• Info
  • Home
  • About
  • Editorial Board
  • Archive
  • Research Topics
  • View Some Authors
  • Review Guidelines
  • Subscribe to Alerts
  • Search
  • Article Type

    Publication Date

  • Author Info
  • Why Submit?
  • Fees
  • Article Types
  • Author Guidelines
  • Submission Checklist
  • Contact Editorial Office
  • Submit Manuscript
Start date should be earlier than end date. OK Please enter valid date format.

Dramatic loss of Ube3A expression during aging of the mammalian cortex

  • 1 McMaster Integrative Neuroscience Discovery and Study Program, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON, Canada
  • 2 Psychology, Neuroscience & Behaviour, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON, Canada

Neurobiological studies of aging are beginning to link functional changes with a loss of experience-dependent plasticity. In the visual system, age-related functional changes include decreases in visual acuity, orientation selectivity, motion perception, and ocular dominance plasticity. A recent paper has shown that Ube3A, an E3 ubiquitin ligase that is absent in Angelman’s syndrome, is required for experience-dependent plasticity during development of the visual cortex. Knocking out Ube3A during development leads to rigidity of ocular dominance plasticity that is strikingly similar to the reduced plasticity seen in older animals. Furthermore, ubiquitin ligases have been linked with age-related neurodegenerative disorders and longevity. Ubiquitin ligases selectively mark proteins for degradation, and a balance between synaptic proteins and their degradation is important for neural transmission and plasticity. This led us to ask whether normal aging is characterized by a loss of Ube3A in the cortex. We used Western blot analysis in order to quantify Ube3A expression across the life span of humans, macaque monkeys, and cats. We found that Ube3A expression declines across the lifespan in human, monkey, and cat cortex. The losses were substantial (50–80%) in all areas studied which includes V1, V3, V4, frontal, and auditory cortex. In addition, when compared with other synaptic proteins there was a selective loss of Ube3A in human cortex. The progressive loss of Ube3A expression during cortical aging is an important new finding. Furthermore, the selective loss of Ube3A in human cortex highlights a specific vulnerability in human brain aging that may signify a dramatic shift in cortical function and plasticity.

Keywords: Ube3A, aging, visual cortex, plasticity, E6AP

Citation: Williams K, Irwin DA, Jones DG and Murphy KM (2010) Dramatic loss of Ube3A expression during aging of the mammalian cortex. Front. Ag. Neurosci. 2:18. doi: 10.3389/fnagi.2010.00018

Received: 04 February 2010; Paper pending published: 06 March 2010;
Accepted: 19 April 2010; Published online: 18 May 2010

Edited by:

P. Hemachandra Reddy, Oregon Health and Science University, USA

Reviewed by:

Benjamin D. Philpot, University of North Carolina, School of Medicine, USA
Asgar Zaheer, University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics, USA

Copyright: © 2010. Williams, Irwin, Jones and Murphy. This is an open-access article subject to an exclusive license agreement between the authors and the Frontiers Research Foundation, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original authors and source are credited.

*Correspondence: Kathryn Murphy, McMaster Integrative Neuroscience Discovery and Study Program (MiNDS), McMaster University, 1280 Main Street West, Hamilton, ON, Canada L8S 4K1. e-mail: kmurphy@mcmaster.ca

© 2007 - 2012 Frontiers Media S.A. All Rights Reserved