Researchers found that the immune cell interleukin 1 beta, or IL-1 beta, prompts production of hydrogen sulfide, impacting the brain cells' ability to use food and glucose, and ultimately resulting in the destruction of synapses, where the cells connect so information can be stored and memories made.
"So just think about this. If this protein is being chewed up, then neuron-to-neuron communication is disrupted," said Dr Nilkantha Sen, neuroscientist at the Medical College of Georgia at Georgia Regents University.
Sen is referencing damage to the protein PSD95, which is essential to the framework of the synapses that connect brain cells and which gets modified by the gas hydrogen sulfide.
Loss of PSD95 already is implicated in dementia as well as depression, anxiety disorders, and addiction. IL-1 beta signalling in the brain plays a critical role in learning and memory however, the rapid accumulation that follows injury appears to have the opposite effect.
Two years ago, Sen was among the first to find that, at least in mice, stress, like an injury, upregulates expression of the IL-1 beta receptor on neurons, and that's where the trouble begins.
But, as with IL-1 beta, at high levels, hydrogen sulfide seems more bent on cell destruction.
"It is maintained at a threshold level in every tissue of our body. But when it increases, it produces adverse reactions," Sen said.
In this case, hydrogen sulfide modifies GAPDH, an enzyme essential to the brain cell's ability to use its major food source, glucose.
The modified GAPDH then binds with Siah, a protein important to the body's ability to degrade improperly folded proteins.
"It kills a very important protein for synaptic plasticity," Sen said.
"This is a completely novel mechanism," that Sen hopes will one day translate to a novel therapy for several neurodegenerative disorders as well as brain injury by targeting modified GAPDH.
The study was published in the journal Molecular Cell.
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