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1.
Zirzow  G. C.  Sanchez  O. A.  Murray  G. J.  Brady  R. O.  Oldfield  E. H. 《Neurochemical research》1999,24(2):301-305
Gaucher disease is caused by insufficient activity of the enzyme glucocerebrosidase. Great benefit has been obtained through enzyme replacement therapy for patients with type 1 (non-neuronopathic) Gaucher disease. In contrast, inconsistent effects of enzyme therapy have been observed in patients with type 3 (chronic neuronopathic) Gaucher disease, and no benefit on the lethal course of the disease occurs in patients with Type 2 (acute neuronopathic) Gaucher disease. We examined the use of convection-enhanced delivery to augment the delivery and distribution of exogenous glucocerebrosidase (m.w. 63,000) to the brain by infusing it under slight hydrostatic pressure into the striatal region of rats. The enzyme was comparatively stable under these conditions. It was distributed from the site of injection toward the cerebral cortex where it became primarily localized in neurons. These findings provide considerable incentive for the exploration of intracerebral microinfusion of enzyme to the brain of patients with metabolic storage disorders involving the CNS.  相似文献   

2.
Summary Glucocerebroside -glucosidase (glucocerebrosidase) activity was assayed from cultured fibroblasts of normal individuals, and patients with type 1 (non-neuropathic), type 2 (acute neuropathic), and type 3 (subacute neuropathic) form of Gaucher disease. Residual glucocerebrosidase activity of patients was 8.9 to 17.4% of normal controls, and there was no clear correlation between the level of residual enzyme activity and the different clinical subtypes of the disease. When membrane-bound glucocerebrosidase activity was assayed in the presence of crude brain lipid extracts or purified phosphatidylserine, enzyme from both the normal and type 1 Gaucher fibroblasts was stimulated dramatically (35–60% by crude extracts, 85–90% by phosphatidylserine). This stimulation was not observed with fibroblast glucocerebrosidase of an infantile type 2 and two juvenile type 3 Gaucher patients. The presence of inhibitors of glucocerebrosidase in these type 2 and type 3 Gaucher cells was not detected. Contrary to the mutant enzyme from these Gaucher fibroblasts, glucocerebrosidase from fibroblasts of two adult type 3 Gaucher patients with cerebral involvement was stimulated substantially (72–85%) by phosphatidylserine. When membrane-bound glucocerebrosidase from fibroblasts of the infantile type 2 and juvenile type 3 patients was solubilized with sodium cholate (1% w/v) and delipidated, the phospholipid stimulation of enzyme activity was restored. These findings suggest that considerable clinical and biochemical heterogeneity exists among patients with neuropathic Gaucher disease and that phosphatidylserine activation cannot be used as a reliable indicator in predicting future onset of neurodegeneration in Gaucher patients. The possibility of an aberrant binding of mutant glucocerebrosidase to the lysosomal membrane in juvenile type 3 form of Gaucher disease is discussed.  相似文献   

3.
We have investigated several parameters of glucocerebrosidase in cultured skin fibroblasts from patients with various clinical phenotypes of Gaucher disease. In this study no strict correlation was found between the clinical manifestations of Gaucher disease and the parameters investigated in fibroblasts. These parameters included the specific activity of the enzyme in extracts towards natural lipid and artificial substrate in the presence of different activators; the enzymic activity per unit of glucocerebrosidase protein; the rate of synthesis of the enzyme and its stability; and the post-translational processing of the enzyme. In addition, the activity in situ of glucocerebrosidase in fibroblasts was investigated using a novel method by analysis of the catabolism of NBD-glucosylceramide in cells that were loaded with bovine serum albumin-lipid complexes. Again, no complete correlation with the clinical phenotype of patients was detectable. Glucocerebrosidase in fibroblasts from most non-neuronopathic (type 1) Gaucher disease patients differs in some aspects from enzyme in cells from patients with neurological forms (types 2 and 3). The stimulation by activator protein and phospholipid is clearly more pronounced in type 1 than in types 2 and 3; the enzymic activity per unit of glucocerebrosidase protein in type 1 is severely reduced in the presence of taurocholate and the amount of glucocerebrosidase appears (near) normal in contrast to the situation in types 2 and 3 Gaucher fibroblasts. However, this distinction was not always consistent; glucocerebrosidase in fibroblasts from some type 1 Gaucher patients, particularly some South African cases, was comparable in properties to enzyme in type 2 and 3 patients.  相似文献   

4.
Neuropathic Gaucher disease (nGD), also known as type 2 or type 3 Gaucher disease, is caused by a deficiency of the enzyme glucocerebrosidase (GC). This deficiency impairs the degradation of glucosylceramide (GluCer) and glucosylsphingosine (GluSph), leading to their accumulation in the brains of patients and mouse models of the disease. These accumulated substrates have been thought to cause the severe neuropathology and early death observed in patients with nGD and mouse models. Substrate accumulation is evident at birth in both nGD mouse models and humans affected with the most severe type of the disease. Current treatment of non-nGD relies on the intravenous delivery of recombinant human glucocerebrosidase to replace the missing enzyme or the administration of glucosylceramide synthase inhibitors to attenuate GluCer production. However, the currently approved drugs that use these mechanisms do not cross the blood brain barrier, and thus are not expected to provide a benefit for the neurological complications in nGD patients. Here we report the successful reduction of substrate accumulation and CNS pathology together with a significant increase in lifespan after systemic administration of a novel glucosylceramide synthase inhibitor to a mouse model of nGD. To our knowledge this is the first compound shown to cross the blood brain barrier and reduce substrates in this animal model while significantly enhancing its lifespan. These results reinforce the concept that systemically administered glucosylceramide synthase inhibitors could hold enhanced therapeutic promise for patients afflicted with neuropathic lysosomal storage diseases.  相似文献   

5.
BACKGROUND: Gaucher disease is a common glycolipid storage disease, caused by a deficiency of lysosomal beta-glucosidase (glucocerebrosidase). Alglucerase is a form of glucocerebrosidase enriched with terminal mannose moieties, so as to "target" the preparation to the high-affinity macrophage receptor in patients with Gaucher disease. Our earlier in vitro studies indicated that alglucerase was bound by cells other than macrophages by a widely distributed, low-affinity mannose receptor. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Bone was removed at surgery from six patients with Gaucher disease; in three cases, bone was obtainable both when the patient was untreated and after receiving an infusion of alglucerase. Four samples of bone were obtained from patients without Gaucher disease and served as controls. A bone marrow aspirate was obtained from another patient with Gaucher disease immediately after enzyme infusion. Marrow beta-glucosidase activity and chitotriosidase (a macrophage marker) was determined on all samples. RESULTS: Even with the large bolus doses used for the treatment of Gaucher disease by some, scarcely any beta-glucosidase activity was found in marrow samples; the amount of the enzyme was much less than would have been anticipated had the enzyme been evenly distributed to all body cells. CONCLUSIONS: Alglucerase is not targeted to marrow macrophages. Its unquestioned therapeutic effectiveness must be due either to its activity at some site other than marrow macrophages or to the fact that the doses administered are so enormous that even a small fraction is sufficient to achieve a therapeutic effect.  相似文献   

6.
Summary A current hypothesis is that functional glucocerebrosidase needs to be delivered to the lysosomes of tissue macrophages to guarantee successful enzyme therapy for Gaucher's disease. In this study, biochemical and immunohistochemical techniques were applied to identify in mice the localization of intravenously administered alglucerase (human modified placental glucocerebrosidase). Only in liver and spleen was a significant increase of glucocerebrosidase activity observed, with a maximum level at 15 minutes after enzyme infusion. The uptake of enzyme by liver was sufficiently high to allow more detailed studies on the (sub)cellular distribution of human alglucerase. The enzyme in liver is localized both in the endosomallysosomal system of the Kupffer cells and the endothelial cells lining the lumen of the sinusoids. Uptake by both of these types of cell is prevented by mannan. The results suggest that the cellular mechanisms responsible for improvement of Gaucher patients receiving alglucerase treatment is probably more complicated than previously recognized.  相似文献   

7.
Chang HH  Asano N  Ishii S  Ichikawa Y  Fan JQ 《The FEBS journal》2006,273(17):4082-4092
Gaucher disease is an autosomal recessive lysosomal storage disorder caused by the deficient activity of glucocerebrosidase. Accumulation of glucosylceramide, primarily in the lysosomes of cells of the reticuloendothelial system, leads to hepatosplenomegaly, anemia and skeletal lesions in type I disease, and neurologic manifestations in types II and III disease. We report herein the identification of hydrophilic active-site-specific chaperones that are capable of increasing glucocerebrosidase activity in the cultured fibroblasts of Gaucher patients. Screening of a variety of natural and synthetic alkaloid compounds showed isofagomine, N-dodecyl deoxynojirimycin, calystegines A3, B1, B2 and C1, and 1,5-dideoxy-1,5-iminoxylitol to be potent inhibitors of glucocerebrosidase. Among them, isofagomine was the most potent inhibitor of glucocerebrosidase in vitro, and the most effective active-site-specific chaperone capable of increasing residual glucocerebrosidase activity in fibroblasts established from Gaucher patients with the most prevalent Gaucher disease-causing mutation (N370S). Intracellular enzyme activity increased approximately two-fold after cells had been incubated with isofagomine, and the increase in glucocerebrosidase activity was both dose-dependent and time-dependent. Western blotting demonstrated that there was a substantial increase in glucocerebrosidase protein in cells after isofagomine treatment. Immunocytochemistry revealed an improvement in the glucocerebrosidase trafficking pattern, which overlaps that of lysosome-associated membrane protein 2 in Gaucher fibroblasts cultivated with isofagomine, suggesting that the transport of mutant glucocerebrosidase is at least partially improved in the presence of isofagomine. The hydrophilic active-site-specific chaperones are less toxic to cultured cells. These results indicate that these hydrophilic small molecules are suitable candidates for further drug development for the treatment of Gaucher disease.  相似文献   

8.
Gaucher disease and Fabry disease are lysosomal storage disorders characterized by the accumulation of sphingolipids. In both cases, the goal of gene therapy is to permanently provide tissues with enzyme levels allowing to avoid storage of the undigested substrates. Different gene therapy strategies must however be designed as Gaucher disease is due to a deficiency in the membrane-associated enzyme glucocerebrosidase, whereas Fabry disease is caused by a deficiency in the soluble enzyme alpha-galactosidase. Indeed, a soluble enzyme can be provided to tissues is trans by gene-modified cells whereas gene transfer has to target the most affected cells in the case of membrane-bound enzymes. Thus, in non-neurological Gaucher disease (type 1), the hematopoietic tissue has to be targeted as the deficiency affects the monocyte/macrophage lineage. Following promising preclinical studies, clinical protocols have been initiated to explore the feasibility and safety of retroviral transfer of the glucocerebrosidase gene into CD34+ cells from patients with type 1 Gaucher disease. Although gene-marked cells were detected in vivo, the level of corrected cells was very low, a finding indicating that improved vectors along with partial myeloablation may be necessary. Here, lentiviral vectors should enable more gene transduction into the hematopoietic target cells. As concerns the diffuse neurological lesions in types 2 and 3 of Gaucher disease, they will probably be especially difficult to target by gene therapy because of the non soluble nature of glucocerebrosidase. Finally, over the last few years, Fabry disease has become a compelling target for gene therapy as an etiology-based treatment strategy. Indeed, several recent studies aiming at creating a large in vivo source of alpha-galactosidase have yielded positive long-term results in the Fabry knock-out mouse model.  相似文献   

9.
Gaucher disease is a lysosomal storage disorder resulting from a deficiency of glucocerebrosidase (GC). In this study, we showed that vascular and hepatic delivery of a HIV-1-based lentivirus vector encoding human GC cDNA produced therapeutic levels of GC protein. A high level of expression of GC was produced in cultured fibroblasts derived from patients with Gaucher disease by transducing the cells with recombinant lentivirus vectors. GC secreted by transduced fibroblasts was taken up by adjacent GC-deficient cells by endocytosis. Intraportal administration of lenti-EF-GC viral vector resulted in efficient transduction and expression of the GC. Vascular delivery of vector resulted in high levels of GC expression in mice that persisted in most organs over the four months. No significant abnormalities were found attributable to recombinant lentivirus vectors in any of the tissues examined. This study represents an initial step toward gene transfer using recombinant lentivirus vectors for treatment of Gaucher disease.  相似文献   

10.
In Gaucher disease (glucosylceramide lipidosis), deficiency of glucocerebrosidase causes pathological storage of glucosylceramide, particularly in the spleen. A comparative biochemical and immunological analysis has therefore been made of glucocerebrosidase in spleens from normal subjects (n = 4) and from Gaucher disease patients with non-neuronopathic (n = 5) and neuronopathic (n = 5) phenotypes. The spleens from all Gaucher disease patients showed markedly decreased glucocerebrosidase activity. Discrimination of different phenotypes of Gaucher disease was not possible on the basis of the level of residual enzyme activity, or by measurements, using the immunopurified enzyme, of kinetic constants, pI or molecular mass forms. A severe decrease was found in the specific activity of glucocerebrosidase purified to homogeneity from the spleen of a patient with the non-neuronopathic phenotype of Gaucher disease, as compared with that of the enzyme purified from the spleen of a normal subject. This finding was confirmed by an immunological method developed for accurate assessment of the relative enzyme activity per molecule of glucocerebrosidase protein. The method revealed that the residual enzyme in the spleens of all investigated patients with a non-neuronopathic course of Gaucher disease had a more than 7-fold decreased activity of glucocerebrosidase (measured in the presence of taurocholate) per molecule of enzyme, and that the concentration of glucocerebrosidase molecules in the spleens of these patients was near normal. Observations made with immunoblotting experiments were consistent with these findings. In contrast, in the spleens of patients with neuronopathic phenotypes of Gaucher disease, the concentration of glucocerebrosidase molecules was severely decreased.  相似文献   

11.
Biosynthesis and maturation of glucocerebrosidase in Gaucher fibroblasts   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
The biosynthesis and maturation of glucocerebrosidase were studied in fibroblasts from patients with the neurological and non-neurological forms of Gaucher disease and in control cells. In control fibroblasts the precursor of glucocerebrosidase (62-63 kDa), observed after a short pulse with [35S]methionine, was converted during the chase period to a 66-kDa intermediate form and, finally, to the 59-kDa mature protein. In fibroblasts from patients with the non-neurological phenotype of Gaucher disease (type 1) the same biosynthetic forms were seen as in control fibroblasts. These biosynthetic forms correspond to the three-banded pattern seen in control and Gaucher type 1 fibroblast extracts analysed by the immunoblotting procedure, or after electrophoresis and fluorography of extracts of such fibroblasts cultured for 5 days with [14C]leucine. The 59-kDa protein seen in type 1 fibroblasts was unstable and disappeared after a prolonged chase; this disappearance was not observed when the cells were grown in the presence of leupeptin. In fibroblasts from patients with the neurological forms of Gaucher disease (types 2 and 3) the 62.5-kDa precursor of glucocerebrosidase was present in near-normal amounts after a short pulse, but the 59-kDa form was not detected even when cells were cultured with leupeptin. These results are in accordance with the absence of the 59-kDa band in immunoblots of types 2 and 3 fibroblast extracts. Culturing of type 1, type 2 and type 3 Gaucher fibroblasts in the presence of leupeptin led to an increase in the activity of glucocerebrosidase.  相似文献   

12.
The enzymatic activity of glucocerebrosidase in splenic extracts of the adult nonneurological form of Gaucher disease (type I) was 15% +/- 7% of normal, and the titer of enzyme cross-reacting material (ECRM) in these spleens was 54% +/- 9% of normal. The titer of ECRM in splenic extracts of tissues obtained from patients with the neurological forms of Gaucher disease (types II and III) was essentially the same as in type I Gaucher spleens (59% +/- 10% of normal), but the measurable catalytic activity of glucocerebrosidase in these spleens was substantially lower than that found in type I Gaucher spleens (2.3% +/- 0.6% of normal). Thus, the attentuated glucocerebrosidase activity in spleens from all three forms of Gaucher disease appears to stem from a structurally mutated enzyme that is altered in its catalytic efficiency and possibly in its antigenic expression.  相似文献   

13.
Gaucher disease, caused by pathological mutations GBA1, encodes the lysosome-resident enzyme glucocerebrosidase, which cleaves glucosylceramide into glucose and ceramide. In Gaucher disease, glucocerebrosidase deficiency leads to lysosomal accumulation of substrate, primarily in cells of the reticulo-endothelial system. Gaucher disease has broad clinical heterogeneity, and mutations in GBA1 are a risk factor for the development of different synucleinopathies. Insights into the cell biology and biochemistry of glucocerebrosidase have led to new therapeutic approaches for Gaucher disease including small chemical chaperones. Such chaperones facilitate proper enzyme folding and translocation to lysosomes, thereby preventing premature breakdown of the enzyme in the proteasome. This review discusses recent progress in developing chemical chaperones as a therapy for Gaucher disease, with implications for the treatment of synucleinopathies. It focuses on the development of non-inhibitory glucocerebrosidase chaperones and their therapeutic advantages over inhibitory chaperones, as well as the challenges involved in identifying and validating chemical chaperones.  相似文献   

14.
Characterization of mutations in Gaucher patients by cDNA cloning.   总被引:16,自引:6,他引:10       下载免费PDF全文
Mutated cDNA clones containing the entire coding sequence of human glucocerebrosidase were isolated from libraries originated from Gaucher patients. Sequence analysis of a mutated cDNA derived from a type II Gaucher patient revealed a C-to-G transversion causing a substitution of an arginine for a proline at residue 415. This change creates a new cleavage site for the enzyme HhaI in the mutated cDNA. Allele-specific oligonucleotide hybridization made it possible to show that this mutation exists in the genomic DNA of the patient. From a cDNA library originated from a type I Gaucher patient, a mutated allele was cloned that contains a T-to-C transition causing a substitution of proline for leucine at residue 444 and creating a new NciI site. This mutation is identical to that described by S. Tsuji and colleagues in genomic DNA from type I, type II, and type III patients. Since the new NciI site generates RFLP, it was used to test the existence of this mutated allele in several Gaucher patients by Southern blot analysis. This allele was found in type I (Jewish and non-Jewish), type II, and type III Gaucher patients. These findings led us to conclude that the patient suffering from type II disease (denoted GM1260) carried both mutations described above. Any one of the amino acid changes described reduces the glucocerebrosidase activity as tested by transfection of COS cells with expression vectors harboring the mutated cDNAs. The base changes in the two mutated cDNAs do not affect the electrophoretic mobility of the corresponding polypeptides on an SDS polyacrylamide gel.  相似文献   

15.
Substrate reduction therapy: clinical evaluation in type 1 Gaucher disease   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Glycosphingolipid (GSL) lysosomal storage disorders are inherited enzyme deficiencies that result in pathological lysosomal accumulation of glycolipids, with widespread clinical consequences. Type 1 Gaucher disease is the commonest of these; the deficient enzyme in this condition is glucocerebrosidase. Clinical manifestations include hepatosplenomegaly, thrombocytopenia, anaemia, recurrent infections and skeletal lesions. The condition can be treated with intravenous enzyme replacement therapy (ERT). Substrate reduction therapy is a new approach in which glycolipid accumulation is counteracted not by replacing the deficient enzyme but by reducing the substrate level to better balance residual activity of the deficient enzyme. Miglustat is an inhibitor of glucosylceramide synthase, a key enzyme in GSL synthesis. Oral administration of miglustat to patients with type 1 Gaucher disease attenuates the synthesis of glucocerebroside, the substrate of the deficient glucocerebrosidase. In the first clinical study, patients with type 1 Gaucher disease who had enlargement of the liver or spleen and (if present) the spleen at baseline received 12 months treatment with oral miglustat. There were mean decreases in liver and spleen volumes of 12% (7.9-16.4, p < 0.001) and 19% (14.3-23.7, p < 0.001), respectively. Mean haemoglobin increased by 0.26 g dl(-1) (-0.5-0.57, not statistically significant) and platelet count by 8.3 x 10(9) l(-1) (1.9-14.7, p = 0.014).  相似文献   

16.
We have identified a new T-to-A single-base substitution at nucleotide 3548 (in the genomic sequence) in exon 6 in the glucocerebrosidase gene from a patient with Gaucher disease type 3. This mutation caused a substitution of isoleucine for phenylalanine at amino acid residue 213 (of 497 residues in the mature protein). By in vitro expression study in cultured mammalian cells, this mutation resulted in deficient activity of glucocerebrosidase. By allele-specific oligonucleotide hybridization of selectively PCR-amplified DNA from eight unrelated Japanese Gaucher disease patients, this mutant allele was observed in other neuronopathic Japanese Gaucher disease patients, in moderately frequent occurrence (three of six neuronopathic patients). This observation suggests that this allele was one of severe [corrected] alleles which were related to the development of neurological manifestations of Gaucher disease.  相似文献   

17.
Intravenous enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) with purified glucocerebrosidase (GLA) leads to significant improvement of the clinical manifestations in patients with Type 1 Gaucher disease. However, the high doses required, slow response and inability to recover most of the infused enzyme in the target tissues may be attributed to losses occurring during transit en route to the lysosome. Preincubation of GLA with isofagomine (IFG), a slow-binding inhibitor, significantly increased stability of the enzyme to heat, neutral pH and denaturing agents in vitro. Preincubation of GLA with isofagomine prior to uptake by cultured cells results in increased intracellular enzyme activity accompanied by an increase in enzyme protein suggesting that reduced denaturation of GLA in the presence of isofagomine leads to a decrease in the degradation of the enzyme after internalization. Preincubation of GLA with slow-binding inhibitors before infusion may improve the effectiveness of ERT for Gaucher disease.  相似文献   

18.
Gaucher disease results from an autosomal recessive deficiency of the lysosomal enzyme glucocerebrosidase. The glucocerebrosidase gene is located in a gene-rich region of 1q21 that contains six genes and two pseudogenes within 75 kb. The presence of contiguous, highly homologous pseudogenes for both glucocerebrosidase and metaxin at the locus increases the likelihood of DNA rearrangements in this region. These recombinations can complicate genotyping in patients with Gaucher disease and contribute to the difficulty in interpreting genotype-phenotype correlations in this disorder. In the present study, DNA samples from 240 patients with Gaucher disease were examined using several complementary approaches to identify and characterize recombinant alleles, including direct sequencing, long-template polymerase chain reaction, polymorphic microsatellite repeats, and Southern blots. Among the 480 alleles studied, 59 recombinant alleles were identified, including 34 gene conversions, 18 fusions, and 7 downstream duplications. Twenty-two percent of the patients evaluated had at least one recombinant allele. Twenty-six recombinant alleles were found among 310 alleles from patients with type 1 disease, 18 among 74 alleles from patients with type 2 disease, and 15 among 96 alleles from patients with type 3 disease. Several patients carried two recombinations or mutations on the same allele. Generally, alleles resulting from nonreciprocal recombination (gene conversion) could be distinguished from those arising by reciprocal recombination (crossover and exchange), and the length of the converted sequence was determined. Homozygosity for a recombinant allele was associated with early lethality. Ten different sites of crossover and a shared pentamer motif sequence (CACCA) that could be a hotspot for recombination were identified. These findings contribute to a better understanding of genotype-phenotype relationships in Gaucher disease and may provide insights into the mechanisms of DNA rearrangement in other disorders.  相似文献   

19.
BACKGROUND: Gaucher disease is the most common of the lysosomal storage disorders. The primary manifestation is the accumulation of glucosylceramide (GL-1) in the macrophages of liver and spleen (Gaucher cells), due to a deficiency in the lysosomal hydrolase glucocerebrosidase (GC). A Gaucher mouse model (D409V/null) exhibiting reduced GC activity and accumulation of GL-1 was used to evaluate adeno-associated viral (AAV)-mediated gene therapy. METHODS: A recombinant AAV8 serotype vector bearing human GC (hGC) was administered intravenously to the mice. The levels of hGC in blood and tissues were determined, as were the effects of gene transfer on the levels of GL-1. Histopathological evaluation was performed on liver, spleen and lungs. RESULTS: Vector administration to pre-symptomatic Gaucher mice resulted in sustained hepatic secretion of hGC at levels that prevented GL-1 accumulation and the appearance of Gaucher cells in the liver, spleen and lungs. AAV administration to older mice with established disease resulted in normalization of GL-1 levels in the spleen and liver and partially reduced that in the lung. Analysis of the bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) from treated mice showed significant correction of the abnormal cellularity and cell differentials. No antibodies to the expressed hGC were detected following a challenge with recombinant enzyme suggesting the animals were tolerized to human enzyme. CONCLUSIONS: These data demonstrate the effectiveness of AAV-mediated gene therapy at preventing and correcting the biochemical and pathological abnormalities in a Gaucher mouse model, and thus support the continued consideration of this vector as an alternative approach to treating Gaucher disease.  相似文献   

20.
Cellulose-acetate gel electrophoresis, a technique commonly used for the separation of human acid hydrolases, was applied to study heterogeneity in acid beta-glucosidase (EC 3.2.1.45). With this technique, three forms of beta-glucosidase were distinguishable in extracts of several tissues. The most anodic beta-glucosidase activity (band 3) represents the broad-specificity beta-glucosidase that is not deficient in Gaucher disease and is not inhibited by conduritol B-epoxide (CBE). The beta-glucosidase activity was deficient in Gaucher disease. A third beta-glucosidase activity with an intermediate mobility (band 2) was also inhibited by CBE and deficient in Gaucher disease. Band 1 and band 2 beta-glucosidase thus represent different forms of glucocerebrosidase. By adding phosphatidylserine and sphingolipid activator protein (SAP-2), monomeric glucocerebrosidase could be completely converted into a form that comigrated with band 2 beta-glucosidase of tissue extracts. The addition of phosphatidylserine only also resulted in a changed mobility of the monomeric enzyme, but the migration in this case differed from that of band 2 beta-glucosidase of tissue extracts. The electrophoretic profile of beta-glucosidase activity of tissue extracts changed upon ethanol/chloroform extraction: the two glucocerebrosidase forms were converted into a band with a mobility identical to that of band 1 beta-glucosidase. Our findings indicate that the interaction of glucocerebrosidase with phospholipid and SAP-2 has major effects on the mobility of the enzyme in the cellulose-acetate gel electrophoresis system. The findings with the cellulose-acetate gel electrophoretic system are discussed in relation to the heterogeneity in glucocerebrosidase observed with sucrose density gradient analysis, immunochemical methods and isoelectric focussing studies.  相似文献   

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