Preferential expression of myelencephalon-specific protease by oligodendrocytes of the adult rat spinal cord white matter |
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Authors: | Scarisbrick I A Asakura K Blaber S Blaber M Isackson P J Bieto T Rodriguez M Windebank A J |
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Affiliation: | Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Mayo Medical and Graduate Schools, Rochester, Minnesota 55905, USA. scarisbrick.isobel@mayo.edu |
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Abstract: | Myelencephalon-specific protease (MSP) is a novel serine protease that is expressed predominantly in the nervous system. In the adult rat spinal cord, MSP mRNA expression was dramatically upregulated, in both the white and gray matter, after systemic exposure to the glutamate receptor agonist, kainic acid (KA) (Scarisbrick et al. J Neurosci 17: 8156-8168, 1997b). To determine the cell-specific expression patterns of MSP, we generated MSP-specific monoclonal antibodies. These have been used in immunohistochemical and in situ hybridization colocalization studies, to demonstrate that MSP mRNA and protein are produced predominantly by CNP-immunoreactive oligodendroglia, but not by GFAP-immunoreactive astrocytes, in the white matter of the normal adult cord. In vitro, the soma of oligodendrocytes were also densely MSP immunoreactive, as were their growth tips, while astrocytes were associated with lower levels. These findings suggest that the enzymatic activity of MSP is likely to be important in the biology of oligodendrocytes and/or in the maintenance of the nerve fiber tracts of the adult spinal cord. |
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