgin females were injected with the JH-mimic methoprene (MP), the level of Vg was comparable to that in non-decapitated moths, indicating that vitellogenesis in S. frugiperda depends on juvenile hormone (JH). However, the number of vitellogenic oocytes was somewhat lower than in non-decapitated virgin females. Injection of 20-hydroxyecdysone (20E) promoted Vg production to a similar extent in decapitated female moths, but in contrast to methoprene injection, treatment with 20E never resulted in the production of vitellogenic oocytes. In vitro cultivated ovaries of adult females dissected directly after eclosion produced lower amounts of ecdysteroids than those isolated on day 1 after emergence. Our results suggest a crucial role for 20E in the induction of vitellogenesis in the noctuid S. frugiperda, while JH seems to be essential for the continued uptake of Vg by developing oocytes and may trigger 20E biosynthesis in the ovary.