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J Neurochem. 2006 Aug.
RS-alpha-lipoic acid protects cholinergic cells against sodium nitroprusside and amyloid-beta neurotoxicity through restoration of acetyl-CoA level.
Bielarczyk H, Gul S, Ronowska A, Bizon-Zygmanska D, Pawelczyk T, Szutowicz A.
Department of Laboratory Medicine, Medical University of Gdansk, Gdansk, Poland.
[ PubMed ]

Abstract: The work presented here verifies the hypothesis that RS-alpha-lipoic acid may exert its cholinoprotective and cholinotrophic activities through the maintenance of appropriate levels of acetyl-CoA in mitochondrial and cytoplasmic compartments of cholinergic neurons. Sodium nitroprusside (SNP) and amyloid-beta decreased pyruvate dehydrogenase, choline acetyltransferase activities, acetyl-CoA content in mitochondria and cytoplasm, as well as increased fraction of non-viable, trypan blue positive cells in cultured differentiated cholinergic SN56 neuroblastoma cells. Lipoic acid totally reversed toxin-evoked suppression of choline acetyltrasferase and pyruvate dehydrogenase activities, as well as mitochondrial and cytoplasmic acetyl-CoA levels, and partially attenuated increase of cell mortality. Significant negative correlations were found between enzyme activities, acetyl-CoA levels and cell mortality in different neurotoxic and neuroprotective conditions employed here. The level of cytoplamic acetyl-CoA correlated with mitochondrial acetyl-CoA, whereas choline acetyltransferase activity followed shifts in cytoplasmic acetyl-CoA. Thus, we conclude that, in cholinergic neurons, particular elements of the pyruvate-acetyl-CoA-acetylcholine pathway form a functional unit responding uniformly to neurotoxic and neuroprotectory conditions.


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