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Vol. 60, Issue 4, 838-846, October 2001
Laboratoire de Neurobiologie Cellulaire et Moléculaire (L.G.,
Y.M.G.-T.), Institut de Chimie des Substances Naturelles (C.D.), Centre
National de la Recherche Scientifique, Gif-sur-Yvette, France
Evidence of an overload of reactive oxygen species and peroxynitrite, a
derivative of nitric oxide, in sporadic amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
suggests that peroxynitrite could impair cholinergic functions. Because
of the impossibility of obtaining synaptosomes from vertebrate
neuromuscular junctions, we used cholinergic synaptosomes purified from
Torpedo marmorata electroneurons to characterize the
defects triggered by peroxynitrite in more detail. Addition of
peroxynitrite or its donor 3-morpholinosydnonimine abolished high-affinity choline uptake and synthesis of acetylcholine from acetate. T. marmorata choline acetyltransferase (ChAT)
was impaired to the same extent as bovine brain ChAT. A hallmark of
peroxynitrite action is the nitration of tyrosine residues in proteins.
Peroxynitrite induced a concentration-dependent appearance of
nitrotyrosines in several neuronal proteins from synaptosomes and, more
readily, from synaptic vesicles. Peroxynitrite also triggered tyrosine nitrations in purified ChAT. Peroxynitrite-dependent nitrations were
impaired when synaptosomes were pretreated with thioreductants (glutathione, N-acetyl cysteine, dithiothreitol) or
antioxidants (uric acid, melatonin, bovine serum albumin,
desferrioxamine). Deleterious effects of peroxynitrite on choline
transport and ChAT activity were prevented by the thioreductants but
only partially by the antioxidants, suggesting a mechanism other than
tyrosine nitration, which may involve cysteine oxidation. Further
development of protective agents acting on choline transport and on
ChAT activity may offer interesting therapeutic possibilities with
respect to cholinergic dysfunction occurring in neurodegenerative diseases.
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