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1.
During endocytosis, membrane components move to intraluminal vesicles of the endolysosomal compartment for digestion. At the late endosomes, cholesterol is sorted out mainly by two sterol-binding proteins, Niemann-Pick protein type C (NPC)1 and NPC2. To study the NPC2-mediated intervesicular cholesterol transfer, we developed a liposomal assay system. (Abdul-Hammed, M., B. Breiden, M. A. Adebayo, J. O. Babalola, G. Schwarzmann, and K. Sandhoff. 2010. Role of endosomal membrane lipids and NPC2 in cholesterol transfer and membrane fusion. J. Lipid Res. 51: 1747–1760.) Anionic lipids stimulate cholesterol transfer between liposomes while SM inhibits it, even in the presence of anionic bis(monoacylglycero)phosphate (BMP). Preincubation of vesicles containing SM with acid sphingomyelinase (ASM) (SM phosphodiesterase, EC 3.1.4.12) results in hydrolysis of SM to ceramide (Cer), which enhances cholesterol transfer. Besides SM, ASM also cleaves liposomal phosphatidylcholine. Anionic phospholipids derived from the plasma membrane (phosphatidylglycerol and phosphatidic acid) stimulate SM and phosphatidylcholine hydrolysis by ASM more effectively than BMP, which is generated during endocytosis. ASM-mediated hydrolysis of liposomal SM was also stimulated by incorporation of diacylglycerol (DAG), Cer, and free fatty acids into the liposomal membranes. Conversely, phosphatidylcholine hydrolysis was inhibited by incorporation of cholesterol, Cer, DAG, monoacylglycerol, and fatty acids. Our data suggest that SM degradation by ASM is required for physiological secretion of cholesterol from the late endosomal compartment, and is a key regulator of endolysosomal lipid digestion.  相似文献   

2.
The ganglioside-activator protein is an essential cofactor for the lysosomal degradation of ganglioside GM2 (GM2) by beta-hexosaminidase A. It mediates the interaction between the water-soluble exohydrolase and its membrane-embedded glycolipid substrate at the lipid-water interphase. Mutations in the gene encoding this glycoprotein result in a fatal neurological storage disorder, the AB variant of GM2-gangliosidosis. In order to efficiently and sensitively probe the glycolipid binding and membrane activity of this cofactor, we synthesized two new fluorescent glycosphingolipid (GSL) probes, 2-NBD-GM1 and 2-NBD-GM2. Both compounds were synthesized in a convergent and multistep synthesis starting from the respective gangliosides isolated from natural sources. The added functionality of 2-aminogangliosides allowed us to introduce the chromophore into the region between the polar head group and the hydrophobic anchor of the lipid. Both fluorescent glycolipids exhibited an extremely low off-rate in model membranes and displayed very efficient resonance energy transfer to rhodamine-dioleoyl phosphoglycerol ethanolamine (rhodamine-PE) as acceptor. The binding to GM2-activator protein (GM2AP) and the degrading enzyme was shown to be unaltered compared to their natural analogues. A novel fluorescence-resonance energy transfer (FRET) assay was developed to monitor in real time the protein-mediated intervesicular transfer of these lipids from donor to acceptor liposomes. The data obtained indicate that this rapid and robust system presented here should serve as a valuable tool to probe quantitatively and comprehensively the membrane activity of GM2AP and other sphingolipid activator proteins and facilitate further structure-function studies aimed at delineating independently the lipid- and the enzyme-binding mode of these essential cofactors.  相似文献   

3.
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   

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 GM2-activator protein (GM2AP) is an essential cofactor for the lysosomal degradation of ganglioside GM2 by beta-hexosaminidase A (HexA). It mediates the interaction between the water-soluble exohydrolase and its membrane-embedded glycolipid substrate at the lipid-water interface. Functional deficiencies in this protein result in a fatal neurological storage disorder, the AB variant of GM2 gangliosidosis. In order to elucidate this cofactor's mode of action and identify the surface region of GM2AP responsible for binding to HexA, we designed several variant forms of this protein and evaluated the consequences of these mutations for lipid- and enzyme-binding properties using a variety of biophysical and functional studies. The point mutants D113K, M117V and E123K showed a drastically decreased capacity to stimulate HexA-catalysed GM2 degradation. However, surface plasmon resonance (SPR) spectroscopy showed that the binding of these variants to immobilized lipid bilayers and their ability to solubilize lipids from anionic vesicles were the same as for the wild-type protein. In addition, a fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET)-based assay system showed that these variants had the same capacity as wild-type GM2AP for intervesicular lipid transfer from donor to acceptor liposomes. The concentration-dependent effect of these variants on hydrolysis of the synthetic substrate 4-methylumbelliferyl-2-acetamido-2-deoxy-6-sulfo-beta-D-glucopyranoside (MUGS) indicated a weakened association with the enzyme's alpha subunit. This identifies the protein region affected by these mutations, the single short alpha helix of GM2AP, as the major determinant for the interaction with the enzyme. These results further confirm that the function of GM2AP is not restricted to a biological detergent that simply disrupts the membrane structure or lifts the substrate out of the lipid plane. In contrast, our data argue in favour of the critical importance of distinct activator-hexosaminidase interactions for GM2 degradation, and corroborate the view that the activator/lipid complex represents the true substrate for the degrading enzyme.  相似文献   

6.
GM2 activator protein (GM2AP) is a specific protein cofactor that stimulates the enzymatic hydrolysis of the GalNAc from GM2, a sialic acid containing glycosphingolipid, both in vitro and in lysosomes. While phospholipids together with glycosphingolipids are important membrane constituents, little is known about the possible effect of GM2AP on the hydrolysis of phospholipids. Several recent reports suggest that GM2AP might have functions other than stimulating the conversion of GM2 into GM3 by beta-hexosaminidase A, such as inhibiting the activity of platelet activating factor and enhancing the degradation of phosphatidylcholine by phospholipase D (PLD). We therefore examined the effect of GM2AP on the in vitro hydrolyses of a number of phospholipids and sphingomyelin by microbial (Streptomyces chromofuscus) and plant (cabbage) PLD. GM2AP, at the concentration as low as 1.08 microM (1 microg/50 microl) was found to inhibit about 70% of the hydrolyses of phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylethanolamine, and phosphatidylinositol by PLD, whereas the same concentration of GM2AP only inhibited about 20-25% of the hydrolysis of sphingomyelin by sphingomyelinase and had no effect on the hydrolysis of sphingosylphosphorylcholine by PLD. Thus, GM2AP exerts strong and broad inhibitory effects on the hydrolysis of phospholipids carried out by plant and microbial PLDs. High ammonium sulfate concentration (1.6 M or 21.1%) masks this inhibitory effect, possibly due to the alteration of the ionic property of GM2AP.  相似文献   

7.
The GM2 activator protein (GM2AP) is an accessory protein required for the enzymatic conversion of GM2 to GM3 by hydrolases in the lysosomal compartments of cells. Here, GM2AP interactions with lipid vesicles are investigated by sucrose-loaded vesicle sedimentation and gel filtration assays, and the effects of pH and lipid composition on membrane binding and lipid extraction are characterized. The sedimentation experiments allow for facile quantification of the percentage of protein in solution and on the bilayer surface, with detailed analysis of the protein:lipid complex that remains in solution. Optimum binding and ligand extraction is found for pH 4.8 where <15% of the protein remains surface associated regardless of the lipid composition. In addition to extracting GM2, we find that GM2AP readily extracts dansyl-headgroup-labeled lipids as well as other phospholipids from vesicles. The ability of GM2AP to extract dansyl-DHPE from vesicles is altered by pH and the specific ligand GM2. Although the unique endosomal lipid, bis(monoacylglycero)phosphate, is not required for ligand extraction, it does enhance the extraction efficiency of GM2 when cholesterol is present in the vesicles.  相似文献   

8.
The lysosomal degradation of ceramide is catalyzed by acid ceramidase and requires sphingolipid activator proteins (SAP) as cofactors in vivo. The aim of this study was to investigate how ceramide is hydrolyzed by acid ceramidase at the water-membrane interface in the presence of sphingolipid activator proteins in a liposomal assay system. The degradation of membrane-bound ceramide was significantly increased both in the absence and presence of SAP-D when anionic lysosomal phospholipids such as bis(monoacylglycero)phosphate, phosphatidylinositol, and dolichol phosphate were incorporated into substrate-bearing liposomes. Higher ceramide degradation rates were observed in vesicles with increased membrane curvature. Dilution assays indicated that acid ceramidase remained bound to the liposomal surface during catalysis. Not only SAP-D, but also SAP-C and SAP-A, were found to be stimulators of ceramide hydrolysis in the presence of anionic phospholipids. This finding was confirmed by cell culture studies, in which SAP-A, -C, and -D reduced the amount of ceramide storage observed in fibroblasts of a patient suffering from prosaposin deficiency. Strong protein-lipid interactions were observed for both SAP-D and acid ceramidase in surface plasmon resonance experiments. Maximum binding of SAP-D and acid ceramidase to lipid bilayers occurred at pH 4.0. Our results demonstrate that anionic, lysosomal lipids are required for efficient hydrolysis of ceramide by acid ceramidase.  相似文献   

9.
Sphingolipid activator proteins (SAPs), GM2 activator protein (GM2AP) and saposins (Saps) A-D are small, enzymatically inactive glycoproteins of the lysosome. Despite of their sequence homology, these lipid-binding and -transfer proteins show different specificities and varying modes of action. Water-soluble SAPs facilitate the degradation of membrane-bound glycosphingolipids with short oligosaccharide chains by exohydrolases at the membrane-water interface. There is strong evidence that degradation of endocytosed components of the cell membrane takes place at intraendosomal and intralysosomal membranes. The inner membranes of the lysosome differ from the limiting membrane of the organelle in some typical ways: the inner vesicular membranes lack a protecting glycocalix, and they are almost free of cholesterol, but rich in bis(monoacylglycero)phosphate (BMP), the anionic marker lipid of lysosomes. In this study, we prepared glycosylated Sap-B free of other Saps by taking advantage of the Pichia pastoris expression system. We used immobilized liposomes as a model for intralysosomal vesicular membranes to probe their interaction with recombinantly expressed Sap-B. We monitored this interaction using SPR spectroscopy and an independent method based on the release of radioactively labelled lipids from liposomal membranes. We show that, after initial binding, Sap-B disturbs the membrane structure and mobilizes the lipids from it. Lipid mobilization is dependent on an acidic pH and the presence of anionic lipids, whereas cholesterol is able to stabilize the liposomes. We also show for the first time that glycosylation of Sap-B is essential to achieve its full lipid-extraction activity. Removal of the carbohydrate moiety of Sap-B reduces its membrane-destabilizing quality. An unglycosylated Sap-B variant, Asn215His, which causes a fatal sphingolipid storage disease, lost the ability to extract membrane lipids at acidic pH in the presence of BMP.  相似文献   

10.
A liposomal membrane model system was developed to examine the mechanism of spontaneous and protein-mediated intermembrane cholesterol transfer. Rat liver sterol carrier protein 2 (SCP2) and fatty acid binding protein (FABP, also called sterol carrier protein) both bind sterol. However, only SCP2 mediates sterol transfer. The exchange of sterol between small unilamellar vesicles (SUV) containing 35 mol % sterol was monitored with a recently developed assay [Nemecz, G., Fontaine, R. N., & Schroeder, F. (1988) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 943, 511-541], modified to continuous polarization measurement and not requiring separation of donor and acceptor membrane vesicles. As compared to spontaneous sterol exchange, 1.5 microM rat liver SCP2 enhanced the initial rate of sterol exchange between neutral zwwitterionic phosphatidylcholine SUV 2.3-fold. More important, the presence of acidic phospholipids (2.5-30 mol %) stimulated the SCP2-mediated increase in sterol transfer approximately 35-42-fold. Thus, acidic phospholipids strikingly potentiate the effect of SCP2 by 15-18 times as compared to SUV without negatively charged lipids. Rat liver FABP (up to 60 microM) was without effect on sterol transfer in either neutral zwitterionic or anionic phospholipid containing SUV. The potentiation of SCP2 action by acidic phospholipids was suppressed by high ionic strength, neomycin, and low pH. The results suggest that electrostatic interaction between SCP2 and negatively charged membranes may play an important role in the mechanism whereby SCP2 enhances intermembrane cholesterol transfer.  相似文献   

11.
GM2 activator protein (GM2AP) is a cofactor for stimulating the enzymatic hydrolysis of the glycolipid GM2 by -hexosaminidase A to produce GM3. We have examined the conformation of GM2AP before and after its interaction with GM2, GM3, and GA2 using circular dichroism and fluorescence spectroscopy techniques. In the presence of GM2, a blue shift of the fluorescence emission maximum and a strong decrease of molar ellipticity values in circular dichroism spectra were observed only at pH 4.5 and at GM2/GM2AP molar ratio higher than 10:1 (up to 50:1). These results suggest that GM2AP assumed a more organized -helical conformation with the tryptophan residues moving from the polar medium toward the hydrophobic environment of the protein. The conformation of GM2AP in the presence of the downstream reaction product, GM3, or a less favorable substrate, GA2, clearly differed from that in the presence of GM2. The relationships between spectroscopic changes and enzymatic activity, herein discussed, strongly suggest that the specific conformation exhibited by GM2AP in the presence of GM2 is functional to serve as an activator for the enzymatic hydrolysis of GM2.  相似文献   

12.
GM1对肌质网Ca~(2+)-ATPase活性及膜流动性的影响   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
外源性GM1对肌质网Ca2+-ATPase的水解及转运活性都有明显的抑制作用.在GM1浓度为0~8nmol/mg蛋白质范围内抑制作用具有浓度依赖性.当GM1浓度达到8nmol/mg蛋白质时,酶活性受到最大抑制,此时水解活性降低51%,转运活性降低49%.荧光偏振测定结果表明:GM1参入后,肌质网膜流动性降低.  相似文献   

13.
Although sterol carrier protein-2 (SCP-2) binds, transfers, and/or enhances the metabolism of many membrane lipid species (fatty acids, cholesterol, phospholipids), it is not known if SCP-2 expression actually alters the membrane distribution of lipids in living cells or tissues. As shown herein for the first time, expression of SCP-2 in transfected L-cell fibroblasts reduced the plasma membrane levels of lipid species known to traffic through the HDL-receptor-mediated efflux pathway: cholesterol, cholesteryl esters, and phospholipids. While the ratio of cholesterol/phospholipid in plasma membranes of intact cells was not changed by SCP-2 expression, phosphatidylinositol, a molecule important to intracellular signaling and vesicular trafficking, and anionic phospholipids were selectively retained. Only modest alterations in plasma membrane phospholipid percent fatty acid composition but no overall change in the proportion of saturated, unsaturated, monounsaturated, or polyunsaturated fatty acids were observed. The reduced plasma membrane content of cholesterol was not due to SCP-2 inhibition of sterol transfer from the lysosomes to the plasma membranes. SCP-2 dramatically enhanced sterol transfer from isolated lysosomal membranes to plasma membranes by eliciting detectable sterol transfer within 30 s, decreasing the t(1/2) for sterol transfer 364-fold from >4 days to 7-15 min, and inducing formation of rapidly transferable sterol domains. In summary, data obtained with intact transfected cells and in vitro sterol transfer assays showed that SCP-2 expression (i) selectively modulated plasma membrane lipid composition and (ii) decreased the plasma membrane content cholesterol, an effect potentially due to more rapid SCP-2-mediated cholesterol transfer from versus to the plasma membrane.  相似文献   

14.
Saposin B (Sap B) is a member of a family of four small glycoproteins, Sap A, B, C, and D. Like the other three saposins, Sap B plays a physiological role in the lysosomal degradation of sphingolipids (SLs). Although the interaction of Sap B with SLs has been investigated extensively, that with the main membrane lipid components, namely phospholipids and cholesterol (Chol), is scarcely known. Using large unilamellar vesicles (LUVs) as membrane models, we have now found that Sap B simultaneously extracts from the lipid surface neutral [phosphatidylcholine (PC)] and anionic [phosphatidylinositol (PI)] phospholipids, fewer SLs [ganglioside GM1 (GM1) or cerebroside sulfate (CS)], and no Chol. More PI than SL (GM1 or CS) was solubilized from LUVs containing equal amounts of PI and SLs. An increase in PI level had a poor effect on the Sap B-induced solubilization of GM1 or CS but strongly inhibited that of PC. Sap B was able not only to bind, but also to transfer phospholipids between lipid surfaces. Both the phospholipid binding and transfer activities were optimal at low pH values. These results represent the first biochemical analysis of the Sap B interaction with phospholipids. The capacity of Sap B to bind and transfer phospholipids occurs under conditions mimicking the interior of the late endosomal/lysosomal compartment and thus might have physiological relevance.  相似文献   

15.
Filipin is an antibiotic polyene widely used as a histochemical marker for cholesterol. We previously reported cholesterol/filipin-positive staining in brain of β-galactosidase (β-gal) knockout ((-/-)) mice (GM1 gangliosidosis). The content and distribution of cholesterol and gangliosides was analyzed in plasma membrane (PM) and microsomal (MS) fractions from whole-brain tissue of 15 week-old control (β-gal(+/-)) and GM1 gangliosidosis (β-gal(-/-)) mice. Total ganglioside content (μg sialic acid/mg protein) was 3-fold and 7-fold greater in the PM and MS fractions, respectively, in βgal(-/-) mice than in βgal(+/-) mice. GM1 content was 30-fold and 50-fold greater in the PM and MS fractions, respectively. In contrast, unesterified cholesterol content (μg/mg protein) was similar in the PM and the MS fractions of the βgal(-/-) and βgal(+/-) mice. Filipin is known to bind to various sterol derivatives and phospholipids on thin-layer chromatograms. Biochemical evidence is presented showing that filipin also binds to GM1 with an affinity similar to that for cholesterol, with a corresponding fluorescent reaction. Our data suggest that the GM1 storage seen in the β-gal(-/-) mouse contributes to the filipin ultraviolet fluorescence observed in GM1 gangliosidosis brain. The data indicate that in addition to cholesterol, filipin can also be useful for detecting GM1.  相似文献   

16.
A Förster resonance energy transfer-based fusion and transfer assay was developed to study, in model membranes, protein-mediated membrane fusion and intermembrane lipid transfer of fluorescent sphingolipid analogs. For this assay, it became necessary to apply labeled reporter molecules that are resistant to spontaneous as well as protein-mediated intermembrane transfer. The novelty of this assay is the use of nonextractable fluorescent membrane-spanning bipolar lipids. Starting from the tetraether lipid caldarchaeol, we synthesized fluorescent analogs with fluorophores at both polar ends. In addition, we synthesized radioactive glycosylated caldarchaeols. These labeled lipids were shown to stretch through bilayer membranes rather than to loop within a single lipid layer of liposomes. More important, the membrane-spanning lipids (MSLs) in contrast to phosphoglycerides proved to be nonextractable by proteins. We could show that the GM2 activator protein (GM2AP) is promiscuous with respect to glycero- and sphingolipid transfer. Saposin (Sap) B also transferred sphingolipids albeit with kinetics different from GM2AP. In addition, we could unambiguously show that the recombinant activator protein Sap C x His6 induced membrane fusion rather than intermembrane lipid transfer. These findings showed that these novel MSLs, in contrast with fluorescent phosphoglycerolipids, are well suited for an uncompromised monitoring of membrane fusion and intermembrane lipid transfer.  相似文献   

17.
The GM2-activator protein (GM2AP) belongs to a group of five small, nonenzymatic proteins that are essential cofactors for the degradation of glycosphingolipids in the lysosome. It mediates the interaction between the water-soluble enzyme beta-hexosaminidase A and its membrane-embedded substrate, ganglioside GM2, at the lipid-water interphase. Inherited defects in the gene encoding this glycoprotein cause a fatal neurological storage disorder, the AB variant of GM2 gangliosidosis. With the aim to establish a convenient eukaryotic system that allows the efficient production of functionally folded, glycosylated GM2AP and offers the potential of cost-efficient isotopic labeling for structural studies by NMR spectroscopy, we established the expression of recombinant GM2AP in the methylotrophic yeast Pichia pastoris. For the construction of expression plasmids, either the full cDNA encoding human GM2AP preproprotein was cloned in the expression vector pPIC3.5K, or the cDNA encoding only the mature form of GM2AP was inserted in the vector pPIC9K under control of the alcohol oxidase 1 promoter. Both plasmids led to the successful secretory expression of active, glycosylated GM2AP, which could easily be purified by Ni-NTA chromatography due to the hexahistidine tag introduced at the C-terminus. Remarkably, the expression of this membrane-active protein in P. pastoris was accompanied by two peculiarities which were not encountered in other expression systems for GM2AP: First, a significant fraction of the secreted protein existed in the form of aggregates, and second, considerable amounts of noncovalently bound lipids were associated with the recombinant protein. A three-step purification scheme was therefore devised consisting of Ni-NTA, reversed phase, and gel filtration chromatography, which finally yielded 10-12 mg of purified, monomeric GM2AP per liter of expression supernatant. MALDI- and ESI-TOF mass spectrometry were employed to assess the processing, homogeneity, and glycosylation pattern of the recombinant protein. Surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy allowed the interaction of GM2AP with immobilized liposomes to be studied. A modified version of FM22 minimal medium was then used in the cost-effective (15)N-labeling of GM2AP to assess its amenability for the structural investigation by NMR spectroscopy. Initial (15)N,(1)H-HSQC experiments show a well-folded protein and provide evidence for extensive conformational exchange processes within the molecule.  相似文献   

18.
We examined the effect of Niemann-Pick disease type 2 (NPC2) protein and some late endosomal lipids [sphingomyelin, ceramide and bis(monoacylglycero)phosphate (BMP)] on cholesterol transfer and membrane fusion. Of all lipid-binding proteins tested, only NPC2 transferred cholesterol at a substantial rate, with no transfer of ceramide, GM3, galactosylceramide, sulfatide, phosphatidylethanolamine, or phosphatidylserine. Cholesterol transfer was greatly stimulated by BMP, little by ceramide, and strongly inhibited by sphingomyelin. Cholesterol and ceramide were also significantly transferred in the absence of protein. This spontaneous transfer of cholesterol was greatly enhanced by ceramide, slightly by BMP, and strongly inhibited by sphingomyelin. In our transfer assay, biotinylated donor liposomes were separated from fluorescent acceptor liposomes by streptavidin-coated magnetic beads. Thus, the loss of fluorescence indicated membrane fusion. Ceramide induced spontaneous fusion of lipid vesicles even at very low concentrations, while BMP and sphingomyelin did so at about 20 mol% and 10 mol% concentrations, respectively. In addition to transfer of cholesterol, NPC2 induced membrane fusion, although less than saposin-C. In this process, BMP and ceramide had a strong and mild stimulating effect, and sphingomyelin an inhibiting effect, respectively. Note that the effects of the lipids on cholesterol transfer mediated by NPC2 were similar to their effect on membrane fusion induced by NPC2 and saposin-C.  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
Niemann-Pick type C disease is an inherited fatal disorder characterized by the accumulation of unesterified cholesterol and other lipids in the endosomal/lysosomal compartment. Two independent genes responsible for this neurodegenerative disorder have been identified, but the precise functions of the encoded Niemann-Pick C1 (NPC1) and C2 (NPC2) proteins are not yet known. We developed a cell-free assay for measuring intermembrane lipid transport and examined the ability of bovine NPC2 (bNPC2) for intermembrane cholesterol transfer. NPC2 specifically extracts cholesterol from phospholipid bilayers and catalyzes intermembrane transfer to acceptor vesicles in a dose- and time-dependent manner. This transfer activity is dependent on temperature, pH, ionic strength, lipid composition of the model membranes, and the ratio of donor to acceptor vesicles. In model membranes, the presence of the lysosomal anionic phospholipids bis(monooleoylglycero)phosphate and phosphatidyl inositol significantly stimulated cholesterol transfer by NPC2, whereas bis(monomyristoylglycero)phosphate, phosphatidyl serine, and phosphatidic acid had no effect. Moreover, ceramide stimulated cholesterol transfer slightly, whereas sphingomyelin reduced cholesterol transfer rates. With our assay system we identified for the first time the ability of other lysosomal proteins, most notably the GM2-activator protein, to mediate intermembrane cholesterol transfer. This assay system promises to be a valuable tool for further quantitative and mechanistic studies of protein-mediated lipid transfer.  相似文献   

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