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1.
Human beta-hexosaminidase A (Hex A) (alphabeta) is composed of two subunits whose primary structures are approximately 60% identical. Deficiency of either subunit results in severe neurological disease due to the storage of GM2 ganglioside; Tay-Sachs disease, alpha deficiency, and Sandhoff disease, beta deficiency. Whereas both subunits contain active sites only the alpha-site can efficiently bind negatively charged 6-sulfated hexosamine substrates and GM2 ganglioside. We have recently identified the alphaArg(424) as playing a critical role in the binding of 6-sulfate-containing substrates, and betaAsp(452) as actively inhibiting their binding. To determine if these same residues affect the binding of the sialic acid moiety of GM2 ganglioside, an alphaArg(424)Gln form of Hex A was expressed and its kinetics analyzed using the GM2 activator protein:[3H]-GM2 ganglioside complex as a substrate. The mutant showed a approximately 3-fold increase in its K(m) for the complex. Next a form of Hex B (betabeta) containing a double mutation, betaAspLeu(453)AsnArg (duplicating the alpha-aligning sequences), was expressed. As compared to the wild type (WT), the mutant exhibited a >30-fold increase in its ability to hydrolyze a 6-sulfated substrate and was now able to hydrolyze GM2 ganglioside when the GM2 activator protein was replaced by sodium taurocholate. Thus, this alpha-site is critical for binding both types of negatively charge substrates.  相似文献   

2.
Two sibling from a consanguineous Puerto Rican marriage were found to have a juvenile-onset type of lipidosis first noted at age 2 1/2 by expressing difficulties with motor function and developmental delay. They continued to deteriorate, showing muscle atrophy, spasticity, and loss of speech, and death occurred at ages 7 and 8. Examination of the brains from these patients revealed that the concentration of GM2 ganglioside was about 56% of the total gangliosides. Hexosaminidase and percent hexosaminidase A (HEX A) and other lysosomal enzymes were normal in cultured skin fibroblasts, liver, and brain. The concentration of the activator protein required for the enzymatic hydrolysis of GM2 ganglioside was in high normal levels in the brain of the patient available. However, the HEX A from the patient's brain and liver as well as from skin fibroblast lysates could not be activated to hydrolyze GM2 ganglioside by the activator protein from a control or himself. The HEX A from a control could be activated by the activator protein from controls or this patient. These patients appear to have a defect in HEX A, which does not affect it heat stability, electrophoretic migration, and activity toward fluorogenic substrates, but may affect the binding of the activator protein required for GM2 ganglioside hydrolysis. We propose to call these patients the AMB variant of GM2 gangliosidosis to denote the mutation in HEX A but with normal levels of HEX A and B with synthetic substrates. This is to distinguish these patients from those missing the activator protein and normal HEX A and B levels.  相似文献   

3.
GM2-activator protein (GM2-AP) is a lipid transfer protein that has the ability to stimulate the enzymatic processing of gangliosides as well as T-cell activation through lipid presentation. Our previous X-ray crystallographic studies of GM2-AP have revealed a large lipid binding pocket as the central overall feature of the structure with non-protein electron density within this pocket suggesting bound lipid. To extend these studies, we present here the 2A crystal structure of GM2-AP complexed with platelet activating factor (PAF). PAF is a potent phosphoacylglycerol whose toxic patho-physiological effects can be inhibited by GM2-AP. The structure shows an ordered arrangement of two bound lipids and a fatty acid molecule. One PAF molecule binds in an extended conformation within the hydrophobic channel that has an open and closed conformation, and was seen to contain bound phospholipid in the low pH apo structure. The second molecule is submerged inside the pocket in a U-shaped conformation with its head group near the single polar residue S141. It was refined as lyso-PAF as it lacks electron density for the sn-2 acetate group. The alkyl chains of PAF interact through van der Waals' contacts, while the head groups bind in different environments with their phosphocholine moieties in contact with aromatic rings (Y137, F80). The structure has revealed further insights into the lipid binding properties of GM2-AP, suggesting an unexpected unique mode of lipid packaging that may explain the efficiency of GM2-AP in inhibiting the detrimental biological effects of PAF.  相似文献   

4.
According to our hypothesis (Fürst, W., and Sandhoff, K. (1992) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1126, 1-16) glycosphingolipids of the plasma membrane are digested after endocytosis as components of intraendosomal and intralysosomal vesicles and membrane structures. The lysosomal degradation of glycosphingolipids with short oligosaccharide chains by acid exohydrolases requires small, non-enzymatic cofactors, called sphingolipid activator proteins (SAPs). A total of five activator proteins have been identified as follows: namely the saposins SAP-A, -B, -C, and -D, which are derived from the single chain SAP-precursor protein (prosaposin), and the GM2 activator protein. A deficiency of prosaposin results in the storage of ceramide and sphingolipids with short oligosaccharide head groups. The loss of the GM2 activator protein blocks the degradation of the ganglioside GM2. The enzymatic hydrolysis of the ganglioside GM1 is catalyzed by beta-galactosidase, a water-soluble acid exohydrolase. The lack of ganglioside GM1 accumulation in patients suffering from either prosaposin or GM2 activator protein deficiency has led to the hypothesis that SAPs are not needed for the hydrolysis of the ganglioside GM1 in vivo. In this study we demonstrate that an activator protein is required for the enzymatic degradation of membrane-bound ganglioside GM1 and that both SAP-B and the GM2 activator protein significantly enhance the degradation of the ganglioside GM1 by acid beta-galactosidase in a liposomal, detergent-free assay system. These findings offer a possible explanation for the observation that no storage of the ganglioside GM1 has been observed in patients with either isolated prosaposin or isolated GM2 activator deficiency. We also demonstrate that anionic phospholipids such as bis(monoacylglycero)phosphate and phosphatidylinositol, which specifically occur in inner membranes of endosomes and in lysosomes, are essential for the activator-stimulated hydrolysis of the ganglioside GM1. Assays utilizing surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy showed that bis(monoacylglycero)phosphate increases the binding of both beta-galactosidase and activator proteins to substrate-carrying membranes.  相似文献   

5.
The lysosomal degradation of ganglioside GM2 by hexosaminidase A depends on the presence of the specific activator protein which mediates the interaction between micellar or membrane-bound ganglioside and water-soluble hydrolase. The mechanism and the glycolipid specificity of this activator were studied in more detail. 1. It could be shown with three different techniques (isoelectric focusing, centrifugation and electrophoresis) that the activator protein extracts glycolipid monomers from micelles or liposomes to give water-soluble complexes with a stoichiometry of 1 mol of glycolipid/mol of activator protein. Liposome-bound ganglioside GM2 is considerably more stable against extraction and degradation than micellar ganglioside. 2. In the absence of enzyme the activator acts in vitro as glycolipid transfer protein, transporting glycolipids from donor to acceptor membranes. 3. The activator protein is rather specific for ganglioside GM2. Other glycolipids (GM3 GM1, GD1a and GA2) form less stable complexes with the activator and are transferred at a slower rate (except for ganglioside GM1) than ganglioside GM2.  相似文献   

6.
The existence of activator proteins that stimulate hydrolysis of ganglioside GM2 by beta-hexosaminidase was demonstrated in kidney extracts from four species (rat, mouse, cattle and pig). The extent to which these preparations, as well as their human counterpart, promote ganglioside GM2 catabolism by autologous and heterologous hexosaminidase isoenzymes was compared. It was found that these activators can replace each other functionally, although the animal activator proteins do not cross-react immunochemically with an antiserum against the human protein. All preparations examined catalysed the transfer of ganglioside GM2 between liposomal membranes, indicating that the animal activator proteins act by a mechanism similar to the human GM2 activator.  相似文献   

7.
Glycosphingolipid specificity of the human sulfatide activator protein   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The interaction of the sulfatide activator protein with different glycosphingolipids have been studied in detail. The following findings were made. 1. The sulfatide activator protein forms water-soluble complexes with sulfatides [Fischer, G. and Jatzkewitz, H. (1977) Hoppe-Seyler's Z. Physiol. Chem. 356, 6588-6591] and various other glycospingolipids. 2. In the absence of degrading enzymes the activator protein acts in vitro as a glycosphingolipid transfer protein, transporting glycosphingolipids from donor to acceptor liposomes. Lipids having less than three hexoses, e.g. galactosylceramide, sulfatide and ganglioside GM3 were transferred at very slow rates, whereas complex lipids such as gangliosides GM2, GM1 and GD1a were transferred much faster than the former. The transfer rate increased with increasing length of the carbohydrate chain of the lipid molecules. 3. Both the acyl residue in the ceramide moiety and the nature of the carbohydrate chain are significant for recognition of the glycosphingolipids by the sulfatide activator protein. Apparently, both residues serve as an anchor and the longer they are the better they are recognized by the protein. 4. In the absence of activator protein, degradation rates of sulfatide derivatives by arylsulfatase A, and of ganglioside GM1 derivatives by beta-galactosidase, increase with decreasing length of acyl residues in their hydrophobic ceramide moiety. Addition of activator protein stimulates the degradation of only those GM1 and sulfatide derivatives that have long-chain fatty acids in their hydrophobic ceramide anchor.  相似文献   

8.
The alpha- and/or beta-subunits of human beta-hexosaminidase A (alphabeta) and B (betabeta) are approximately 60% identical. In vivo only beta-hexosaminidase A can utilize GM2 ganglioside as a substrate, but requires the GM2 activator protein to bind GM2 ganglioside and then interact with the enzyme, placing the terminal GalNAc residue in the active site of the alpha-subunit. A model for this interaction suggests that two loop structures, present only in the alpha-subunit, may be critical to this binding. Three amino acids in one of these loops are not encoded in the HEXB gene, while four from the other are removed posttranslationally from the pro-beta-subunit. Natural substrate assays with forms of hexosaminidase A containing mutant alpha-subunits demonstrate that only the site that is removed from the beta-subunit during its maturation is critical for the interaction. Our data suggest an unexpected biological role for such proteolytic processing events.  相似文献   

9.
The heat stable protein activator of GM1 ganglioside hydrolysis was isolated from the liver of a patient with GM1 gangliosidosis, Type 1. It was found to be present at a level about 35 times that found in a liver sample from an age matched control. This activator protein was demonstrated to stimulate the hydrolysis of GM1 ganglioside and GA1 (asialo-GM1 ganglioside) in the presence of purified GM1 ganglioside β-galactosidase without the need for bile salt detergents. It could not stimulate the hydrolysis of two other galactosphingolipids, galactosylceramide and lactosylceramide, in the presence of the same enzyme. Lactosylceramide was a good substrate for this enzyme when sodium glycodeoxycholate was included in the assay. This activator protein had two isoelectric points pH 4.1 and 4.6, and it had an apparent molecular weight of 27,000 by gel filtration.  相似文献   

10.
Competition experiments were carried out on the hydrolysis of different substrates by beta-hexosaminidase A isolated from human liver. The results show that ganglioside GM2 in the presence of the GM2 activator protein and a new synthetic substrate, 4-methylumbelliferyl-beta-N-acetylglucosaminide 6-sulfate, are hydrolyzed at the same active site on the alpha subunit of beta-hexosaminidase A, whereas 4-methylumbelliferyl-beta-N-acetylglucosaminide is degraded predominantly by a different active site on the beta-subunit. This finding provides for the first time a possible molecular basis for the observation that, in variant B1 of the GM2 gangliosidoses, beta-hexosaminidase A has lost its activity toward GM2 ganglioside and the sulfated artificial substrate while being still able to hydrolyze the unsulfated artificial substrate at a normal rate. Furthermore, the finding that the GM2 activator protein inhibits the degradation of the sulfated substrate by beta-hexosaminidases A and S indicates that the alpha subunit common to both isoenzymes might provide a binding site for the activator protein.  相似文献   

11.
Prior to fertilization, mammalian spermatozoa need to acquire fertilizing ability (capacitation) in the female reproductive tract. On the other hand, capacitated spermatozoa reversibly lose their capacitated state when treated with seminal plasma (decapacitation). Previously, we demonstrated that a mouse seminal plasma protein, SVS2, is a decapacitation factor and regulates sperm fertilizing ability in vivo. Here, we examined the mechanisms of regulation of fertilizing ability by SVS2. Capacitation appears to be mediated by dynamic changes in lipid rafts since release of the cholesterol components of lipid rafts in the sperm plasma membrane is indispensable for capacitation. When the ejaculated spermatozoa were stained with a cholera toxin subunit B (CTB) that preferably interacts with ganglioside GM1, another member of the lipid rafts, the staining pattern of the sperm was the same as the binding pattern of SVS2. Interestingly, SVS2 and CTB competitively bound to the sperm surface with each other, suggesting that the binding targets of both molecules are the same, that is, GM1. Molecular interaction studies by the overlay assay and the quartz crystal microbalance analysis revealed that SVS2 selectively interacts with GM1 rather than with other gangliosides. Furthermore, external addition of GM1 nullified SVS2-induced sperm decapacitation. Thus, ganglioside GM1 is a receptor of SVS2 and plays a crucial role in capacitation in vivo.  相似文献   

12.
Cholera toxin (CT) is an AB5 hexameric protein responsible for the symptoms produced by Vibrio cholerae infection. In the first step of cell intoxication, the B-pentamer of the toxin binds specifically to the branched pentasaccharide moiety of ganglioside GM1 on the surface of target human intestinal epithelial cells. We present here the crystal structure of the cholera toxin B-pentamer complexed with the GM1 pentasaccharide. Each receptor binding site on the toxin is found to lie primarily within a single B-subunit, with a single solvent-mediated hydrogen bond from residue Gly 33 of an adjacent subunit. The large majority of interactions between the receptor and the toxin involve the 2 terminal sugars of GM1, galactose and sialic acid, with a smaller contribution from the N-acetyl galactosamine residue. The binding of GM1 to cholera toxin thus resembles a 2-fingered grip: the Gal(beta 1-3)GalNAc moiety representing the "forefinger" and the sialic acid representing the "thumb." The residues forming the binding site are conserved between cholera toxin and the homologous heat-labile enterotoxin from Escherichia coli, with the sole exception of His 13. Some reported differences in the binding affinity of the 2 toxins for gangliosides other than GM1 may be rationalized by sequence differences at this residue. The CTB5:GM1 pentasaccharide complex described here provides a detailed view of a protein:ganglioside specific binding interaction, and as such is of interest not only for understanding cholera pathogenesis and for the design of drugs and development of vaccines but also for modeling other protein:ganglioside interactions such as those involved in GM1-mediated signal transduction.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Although the physiologic function of gangliosides is unknown, evidence suggests they play a role in the regulation of cell growth. The binding of ganglioside GM1 by recombinant B subunit of cholera toxin (rCT-B) inhibited mitogen-stimulated B cell proliferation without elevating intracellular cAMP. CT-B paradoxically enhanced the expression of MHC class II (Ia) molecules and minor lymphocyte-stimulating determinants without altering the expression of some other immunologically relevant B cell surface Ag. Increased expression of Ia was not detected until 4 h after stimulation, kinetics similar to those seen when B cells are stimulated with anti-Ig antibody or IL-4, suggesting that the enhancement was not the result of redistribution of existing cell surface markers but rather the result of a new metabolic event. Both the inhibitory and stimulatory effects of CT-B could be blocked by incubation of CT-B with ganglioside GM1. Furthermore, enhancement of the CT-B-mediated effect was seen when additional ganglioside GM1 was incorporated into the B cell membrane. rCT-B with a mutation that interfered with its binding to ganglioside GM1 did not enhance Ia expression. Taken together, these results indicate that the observed effects of CT-B were most likely mediated through the binding of cell surface ganglioside GM1. CT-B-mediated stimulation of Ia expression provides a potential explanation for the previously described ability of CT-B to act as an immunoadjuvant. These results suggest that the binding of ganglioside GM1 has multiple B cell growth-regulating effects.  相似文献   

15.
According to a recent hypothesis, glycosphingolipids originating from the plasma membrane are degraded in the acidic compartments of the cell as components of intraendosomal and intralysosomal vesicles and structures. Since most previous in vitro investigations used micellar ganglioside GM2 as substrate, we studied the degradation of membrane-bound ganglioside GM2 by water-soluble beta-hexosaminidase A in the presence of the GM2 activator protein in a detergent-free, liposomal assay system. Our results show that anionic lipids such as the lysosomal components bis(monoacylglycero)phosphate or phosphatidylinositol stimulate the degradation of GM2 by beta-hexosaminidase A up to 180-fold in the presence of GM2 activator protein. In contrast, the degradation rate of GM2 incorporated into liposomes composed of neutral lysosomal lipids such as dolichol, cholesterol, or phosphatidylcholine was significantly lower than in negatively charged liposomes. This demonstrates that both, the GM2 activator protein and anionic lysosomal phospholipids, are needed to achieve a significant degradation of membrane-bound GM2 under physiological conditions. The interaction of GM2 activator protein with immobilized membranes was studied with surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy at an acidic pH value as it occurs in the lysosomes. Increasing the concentration of bis(monoacylglycero)phosphate in immobilized liposomes led to a significant drop of the resonance signal in the presence of GM2 activator protein. This suggests that in the presence of bis(monoacylglycero)phosphate, which has been shown to occur in inner membranes of the acidic compartment, GM2 activator protein is able to solubilize lipids from the surface of immobilized membrane structures.  相似文献   

16.
B Xie  J L Kennedy  B McInnes  D Auger  D Mahuran 《Genomics》1992,14(3):796-798
The GM2 activator protein is an essential substrate cofactor for the hydrolysis of GM2 ganglioside by lysosomal beta-hexosaminidase A (EC 3.2.1.52). There have been conflicting reports as to the chromosomal localization of the gene encoding the activator. We demonstrate here that these conflicts were caused by the presence of a previously unidentified processed activator-pseudogene on chromosome 3, and we confirm a previous ELISA-based localization of the functional activator gene to chromosome 5. Our data indicate that the functional activator locus can still be considered a candidate site for defects causing some forms of spinal muscular atrophy.  相似文献   

17.
Urine specimens from two sibs affected with cerebroside sulfatase activator deficiency were examined to ascertain whether the deficiency of the supplementary activator protein required for the enzymatic hydrolysis of cerebroside sulfate was also evident in urine. Material from chromatographic fractionations was examined for the activator activity to avoid ambiguities resulting from protein inhibition. There were substantial deficits in all chromatographic fractions corresponding to activator-containing fractions of control urines. Since patient urines contained elevated amounts of lactosylceramide, digalactosylceramide, and globotriaosylceramide and since similarities between activators for cerebroside sulfate and GM1 ganglioside hydrolyses had been noted previously, the chromatographic fractions were also examined for activators in other glycosphingolipid hydrolase systems. There was coincidence of activators for the GM1 ganglioside/beta-galactosidase and the globotriaosylceramide/alpha-galactosidase A reactions with the cerebroside sulfatase activator in control urine fractions, and the patients' urines were deficient in activator activities for the three reactions. Identity of the three activators was suggested and antiserum to purified GM1 ganglioside activator was used to test this possibility. There were depressed levels of cross-reacting material in fractions of patient urines by Ouchterlony double diffusion and in unfractionated urine by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Purified activators for the cerebroside sulfate and GM1 ganglioside systems showed lines of identity with no spurring on Ouchterlony double diffusion, identical mobility on immunoelectrophoresis, and similar stimulatory activities toward hydrolysis of the three glycosphingolipid species by their respective enzymes. Finally, the three activator activities were retained by anti-GM1-activator IgG coupled to Sepharose 4B. The results suggest strongly that the same protein entity serves as activator for the enzymatic hydrolysis of cerebroside sulfate, GM1 ganglioside, and globotriaosylceramide.  相似文献   

18.
Ganglioside GD1a-GalNAc was isolated from Tay-Sachs brain, tritium-labeled in its sphingosine moiety, and its enzymic degradation studied in vitro and in cultured fibroblasts. When offered as micelles, GD1a-GalNAc was almost not hydrolyzed by Hex A or Hex B, while after incorporation of the ganglioside into the outer leaflet of liposomes, the terminal GalNAc residue was rapidly split off by Hex a. In striking contrast to ganglioside GM2, the major glycolipid substrate of Hex A, the enzymic hydrolysis of GD1a-GalNAc was not promoted by the GM2 activator protein, although the activator protein did bind GD1a-GalNAc to form a water-soluble complex. Pathobiochemical studies corroborate these results. After incorporation of [3H]GD1a-GalNAc into cultured skin fibroblasts from healthy subjects and from patients with different variants of GM2 gangliosidosis, its degradation was found to be strongly attenuated in mutant cells with Hex A deficiencies such as variant B (Tay-Sachs disease), variant B1 and variant 0 (Sandhoff disease), while in cells with variant AB (GM2 activator deficiency), its catabolism was blocked only at the level of GM2. In line with these metabolic studies, a normal content of GD1a-GalNAc was found in brains of patients who had succumbed to variant AB of GM2 gangliosidosis whereas in brains from variants B, B1, and 0, its concentration was considerably elevated (up to 19-fold). Together with studies on the enzymic degradation of GM2 derivatives with modifications in the ceramide portion, these results indicate that mainly steric hindrance by adjacent lipid molecules impedes the access of Hex A to membrane-bound GM2 (whose degradation therefore depends on solubilization by the GM2 activator) and in addition that the interaction between the GM2. GM2 activator complex and the enzyme must be highly specific.  相似文献   

19.
Abstract: Ganglioside analysis and quantitative Golgi studies of the cerebral cortex of cats with ganglioside and nonganglioside lysosomal storage diseases reveal a correlation between the amount of accumulated GM2 ganglioside and the extent of ectopic dendrite growth on cortical pyramidal neurons. This correlation was not observed with any of the other gangliosides assayed for, including GM1 ganglioside. These results suggest a specific role for GM2 ganglioside in the initiation of ectopic neurites on pyramidal cells in vivo and are consistent with the developing hypothesis that different gangliosides have specific roles in different cell types dependent upon the receptor or other effector molecules with which they may interact.  相似文献   

20.
Wright CS  Mi LZ  Lee S  Rastinejad F 《Biochemistry》2005,44(41):13510-13521
GM2-activator protein (GM2AP) is a lysosomal lipid transfer protein with important biological roles in ganglioside catabolism, phospholipid metabolism, and T-cell activation. Previous studies of crystal structures of GM2AP complexed with the physiological ligand GM2 and platelet activating factor (PAF) have shown binding at two specific locations within the spacious apolar pocket and an ordering effect of endogenous resident lipids. To investigate the structural basis of phospholipid binding further, GM2AP was cocrystallized with phosphatidylcholine (PC), known to interact with GM2AP. Analysis of three crystal forms revealed binding of single chain lipids and fatty acids only and surprisingly not intact PC. The regions of best defined electron density are consistent with the presence of lyso-PC and oleic acid, which constitute deacylation products of PC. Their acyl tails are in stacking contact with shorter, less well-defined stretches of electron density that may represent resident fatty acids. The GM2AP associated hydrolytic activity that generates lyso-PC was further confirmed by mass spectrometry and enzymatic assays. In addition, we report the structures of (i) mutant Y137S, assessing the role of Tyr137 in lipid transfer via the hydrophobic cleft, and (ii) apo-mouse GM2AP, revealing a hydrophobic pocket with a constricted opening. Our structural results provide new insights into the biological functions of GM2AP. The combined effect of hydrolytic and lipid transfer properties has profound implications in cellular signaling.  相似文献   

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