Abstract

Abstract:Cathepsin D, an aspartyl endopeptidase, was analyzed in cortex from forebrain and cerebellum, spinal cord, and optic and sciatic nerves, and in the liver of rats from 1 to 120 days of age. Cathepsin D was quantitated in tissue extracts by measurement of enzyme specific activity on a substrate of [methyl‐14C]‐methylated hemoglobin and by radioimmunoassay. Immunocytochemistry was used to ascertain the identity of the mixed cell types that contributed to the cathepsin D detected. As quantitated by radioimmunoassay, immunoreactive cathepsin D varied between 0.2 and 1 ng/μg of total protein. Maximum activity occurred at approximately the 15th postnatal day; the least amount of immunoreactive cathepsin D was found at 30 or 60 days of age. A subsequent increase of varying magnitude occurred at postnatal day 120. There was good correspondence between immunoreactive enzyme and enzyme specific activity, which ranged from 1 to 4 ng/μg of total protein, and the activities determined by the two methods provided similar, but not identical, developmental profiles. Cathepsin D was demonstrated by immunocytochemistry to be present in most neurons, in all choroid plexus epithelium, and in certain oligodendrocytes from the first postnatal day. Cathepsin D was present in oligodendrocytes in cord lateral funiculi and optic nerve by the first postnatal day, and by the sixth postnatal day many oligodendrocytes were abundantly stained. In contrast, oligodendrocytes in the corpus callosum and in the cerebellar white matter did not contain demonstrable cathepsin D until postnatal days 10 and 15, respectively. These results indicate a role for cathepsin D during the postnatal development of rat CNS and suggest that this proteinase may be involved in the steps of myelination.

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