We measured the activity of transglutaminase (TG), a Ca(2+)-dependent enzyme and a biochemical marker of cell degeneration, in the adult rat spinal cord after unilateral occlusion of a branch of the dorsal spinal artery, and compared it to the enzyme activity in the tissue on the contralateral side without ischemic damage. The affected half of the spinal cord showed a significant rise in intrinsic (endogenous) TG activity one day after ischemic insult while no apparent morphological changes were observed in the tissue. However, the enzymic activity on the affected side gradually decreased to reach the level in the non-affected tissue, accompanying severe degeneration of neuronal cells at 7 days after the surgery, then it declined to nearly half the level in the intact tissue 30 days after the operation. We also determined the TG activity in transverse sections of the human spinal cord obtained at autopsy from 5 amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and 9 non-ALS patients. TG activity in thoracic and lumbar cords was markedly low in ALS patients not only in ventral and lateral regions but also in the dorsal portion. These findings imply that the reduced TG activity in the ALS spinal cord is one of the characteristic features of the disease reflecting exhaustion of the enzyme in the tissue resulting from degeneration of the spinal neurons through cross-linkage of soluble intraneuronal cytoplasmic proteins.
A 4-week low dosage (500 mg/day) L-carnitine supplementation in combination with motivation training was carried out in 24 overweight (BMI 25.8 -26.6 kg/m2) Japanese males in the course of a double-blind randomized placebo-controlled study. L-carnitine motivated group showed significant body weight loss and a decrement of serum triglyceride level vs. the non-motivated placebo group. Serum adiponectin levels increased in both L-carnitine supplemented groups. The beneficial effects of L-carnitine were amplified by motivation training. For clinical evaluation of supplements, whose efficacy is potentially affected by inter-individual life style variability, supportive motivation training might be advisable for future clinical trials.
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