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    Brain Res. 2009 May 1;1268:162-73. Epub 2009 Mar 9.

    Upregulation of phosphorylated alphaB-crystallin in the brain of children and young adults with Down syndrome.

    Palminiello S, Jarzabek K, Kaur K, Walus M, Rabe A, Albertini G, Golabek AA, Kida E.

    Child Developmental Department, IRCCS San Raffaele Pisana, Rome and San Raffaele Cassino, Italy.

    Our previous proteomic studies disclosed upregulation of alphaB-crystallin, a small heat shock protein, in the brain tissue of Ts65Dn mice, a mouse model for Down syndrome (DS). To validate data obtained in model animals, we studied at present the levels and distribution of total alphaB-crystallin and its forms phosphorylated at Ser-45 and Ser-59 in the brain tissues of DS subjects and age-matched controls at 4 months to 23 years of age. On immunoblots from frontal cortex and white matter, alphaB-crystallin and its form phosphorylated at Ser-59 were detectable already in infants, whereas alphaB-crystallin phosphorylated at Ser-45 appeared in small amounts in older children. Although the levels of total alphaB-crystallin were modestly increased in DS subjects, the amounts of both phosphorylated forms were much higher (up to approximately 550%) in the group of older children and young adults with DS than in age-matched controls. Immunoreactivity to alphaB-crystallin occurred not only in a subset of oligodendrocytes and some subpial and perivascular astrocytes, which was reported earlier, but also in GFAP-positive astrocytes accumulating at the sites of ependymal injury as well as some GFAP/platelet-derived growth factor receptor alpha-positive cells in both DS and control brains, which is a novel observation. Given that the chaperone and anti-apoptotic activities of alphaB-crystallin are phosphorylation-dependent, we propose that enhanced phosphorylation of alphaB-crystallin in the brains of young DS subjects might reflect a cytoprotective mechanism mobilized in response to stress conditions induced or augmented by the effect of genes encoded by the triplicated chromosome 21.

    PMID: 19272359 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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