PNNs..
Right, time to talk glycan chemistry because your brain refuses to like simple things.
1. What “CS sulfation” actually is
CS = chondroitin sulfate, the sugar chains (GAGs) attached to proteoglycans in PNNs (like aggrecan, brevican, etc.).
Each repeat unit has a GalNAc sugar that can be sulfated at different positions:
- C4S = chondroitin-4-sulfate
- C6S = chondroitin-6-sulfate
So “CS sulfation” just means where the sulfate group is attached on the sugar ring. That stupid little positional detail radically changes how the ECM behaves.
2. Functional difference: C4S vs C6S
Empirically:
- C4S (4-sulfated CS)
- More inhibitory to:
- axon growth
- regeneration
- plasticity
- Think: “no entry” sign.
- C6S (6-sulfated CS)
- More permissive to:
- sprouting
- synapse remodeling
- plasticity
- Think: “you may pass if you behave.”
PNNs are loaded with these chains. The C4S/C6S ratio is basically a chemical “plasticity dial” for the net.
3. What aging does to that dial
Key findings:
- With age, C6S drops hard in PNNs; C4S dominates.
- Foscarin et al: aged rats show increased C4S/C6S ratio, PNNs become more inhibitory, and memory performance drops.
- Fawcett/Yang: in very old brains, C6S becomes almost undetectable in PNNs.