Keeping it trim: roles of neuraminidases in CNS function.
Alexey V PshezhetskyMila AshmarinaPublished in: Glycoconjugate journal (2018)
The sialylated glyconjugates (SGC) are found in abundance on the surface of brain cells, where they form a dense array of glycans mediating cell/cell and cell/protein recognition in numerous physiological and pathological processes. Metabolic genetic blocks in processing and catabolism of SGC result in development of severe storage disorders, dominated by CNS involvement including marked neuroinflammation and neurodegeneration, the pathophysiological mechanisms of which are still discussed. SGC patterns in the brain are cell and organelle-specific, dynamic and maintained by highly coordinated processes of their biosynthesis, trafficking, processing and catabolism. The changes in the composition of SGC during development and aging of the brain cannot be explained based solely on the regulation of the SGC-synthesizing enzymes, sialyltransferases, suggesting that neuraminidases (sialidases) hydrolysing the removal of terminal sialic acid residues also play an essential role. In the current review we summarize the roles of three mammalian neuraminidases: neuraminidase 1, neuraminidase 3 and neuraminidase 4 in processing brain SGC. Emerging data demonstrate that these enzymes with different, yet overlapping expression patterns, intracellular localization and substrate specificity play essential roles in the physiology of the CNS.
Keyphrases
- single cell
- cell therapy
- resting state
- white matter
- blood brain barrier
- cerebral ischemia
- traumatic brain injury
- induced apoptosis
- functional connectivity
- multiple sclerosis
- early onset
- gene expression
- inflammatory response
- high resolution
- mesenchymal stem cells
- deep learning
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- binding protein
- long non coding rna
- brain injury
- cell wall
- pi k akt