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1.
Saposins: structure, function, distribution, and molecular genetics.   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11  
Saposins A, B, C, and D are small heat-stable glycoproteins derived from a common precursor protein, prosaposin. These mature saposins, as well as prosaposin, activate several lysosomal hydrolases involved in the metabolism of various sphingolipids. All four saposins are structurally similar to one another including placement of six cysteines, a glycosylation site, and conserved prolines in identical positions. In spite of the structural similarities, the specificity and mode of activation of sphingolipid hydrolases differs among individual saposins. Saposins appear to be lysosomal proteins, exerting their action upon lysosomal hydrolases. Prosaposin is a 70 kDa glycoprotein containing four domains, one for each saposin, placed in tandem. Prosaposin is proteolytically processed to saposins A, B, C and D, apparently within lysosomes. However, prosaposin also exists as an integral membrane protein not destined for lysosomal entry and exists uncleaved in many biological fluids such as seminal plasma, human milk, and cerebrospinal fluid, where it appears to have a different function. The physiological significance of saposins is underlined by their accumulation in tissues of lysosomal storage disease patients and the occurrence of sphingolipidosis due to mutations in the prosaposin gene. This review presents an overview of the occurrence, structure and function of these saposin proteins.  相似文献   

2.
Saposins A, B, C and D are soluble, non-enzymatic proteins that interact with lysosomal membranes to activate the breakdown and transfer of glycosphingolipids. The mechanisms of hydrolase activation and lipid transfer by saposins remain unknown. We have used in situ atomic force microscopy (AFM) with simultaneous confocal fluorescence microscopy to investigate the interactions of saposins with lipid membranes. AFM images of the effect of saposins A, B and C on supported lipid bilayers showed a time and concentration-dependent nucleated spread of membrane transformation. Saposin B produced deep gaps that ultimately filled with granular material, while saposins A and C lead to localized areas of membrane that were reduced in height by approximately 1.5 nm. Fluorescence-labeled saposin C co-localized with the transformed areas of the bilayer, indicating stable binding to the membrane. Fluorescence resonance energy transfer confirmed a direct interaction between saposin C and lipid. Under certain conditions of membrane lipid composition and saposin concentration, extensive bilayer lipid removal was observed. We propose a multi-step mechanism that integrates the structural features and amphipathic properties of the saposin proteins.  相似文献   

3.
Saposins A and C are sphingolipid activator proteins required for the lysosomal breakdown of galactosylceramide and glucosylceramide, respectively. The saposins interact with lipids, leading to an enhanced accessibility of the lipid headgroups to their cognate hydrolases. We have determined the crystal structures of human saposins A and C to 2.0 Angstroms and 2.4 Angstroms, respectively, and both reveal the compact, monomeric saposin fold. We confirmed that these two proteins were monomeric in solution at pH 7.0 by analytical centrifugation. However, at pH 4.8, in the presence of the detergent C(8)E(5), saposin A assembled into dimers, while saposin C formed trimers. Saposin B was dimeric under all conditions tested. The self-association of the saposins is likely to be relevant to how these small proteins interact with lipids, membranes, and hydrolase enzymes.  相似文献   

4.
Saposins are small glycoproteins which are required for sphingolipid hydrolysis by lysosomal hydrolases. Each saposin (A, B, C, and D) stimulates a different enzymatic activity. A new simple HPLC method to determine the levels of saposins A, C, and D in tissue was developed. Tissues were homogenized in 20 vol of water, boiled, and centrifuged. The supernatant was lyophilized and redissolved in 5 ml of water. A 1.5-ml sample of the solution was applied to a reverse-phase HPLC column (C4 column) and eluted with an acetonitrile gradient. Most contaminants eluted from the column prior to the saposins, which were eluted later as a cluster of peaks. This cluster was collected and then analyzed by another HPLC system equipped with an AX-300 anion-exchange column using a NaCl gradient. Saposins D, A, and C eluted from the AX-300 column separately and in that order. Quantitation of the saposins was made by measuring the sizes of each peak. Standard curves made from pure saposins showed that quantification was linear over a range from 1 to 5 micrograms. Saposin B was measured by its stimulation activity on pure human liver GM1 ganglioside beta-galactosidase. Stimulation was linear up to 80 micrograms of saposin B. Application of this method to analysis of human tissues for their saposin content is presented.  相似文献   

5.
Saposin C is a small Trp-free, multifunctional glycoprotein that enhances the hydrolytic activity of acid beta-glucosidase in lysosomes. Saposin C's functions have been shown to include neuritogenic/neuroprotection effects and membrane fusion induction. Here, the mechanism and kinetics of saposin C's fusogenic activity were evaluated by fluorescence spectroscopic methods including dequenching, fluorescence resonance energy transfer, and stopped-flow analyses. Trp or dansyl groups were introduced as fluorescence reporters into selected sites of saposin C to serve as topological probes for protein-protein and protein-membrane interactions. Saposin C induction of liposomal vesicle enlargement was dependent upon anionic phospholipids and acidic pH. The initial fusion burst was completed in the timeframe of a few seconds to minutes and was dependent upon the unsaturated anionic phospholipid content. Two events were associated with saposin C-membrane interaction: membrane insertion of the saposin C terminal helices and reorientation of its central helical region. The latter conformational change likely exposed a binding site for saposins anchored on vesicles. Addition of selected saposin C peptides prior to intact saposin C in reaction mixtures abolished the liposomal fusion. These results indicated that saposin-membrane and saposin-saposin interactions are needed for the fusion process.  相似文献   

6.
Saposin D is generated together with three similar proteins, saposins A, B and C, from a common precursor, called prosaposin, in acidic organelles such as late endosomes and lysosomes. Although saposin D has been reported to stimulate the enzymatic hydrolysis of sphingomyelin and ceramide, its physiological role has not yet been clearly established. In the present study we examined structural and membrane-binding properties of saposin D. At acidic pH, saposin D showed a great affinity for phospholipid membranes containing an anionic phospholipid such as phosphatidylserine or phosphatidic acid. The binding of saposin D caused destabilization of the lipid surface and, conversely, the association with the membrane markedly affected the fluorescence properties of saposin D. The presence of phosphatidylserine-containing vesicles greatly enhanced the intrinsic tyrosine fluorescence of saposin D, which contains tyrosines but not tryptophan residues. The structural properties of saposin D were investigated in detail using advanced MS analysis. It was found that the main form of saposin D consists of 80 amino acid residues and that the six cysteine residues are linked in the following order: Cys5-Cys78, Cys8-Cys72 and Cys36-Cys47. The disulfide pattern of saposin D is identical with that previously established for two other saposins, B and C, which also exhibit a strong affinity for lipids. The common disulfide structure probably has an important role in the interaction of these proteins with membranes. The analysis of the sugar moiety of saposin D revealed that the single N-glycosylation site present in the molecule is mainly modified by high-mannose-type structures varying from two to six hexose residues. Deglycosylation had no effect on the interaction of saposin D with phospholipid membranes, indicating that the glycosylation site is not related to the lipid-binding site. The association of saposin D with membranes was highly dependent on the composition of the bilayer. Neither ceramide nor sphingomyelin, sphingolipids whose hydrolysis is favoured by saposin D, promoted its binding, while the presence of an acidic phospholipid such as phosphatidylserine or phosphatidic acid greatly favoured the interaction of saposin D with vesicles at low pH. These results suggest that, in the acidic organelles where saposins are localized, anionic phospholipids may be determinants of the saposin D topology and, conversely, saposin D may affect the lipid organization of anionic phospholipid-containing membranes.  相似文献   

7.
Although the Man-6-P-independent lysosomal sorting of prosaposin, a precursor of four saposins (A, B, C, and D) is not understood, a protein/lipid interaction is considered. Immunocytochemical analysis revealed that each single saposin linked to the C-terminus of prosaposin and to secretory albumin, drives the chimeric protein to lysosomes in COS-7 cells. Quantitative image analysis demonstrated that saposins are targeted with different efficiency (P<0.05) and in a less smooth manner than the precursor. Despite a very close homology, the charge distribution at the surface of 3D comparative models between saposins appeared different. Western blotting monitored prosaposin in cells also as a di- or trimeric form, whereas the chimeric saposins as monomeric. This implies that each amphipathic saposin-like motif may be a part of the overall structural requirements for binding of the precursor to the membrane lipids of transport vesicle. The crystal structure of saposin B demonstrating two dimeric units for lipid binding supports current findings.  相似文献   

8.
The twitcher mutant mouse, the animal model of Krabbe disease (human globoid cell leukodystrophy), is characterized by apparent deficiency of galactosylceramide beta-galactosidase activity. Saposin A and C, the heat-stable small sphingolipid activator glycoproteins, stimulate the activity of galactosylceramide beta-galactosidase as well as glucosylceramide beta-glucoside. The role of these saposins in the twitcher mutation was investigated. Boiled supernatant fractions, which contained saposins, were prepared from homogenates of twitcher brain, liver, kidney, and spleen. These preparations showed an almost identical effect on the activity of purified glucosylceramide beta-glucosidase (measured by hydrolysis of 4-methylumbelliferyl-beta-glucoside) with similar preparations from control tissues. The effect on the activity of galactosylceramide beta-galactosidase as well as 4-methylumbelliferyl-beta-glucoside beta-glucosidase in the twitcher brain and liver homogenates by authentic saposin A and C was similar to that in control tissues. These results suggest that the twitcher mutation does not affect the concentrations of saposin A or C or their interaction with galactosylceramide beta-galactosidase.  相似文献   

9.
Saposins (A, B, C, and D) are small sphingolipid activator proteins that are derived by proteolytic processing of a common precursor, prosaposin. In the lysosomal sphingolipid degradation pathway, acid beta-glucosidase (GCase) requires saposin C for optimal in vitro and in vivo hydrolysis of glucocerebroside. The deficiency of prosaposin/saposins (PS-/-) in humans and mice leads to a decrease of GCase activity in selected tissues. Concordant decreases (>50%) of GCase protein and in vitro activity were detected in extracts of cultured fibroblasts and hepatocytes from PS-/- mice and human prosaposin-deficient fibroblasts. GCase RNA in the PS-/- cells was at wild-type levels. Compared with that in wild-type cells (t(1/2) >24 h), the GCase protein in the PS-/- cells had a faster disappearance rate (t(1/2) approximately 1 h in mouse and approximately 8 h in human) as determined by metabolic labeling and immunoprecipitation with anti-GCase antibodies. Treatment of PS-/- cells with leupeptin, an inhibitor of cysteine proteases, led to significant increases (approximately 2-fold) in GCase protein and in vitro activity. Loading saposin C to human PS-/- fibroblasts resulted in an enhancement of GCase protein and in vitro activity. Saposin D loading had no effect. These data indicate that saposin C is required for GCase resistance to proteolytic degradation in the cell. Thus, diminished in vivo GCase activity would be greater than expected only from the lack of GCase activation by saposin C. These results indicate a new property for saposin C, an anti-proteolytic protective function toward GCase.  相似文献   

10.
Sphingolipid hydrolase activator proteins and their precursors   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Activator proteins for sphingolipid hydrolases (saposins) are small acidic, heat-stable glycoproteins that stimulate the hydrolysis of sphingolipids by lysosomal enzymes. The molecular mass of each stimulator is about 10 kDa, but glycosylated forms of higher mass exist too. The distribution and developmental changes in two saposins and their precursor proteins were studied with the aid of monospecific antibodies against saposin-B and saposin-C. They show a wide distribution in rat organs and forms intermediate between saposin and prosaposin (the precursor protein containing four different saposin units) could be seen. The amount of saposin and the degree of processing from prosaposin are quite different in different tissues. The saposins are the dominant forms in spleen, lung, liver, and kidney, while skeletal muscle, heart, and brain contain mainly precursor forms. In human blood, leukocytes contain mainly saposin, while plasma contains mainly precursor forms and platelets show many forms. Their subcellular distribution was studied using rat liver. The saposins of approximately 20 kDa are dominant in the light mitochondrial, mitochondrial, and microsomal fractions, following the distribution of the activity of a lysosomal marker enzyme. The nuclear fraction exhibits bands corresponding to non-glycosylated saposin. The soluble fraction contained much precursor forms. A developmental study of rat brain showed that the concentration of saposin precursors increased with age.  相似文献   

11.
Acidic phospholipids and saposins associations are involved in the degradation process of glycosphingolipids/sphingolipids in late endosomes/lysosomes. In this report, we showed the colocalization of saposin C and lysobisphosphatidic acid (LBPA) in human fibroblasts by using cytoimmunofluorescence analysis. This colocalization pattern was not seen with other saposins. Large numbers of saposins A, B, and D illustrated the staining patterns that differ from LBPA. In addition, ingested anti-LBPA antibody altered the location of saposin C in human wild-type fibroblasts. In vitro assays demonstrated that saposin C at nM concentrations induced membrane fusion of LBPA containing phospholipid vesicles. Under the same condition, other saposins had no fusion induction on these vesicles. These results suggested a specific interaction between saposin C and LBPA. Total saposin-deficient fibroblasts showed a massive accumulation of multivesicular bodies (MVBs) by electron microscopic analysis. No significant increase of MVBs was found in saposins A and B deficient cells. Interestingly, the accumulated MVBs were significantly reduced by loading saposin C alone into the total saposin-deficient cells. Therefore, we propose that saposin C-LBPA interaction plays a role in the regulation of MVB formation in cells.  相似文献   

12.
Saposin C, a sphingolipid activator protein with fusogenic activity, interacts specifically with the membrane containing negatively charged, unsaturated phospholipids. The kinetics and mechanism of saposin C-induced membrane fusion were previously investigated using acidic phospholipid liposomes. A hypothetic clip-on model for such a fusion process was illustrated by the ionic binding between saposin C and lipids, as well as the inter-saposin C hydrophobic interaction. Here, we report the location of the fusogenic domain in a linear sequence at the amino-terminal half of saposin C. This domain consisted of the first and second helical sequences. Selected positively charged lysines in the fusogenic domain were mutated to study the roles of basic residues in the saposin C-induced vesicle fusion. Based on the results, Lys13 and Lys17 were critical for the fusogenic activity, but had no effect on the enzymatic activation of acid beta-glucosidase (GCase). These results clearly indicate the segregation of the fusion and activation function into two different regions of saposin C. Interestingly, all the Lys mutant saposin Cs anchored on the acidic phospholipid membrane. Our data suggest that saposin C's fusogenic and activation functions have different requirements for the orientation and insertion manners of helical peptides in membranes.  相似文献   

13.
Saposins are lipid-binding and membrane-perturbing glycoproteins of the mammalian lysosomes involved in sphingolipid and membrane digestion. Although the four human saposins (Saps), A-D, are sequence-related, they are responsible for the activation of different steps in the cascade of lysosomal glycosphingolipid degradation. Saposin activity is maximal under acidic conditions, and the pH dependence of lipid and membrane binding has been assigned to conformational variability. We have employed solution NMR spectroscopy to all four (15)N-labeled human saposins at both neutral and acidic pH. Using backbone NOEs and residual dipolar couplings, the "saposin fold" comprising five alpha-helices was confirmed for Sap-A, Sap-C, and Sap-D. Structural variations within these proteins are in the order of variations between the known structures of Sap-C and NK-lysin. In contrast, Sap-B yielded spectra of very poor quality, presumably due to conformational heterogeneity and molecular association. Sap-D exists in a slow dynamic equilibrium of two conformational states with yet unknown function. At pH 4.0, where all saposins are highly unstable, Sap-C undergoes a transition to a specific dimeric state, which is likely to resemble the structure recently found in both Sap-C in a detergent environment and crystals of Sap-B.  相似文献   

14.
Saposins and Their Interaction with Lipids   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The lysosomal degradation of several sphingolipids requires the presence of four small glycoproteins called saposins, generated by proteolytic processing of a common precursor, prosaposin. Saposins share several structural properties, including six similarly located cysteines forming three disulfide bridges with the same cysteine pairings. Recently it has been noted that also other proteins have the same polypeptide motif characterized by the similar location of six cysteines. These saposin-like (SAPLIP) proteins are surfactant protein B (SP-B), Entamoeba histolytica poreforming peptide, NK-lysin, acid sphingomyelinase and acyloxyacyl hydrolase. The structural homology and the conserved disulfide bridges suggest for all SAPLIPs a common fold, called saposin fold. Up to now a precise fold, comprising five -helices, has been established only for NK-lysin. Despite their similar structure each saposin promotes the degradation of specific sphingolipids in lysosomes, e.g. Sap B that of sulfatides and Sap C that of glucosylceramides. The different activities of the saposins must reside within the module of the -helices and/or in additional specific regions of the molecule. It has been reported that saposins bind to lysosomal hydrolases and to several sphingolipids. Their structural and functional properties have been extensively reviewed and hypotheses regarding their molecular mechanisms of action have been proposed. Recent work of our group has evidenced a novel property of saposins: some of them undergo an acid-induced change in hydrophobicity that triggers their binding to phospholipid membranes. In this article we shortly review recent findings on the structure of saposins and on their interactions with lipids, with special attention to interactions with phospholipids. These findings offer a new approach for understanding the physiological role of saposins in lysosomes.  相似文献   

15.
Prosaposin is the precursor of four activator proteins, termed saposins A, B, C, and D, that are required for much of glycosphingolipid hydrolysis. The intact precursor also has neurite outgrowth activity ex vivo and in vivo that is localized to amino acid residues 22-31 of saposin C. Across species, this saposin C region has a high degree of identity and similarity with amino acids in the analogous region of saposin A. Wild-type and mutant saposins C and A from human and mouse were expressed in E. coli. Pure proteins, synthetic peptide analogues, conformation-specific antibodies, and CD spectroscopy were used to evaluate the basis of the ex vivo neuritogenic effect. Wild-type saposin A had no neuritogenic activity whereas reduced and alkylated saposin A did. Introduction of the conserved saposin A Tyr 30 (Y30) into saposin C at the analogous position 31, a conserved Ala(A)/Gly(G)31, diminished neuritogenic activity by 50-60%. Nondenatured saposin A with an introduced A30 acquired substantial neuritogenic activity. Polyclonal antibodies directed against the NH2-terminus of saposin C cross-reacted well with reduced and alkylated saposins C and A, wild-type saposin C, and saposin A [Y30A], poorly with saposin C [A31Y], and not at all with wild-type saposin A. CD spectra of wild-type and mutant saposins C and A, the corresponding neuritogenic region of saposin C, and the analogous region of saposin A showed that more "saposin C-like" molecules had neuritogenic properties. Those with more "saposin A-like" spectra did not. These studies show that the neuritogenic activity of saposin C requires specific placement of amino acids, and that Y30 of saposin A significantly alters local conformation in this critical region and suppresses neuritogenic activity.  相似文献   

16.
Interaction of saposins, acidic lipids, and glucosylceramidase   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Activity of lysosomal glucosylceramidase is stimulated by two small glycoproteins, saposin A and C, which are, together with two other similar glycoproteins, derived from a single precursor protein. This enzyme is also stimulated by naturally occurring acidic lipids, such as phosphatidylserine and gangliosides. Using highly purified glucosylceramidase, saposins, and acidic lipids, the mechanism of enzyme stimulation was studied by investigating complex formation between the three components and by examining effects on activity caused by changing amounts of saposins and acidic lipids, individually or in combination. The results indicated that acidic lipids form a water-soluble complex with glucosylceramidase but not with saposins and that saposins and acidic lipids each bind to the enzyme at two different sites for the activation. Based on these observations, the previously proposed three-binding sites model of glucosylceramidase, activator, and substrate was modified to one composed of four binding sites: one for carbohydrate of the substrate, one for aglycon, one for acidic lipids, and one for saposins.  相似文献   

17.
Prosaposin is the precursor of four sphingolipid activator proteins (saposins A, B, C, and D) for lysosomal hydrolases and is abundant in the nervous system and muscle. In addition to its role as a precursor of saposins in lysosomes, intact prosaposin has neurotrophic effects in vivo or in vitro when supplied exogenously. We examined the distribution of prosaposin in the central and peripheral nervous systems and its intracellular distribution. Using a monospecific antisaposin D antibody that crossreacts with prosaposin but not with saposins A, B, or C, immunoblot experiments showed that both the central and peripheral nervous systems express unprocessed prosaposin and little saposin D. Using the antisaposin D antibodies, we demonstrated that prosaposin is abundant in almost all neurons of both the central and peripheral nervous systems, including autonomic nerves, as well as motor and sensory nerves. Immunoelectron microscopy using double staining with antisaposin D and anticathepsin D antibodies showed strong prosaposin immunoreactivity mainly in the lysosomal granules in the neurons in both the central and peripheral nervous systems. The expression of prosaposin mRNA, examined using in situ hybridization, was observed in these same neurons. Our results suggest that prosaposin is synthesized ubiquitously in neurons of both the central and peripheral nervous systems. Funding: This study was supported by the Ehime University INCS and in part by grants-in-aid for Scientific Research to S.M. (Exploratory Res. 19659380) from the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science and to AS (Priority Areas 18023029) from the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology of Japan.  相似文献   

18.
The primary structure of mouse sphingolipid activator protein (saposin) was determined by cDNA sequencing. The amino acid sequence predicted by the cDNA sequence revealed that mouse saposin was highly homologous to human saposin and also to rat sertoli cell glycoprotein. Mouse saposin also has four functional domains, which are structurally similar to each other, and each domain has cysteines, prolines, and a potential glycosylation site at an almost identical position. An amino acid comparison between human and mouse saposins revealed that the similarity was approximately 70%, and human saposin lacks thirty-one amino acids between domains C and D. Heterogeneities of mRNA were found in both the coding and noncoding regions.  相似文献   

19.
A proteomics-based search for molecules interacting with caspase-14 identified prosaposin and epidermal mesotrypsin as candidates. Prosaposin is a precursor of four sphingolipid activator proteins (saposins A–D) that are essential for lysosomal hydrolysis of sphingolipids. Thus, we hypothesized that caspase-14 and mesotrypsin participate in processing of prosaposin. Because we identified a saposin A sequence as an interactor with these proteases, we prepared a specific antibody to saposin A and focused on saposin A-related physiological reactions. We found that mesotrypsin generated saposins A–D from prosaposin, and mature caspase-14 contributed to this process by activating mesotrypsinogen to mesotrypsin. Knockdown of these proteases markedly down-regulated saposin A synthesis in skin equivalent models. Saposin A was localized in granular cells, whereas prosaposin was present in the upper layer of human epidermis. The proximity ligation assay confirmed interaction between prosaposin, caspase-14, and mesotrypsin in the granular layer. Oil Red staining showed that the lipid envelope was significantly reduced in the cornified layer of skin from saposin A-deficient mice. Ultrastructural studies revealed severely disorganized cornified layer structure in both prosaposin- and saposin A-deficient mice. Overall, our results indicate that epidermal mesotrypsin and caspase-14 work cooperatively in prosaposin processing. We propose that they thereby contribute to permeability barrier formation in vivo.  相似文献   

20.
Saposin (Sap) D is a late endosomal/lysosomal small protein, generated together with three other similar proteins, Sap A, B, and C, from the common precursor, prosaposin. Although the functions of saposins such as Sap B and C are well known (Sap B promotes the hydrolysis of sulfatides and Sap C that of glucosylceramide), neither the physiological function nor the mechanism of action of Sap D are yet fully understood. We previously found that a dramatic increase of Sap D superficial hydrophobicity, occurring at the low pH values characteristic of the late endosomal/lysosomal environment, triggers the interaction of the saposin with anionic phospholipid-containing vesicles. We have presently found that, upon lipid binding, Sap D solubilizes the membranes, as shown by the clearance of the vesicles turbidity. The results of gel filtration, density gradient centrifugation, and negative staining electron microscopy demonstrate that this effect is due to the transformation of large vesicles to smaller particles. The solubilizing effect of Sap D is highly dependent on pH, the lipid/saposin ratio, and the presence of anionic phospholipids; small variations in each of these conditions markedly influences the activity of Sap D. The present study documents the interaction of Sap D with membranes as a complex process. Anionic phospholipids attract Sap D from the medium; when the concentration of the saposin on the lipid surface reaches a critical value, the membrane breaks down into recombinant small particles enriched in anionic phospholipids. Our results suggest that the role played by Sap D is more general than promoting sphingolipid degradation, e.g. the saposin might also be a key mediator of the solubilization of intralysosomal/late endosomal anionic phospholipid-containing membranes.  相似文献   

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