Aspartoacylase is a regulated nuclear-cytoplasmic enzyme

2006 
Mutations in the gene for aspartoacylase (ASPA), which catalyzes deacetylation of N-acetyl-L-aspartate in the central nervous system (CNS), result in Canavan Disease, a fatal dysmyelinating disease. Consistent with its role in supplying acetate for myelin lipid synthesis, ASPA is thought to be cytoplasmic. Here we describe the occurrence of ASPA within nuclei of rat brain and kidney, and in cultured rodent oligodendrocytes. Immunohistochemistry showed cytoplasmic and nuclear ASPA staining, the specificity of which was demonstrated by its absence from tissues of the Tremor rat, an ASPA-null mutant. Subcellular fractionation analysis revealed low enzyme activity against NAA in nuclear fractions from normal rats. Whereas two recent reports have indicated that ASPA exists as a dimer, size-exclusion chromatography of subcellular fractions showed ASPA is an active monomer in both subcellular fractions. Western blotting detected ASPA as a single 38 kD band. Because ASPA is small enough to passively diffuse into ...
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