Niemann-Pick Disease, Type C: Evidence for the Deficiency of an Activating Factor Stimulating Sphingomyelin and Glucocerebroside Degradation
- 1 January 1980
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Walter de Gruyter GmbH in Hoppe-Seyler´s Zeitschrift Für Physiologische Chemie
- Vol. 361 (2) , 1489-1502
- https://doi.org/10.1515/bchm2.1980.361.2.1489
Abstract
Qualitative lipid analyses by TLC of 4-Niemann-Pick type C spleens confirmed sphingomyelin accumulation together with increase in the amount of glucocerebroside. In the presence of crude sodium taurocholate as detergent, sphingomyelin degradation rates of normal and Niemann-Pick type C-cultured fibroblasts were fairly close under standard conditions at pH 5.0. In the absence of sodium taurocholate, sphingomyelinase activity was optimal at pH 4.0. Sphingomyelinase activities of fibroblasts from 2 patients with Niemann-Pick disease type C measured without detergent were about 30% of that of controls. Extracts from Gaucher spleen heated to 90.degree. C and devoid of sphingomyelinase activity stimulated at the optimal pH of 4.0 sphingomyelin degradation by cultured normal fibroblasts (2-4-fold), Niemann-Pick type C fibroblasts (5-9-fold), whereas similarly treated extracts from Niemann-Pick type C spleen showed no stimulation of sphingomyelin catabolism. Heated extracts from normal human spleen exhibited a smaller stimulation than that shown by Gaucher spleen. This stimulating effect could not be observed in fibroblasts from patients suffering from Niemann-Pick type B (sphingomyelinase defect). Heat-treated extracts of Gaucher spleen were fractionated by ion exchange chromatography, isoelectric focusing and gel filtration. The active fractions obtained by these procedures stimulated sphingomyelin as well as glucocerebroside degradation and were absent from the corresponding Niemann-Pick type C preparations. Enriched activator preparations of Gaucher spleen stimulated sphingomyelinase activity of Niemann-Pick type C fibroblasts 25-38-fold and that of normal cells 3-fold. The activating factor had an isoelectric point of 4.0 and an apparent MW, as estimated by gel filtration, of 25,000. Treatment with pronase E abolished its activity.This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- Partial Purification of Acid Sphingomyelinase from Normal and Pathological (M. Niemann‐Pick Type C) Human BrainJournal of Neurochemistry, 1980
- Purification and Characterization of an Activator Protein for the Degradation of Glycolipids GM2and GA2by Hexosaminidase AHoppe-Seyler´s Zeitschrift Für Physiologische Chemie, 1979
- A spectrophotometric method for determination of sphingomyelinaseBiochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Lipids and Lipid Metabolism, 1978
- Resolution of tissue sphingomyelinase isoelectric profile in multiple components is extraction‐dependent: evidence for a component defect in Niemann‐Pick disease type C is spuriousJournal of Neurochemistry, 1977
- Activateur des sphingohydrolases et nature du deficit en sphingomyelinase dans la maladie de niemann-pick type A, B et CClinica Chimica Acta; International Journal of Clinical Chemistry, 1977
- Bis(monoacylglycerin)phosphorsäure — ein Marker-Lipid sekundärer Lysosomen?Hoppe-Seyler´s Zeitschrift Für Physiologische Chemie, 1976
- The Activator of Cerebroside Sulphatase. Purification from Human Liver and Identification as a ProteinHoppe-Seyler´s Zeitschrift Für Physiologische Chemie, 1975
- Glucosylceramide in plasma of patients with niemann-pick diseaseClinica Chimica Acta; International Journal of Clinical Chemistry, 1974
- Eine Cerebrosidsulfatase aus SchweineniereHoppe-Seyler´s Zeitschrift Für Physiologische Chemie, 1964
- THE CEREBRAL DEFECT IN TAY‐SACHS DISEASE AND NIEMANN‐PICK DISEASE*Journal of Neurochemistry, 1961