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1.
Niemann-Pick disease is a genetic disorder, affecting approximately 1 to 150,000 living births per year; in Poland 1-5 cases. Usually diagnosed in the childhood, Niemann-Pick disease results in death in the teenage years. Niemann-Pick disease is defined as a lysosomal storage disorder and is related to impaired transport and/or accumulation of specific lipids inside the cell. In this report, we provide evidence about potential role of annexins, calcium- and membrane-binding proteins, in the formation and stabilization of cholesterol-rich microdomains and their possible function in organizing the membranes of early and late endosomes, organelles affected in the type C Niemann-Pick disease characterized by abnormal accumulation of cholesterol and glycosphingolipids in lysosomal like organelles.  相似文献   

2.
Heat shock protein 70 (Hsp70) is an evolutionary highly conserved molecular chaperone. Upon cancer-associated translocation to the lysosomal compartment, it promotes cell survival by inhibiting lysosomal membrane permeabilization, a hallmark of stress-induced death. We have recently shown that Hsp70 stabilizes lysosomes by binding to the endo-lysosomal lipid bis(monoacylglycero)phosphate (BMP), an essential co-factor for lysosomal sphingolipid catabolism. The Hsp70–BMP interaction enhances the activity of acid sphingomyelinase, an important enzyme that hydrolyzes sphingomyelin. Importantly, treatment with recombinant Hsp70 effectively reverts the dramatic increase in lysosomal volume and decrease in lysosomal stability in cells from patients with Niemann-Pick disease, a genetic disorder associated with reduced acid sphingomyelinase activity. These findings give new insight into the mechanisms controlling lysosomal stability and integrity, and open new exciting possibilities for the treatment of cancer as well as Niemann-Pick disease.  相似文献   

3.
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   

4.
Niemann-Pick disease type C (NPC) and Wolman disease are two members of a family of storage disorders caused by mutations of genes encoding lysosomal proteins. Deficiency in function of either the NPC1 or NPC2 protein in NPC disease or lysosomal acid lipase in Wolman disease results in defective cellular cholesterol trafficking. Lysosomal accumulation of cholesterol and enlarged lysosomes are shared phenotypic characteristics of both NPC and Wolman cells. Utilizing a phenotypic screen of an approved drug collection, we found that δ-tocopherol effectively reduced lysosomal cholesterol accumulation, decreased lysosomal volume, increased cholesterol efflux, and alleviated pathological phenotypes in both NPC1 and Wolman fibroblasts. Reduction of these abnormalities may be mediated by a δ-tocopherol-induced intracellular Ca2+ response and subsequent enhancement of lysosomal exocytosis. Consistent with a general mechanism for reduction of lysosomal lipid accumulation, we also found that δ-tocopherol reduces pathological phenotypes in patient fibroblasts from other lysosomal storage diseases, including NPC2, Batten (ceroid lipofuscinosis, neuronal 2, CLN2), Fabry, Farber, Niemann-Pick disease type A, Sanfilippo type B (mucopolysaccharidosis type IIIB, MPSIIIB), and Tay-Sachs. Our data suggest that regulated exocytosis may represent a potential therapeutic target for reduction of lysosomal storage in this class of diseases.  相似文献   

5.
To maintain proper cellular function, the amount and distribution of cholesterol residing within cellular membranes must be regulated. The principal disorder affecting transport of cholesterol through the late endosomal/lysosomal system and intracellular cholesterol homeostasis is Niemann-Pick type C (NPC) disease. The genes responsible for NPC disease have been identified, and the encoded Niemann-Pick C1 (NPC1) and Niemann-Pick C2 (HE1/NPC2) proteins are currently the subject of intense investigation. This review provides a detailed examination of NPC1 and HE1/NPC2 in regulating the transport of cholesterol through the late endosomal/lysosomal system to other cellular compartments responsible for maintaining intracellular cholesterol homeostasis, and how defective function of these proteins may be responsible for the pathophysiology associated with NPC disease.  相似文献   

6.
The metabolism of [stearoyl-1-14C]- and [choline-methyl-14C]sphingomyelin, [stearoyl-1-14C]ceramide-1-phospho-N,N-dimethylethanolamine (demethylsphingomyelin) and [choline-methyl-14C]phosphatidylcholine was measured 1, 3 and 5 days after uptake from the media of cultured skin fibroblasts. This was done to measure the relative contributions of lysosomal sphingomyelinase and plasma membrane phosphocholine transferase on the metabolism of sphingomyelin, a component of all cell membranes. By using cell lines from controls and from patients with Niemann-Pick disease and other lysosomal storage diseases, it was concluded that a significant portion (10-15%) of the observed degradation of sphingomyelin is due to exchange of the phosphocholine moiety producing phosphatidylcholine. Although cell lines from type A and B Niemann-Pick disease have only 0-2% of lysosomal sphingomyelinase activity measured in vitro, three cell lines from type B Niemann-Pick disease could metabolize 54.4% of the labeled sphingomyelin by day 3 while cell lines from type A Niemann-Pick disease could only metabolize 18.5% by day 3. This compares to 86.7% metabolized in control cells by day 3. Cells from one patient with juvenile Niemann-Pick disease and one with type D Niemann-Pick disease metabolized sphingomyelin normally while cells from two other patients with juvenile or type C Niemann-Pick disease could only metabolize 58.2% by day 3. Cells from patients with I-cell disease and 'lactosylceramidosis' also demonstrated decreased metabolism of sphingomyelin (55.1 and 54.9% by day 3, respectively). Cells from the patient with Farber disease accumulated [14C]stearic acid-labeled ceramide produced from [14C]sphingomyelin. Studies with choline-labeled sphingomyelin and phosphatidylcholine demonstrated that phosphocholine exchange takes place in either direction in the cells, and this is normal in Niemann-Pick disease. Studies in cells from patients with all clinical types of sphingomyelinase deficiency have led to new methods for diagnosis and prognosis and to a better understanding of sphingomyelin metabolism.  相似文献   

7.
Abstract: Niemann-Pick disease types A and B are two clinical forms of an inherited lysosomal storage disorder characterized by accumulation of sphingomyelin due to deficient activity of the lysosomal enzyme, acid sphingomyelinase. Patients with both types have hepatosplenomegaly, but only those with type A have nervous system involvement leading to death in early infancy. The residual activities of lysosomal sphingomyelinase in types A and B have never been well characterized because of limitations in both in vitro enzymatic assays and loading tests on intact cells. To evaluate the effective level of sphingomyelinase activity, intact, living cultured Epstein-Barr virus-transformed lymphoid cells were incubated with a radiolabeled sphingomyelin that was first associated to human low-density lipoproteins. This lipoprotein-associated sphingomyelin was targeted to lysosomes, thereby permitting selective hydrolysis by the lysosomal sphingomyelinase. Short-term pulse-chase experiments allowed the determination of the initial rates of degradation; in normal cells, the half-time of sphingomyelin degradation averaged 4.5 h. Whereas cells from the severe neuronopathic type A form of Niemann-Pick disease exhibited about 0.15% residual sphingomyelinase activity, cells from patients with the visceral type B form exhibited about 4%, i.e., 27 times more. Cells from heterozygous Niemann-Pick subjects showed about 70% residual activity. These results provide the first approach to measuring the effective activity of a lysosomal enzyme and represent an accurate method for the differential diagnosis of Niemann-Pick disease types A and B. They also support the hypothesis of relationships among the effective in situ residual enzyme activity, the amount of stored substrate, and the severity of the ensuing lysosomal storage disorder.  相似文献   

8.
《Autophagy》2013,9(2):234-235
Alterations in macroautophagy (hereafter referred to as “autophagy”) are a common feature of lysosomal storage disorders, and have been hypothesized to play a major role in the pathogenesis of these diseases. We have recently reported multiple defects in autophagy contributing to the lysosomal storage disorder Niemann-Pick type C (NPC). These include increased formation of autophagosomes, slowed turnover of autophagosomes secondary to impaired lysosomal proteolysis, and delivery of stored lipids to the lysosome via autophagy. The study summarized here describes novel methods for the interrogation of individual stages of the autophagic pathway, and suggests mechanisms by which lipid storage may result in broader lysosomal dysfunction.  相似文献   

9.
Lysosomal involvement in cellular turnover of plasma membrane sphingomyelin   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
At least two isoenzymes of sphingomyelinase (sphingomyelin cholinephosphohydrolase, EC 3.1.4.12), including lysosomal acid sphingomyelinase and nonlysosomal magnesium-dependent neutral sphingomyelinase, catalyse the degradation of sphingomyelin in cultured human skin fibroblasts. A genetically determined disorder of sphingomyelin metabolism, type A Niemann-Pick disease, is characterized by a deficiency of lysosomal acid sphingomyelinase. To investigate the involvement of lysosomes in the degradation of cellular membrane sphingomyelin, we have undertaken studies to compare the turnover of plasma membrane sphingomyelin in fibroblasts from a patient with type A Niemann-Pick disease, which completely lack acid sphingomyelinase activity but retain nonlysosomal neutral sphingomyelinase activity, with turnover in fibroblasts from normal individuals. Plasma membrane sphingomyelin was labeled by incubating cells at low temperature with phosphatidylcholine vesicles containing radioactive sphingomyelin. A fluorescent analog of sphingomyelin, N-4-nitrobenzo-2-oxa-1,3-diazoleaminocaproyl sphingosylphosphorylcholine (NBD-sphingomyelin) is seen to be readily transferred at low temperature from phosphatidylcholine liposomes to the plasma membranes of cultured human fibroblasts. Moreover, when kinetic studies were done in parallel, a constant ratio of [14C]oleoylsphingosylphosphorylcholine ( [14C]sphingomyelin) to NBD-sphingomyelin was taken up at low temperature by the fibroblast cells, suggesting that [14C]sphingomyelin undergoes a similar transfer. The comparison of sphingomyelin turnover at 37 degrees C in normal fibroblasts compared to Niemann-Pick diseased fibroblasts shows that a rapid turnover of plasma membrane-associated sphingomyelin within the first 30 min appears to be similar in both normal and Niemann-Pick diseased cells. This rapid turnover appears to be primarily due to rapid removal of the [14C]sphingomyelin from the cell surface into the incubation medium. During long-term incubation, an increase in the formation of [14C]ceramide correlating with the degradation of [14C]sphingomyelin is observed in normal fibroblasts. In contrast, the level of [14C]ceramide remains constant in Niemann-Pick diseased cells, which correlates with a higher level of intact [14C]sphingomyelin remaining in these cells compared to normal cells.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
An ultrastructural study was performed in a series of liver biopsies from patients with various lysosomal storage diseases to evaluate the extent of lysosomal hypertrophy and hyperplasia in Ito cells (ICs). In previous studies this has been considered to be absent or only rudimentary. Lysosomal storage was recognized by the presence of storage cytosomes surrounded by limiting membranes and by the appearance of their content which was identical to that in other hepatic storage lysosomes. Storage was found in sphingomyelinase deficiency (Niemann-Pick disease types A, B), in Wolman's disease, GM1 gangliosidosis, mucopolysaccharidosis and in multiple sulphatase deficiency. In type C Niemann-Pick disease it was virtually absent with the exception of cases with prominent hepatic symptomatology. Storage was of variable degree and was accompanied by a decrease in the physiological fat content (cytoplasmic lipid droplets). The degree to which ICs were affected correlated only with the extent to which nonspecific fibroblasts were involved in the specimens studied and thus seems to reflect storage in the fibroblastic population.  相似文献   

11.
Niemann-Pick type C1 disease is an autosomal-recessive lysosomal storage disorder. Loss of function of the npc1 gene leads to abnormal accumulation of free cholesterol and sphingolipids within the late endosomal and lysosomal compartments resulting in progressive neurodegeneration and dysmyelination. Here, we show that oligodendroglial cells secrete cholesterol by exosomes when challenged with cholesterol or U18666A, which induces late endosomal cholesterol accumulation. Up-regulation of exosomal cholesterol release was also observed after siRNA-mediated knockdown of NPC1 and in fibroblasts derived from NPC1 patients and could be reversed by expression of wild-type NPC1. We provide evidence that exosomal cholesterol secretion depends on the presence of flotillin. Our findings indicate that exosomal release of cholesterol may serve as a cellular mechanism to partially bypass the traffic block that results in the toxic lysosomal cholesterol accumulation in Niemann-Pick type C1 disease. Furthermore, we suggest that secretion of cholesterol by exosomes contributes to maintain cellular cholesterol homeostasis.  相似文献   

12.
Niemann-Pick type C1 (NPC1) is a late endosomal/lysosomal transmembrane protein involved in the cellular transport of glycosphingolipids and cholesterol that is mutated in a majority of patients with Niemann-Pick C neurodegenerative disease. We found that NPC1-deficient mice lacked Valpha14-Jalpha18 NKT cells, a major population of CD1d-restricted T cells that is conserved in humans. NPC1-deficient mice also exhibited marked defects in the presentation of Sphingomonas cell wall Ags to NKT cells and in bacterial clearance in vivo. A synthetic fluorescent alpha-glycosylceramide analog of the Sphingomonas Ag trafficked to the lysosome of wild-type cells but accumulated in the late endosome of NPC1-deficient cells. These findings reveal a blockade of lipid trafficking between endosome and lysosome as a consequence of NPC1 deficiency and suggest a common mechanism for the defects in lipid presentation and development of Valpha14-Jalpha18 NKT cells.  相似文献   

13.
The 20-fold increase of free sphingoid bases found in liver from a murine model of Niemann-Pick type C (NPC) combined to the NPC-like phenotype induced by addition of sphinganine to normal fibroblast cultures prompted us to investigate the potential involvement of these compounds in the human disease. The contents of sphingosine and sphinganine were measured in liver, spleen, brain and skin fibroblast cultures by a sensitive HPLC method. In liver and spleen from NPC patients, a 6- to 24-fold elevation of sphingosine and sphinganine already prominent at the fetal stage of the disease was observed, while no clear increase could be evidenced in brain tissue. A significant increase, not modulated by the intralysosomal content of free cholesterol, also occurred in skin fibroblast cultures. To investigate the specificity of these findings, other lysosomal storage disorders were studied. A striking accumulation was found in liver and spleen (24- to 36-fold) from patients with Niemann-Pick disease type A and B (sphingomyelinase-deficient forms), and in cerebral cortex of type A Niemann-Pick disease. A significant storage also occurred in Sandhoff disease, while several other sphingolipidoses showed a moderate elevation. In all cases but Sandhoff disease brain, the sphingosine/sphinganine ratio remained unchanged, suggesting that the accumulated free sphingoid bases derived from sphingolipid catabolism. Formation of complexes between sphingosine and the lipid material accumulated in lysosomes might be a general mechanism in lysosomal lipidoses. In NPC, however, an increase of free sphingoid bases disproportionate to the degree of lysosomal storage and a specific involvement of cultured fibroblasts suggested a more complex or combined mechanism.  相似文献   

14.
Disrupted cellular Ca2+ signaling is believed to play a role in a number of human diseases including lysosomal storage diseases (LSD). LSDs are a group of ∼50 diseases caused predominantly by mutations in lysosomal proteins that result in accumulation of macromolecules within the lysosome. We recently reported that Niemann-Pick type C (NPC) is the first human disease to be associated with defective lysosomal Ca2+ uptake and defective NAADP-mediated lysosomal Ca2+ release. These defects in NPC cells leads to the disruption in endocytosis and subsequent lipid storage that is a feature of this disease. In contrast, Chediak-Higashi Syndrome cells have been reported to have enhanced lysosomal Ca2+ uptake whilst the TRPML1 protein defective in mucolipidosis type IV is believed to function as a Ca2+ channel. In this review we provide a summary of the current knowledge on the role of lysosomal Ca2+ signaling in the pathogenesis of this group of diseases.  相似文献   

15.
Niemann-Pick type C disease (NPC) is a neurovisceral (or, extremely rarely, only visceral) lipidosis caused by mutations in the NPC1 gene or, in a few patients, the HE1 gene, which encode sterol regulating proteins. NPC is characterised by a complex lipid anomaly including a disturbed cellular trafficking of cholesterol but also multi-lipid storage in visceral organs and brain. Lipids were studied using conventional methods in enlarged spleens that had been removed from five patients for different therapeutic and diagnostic reasons and found to have microscopic signs of lysosomal storage disease not suspected clinically. The spleen lipid findings with a concurrent accumulation of cholesterol, sphingomyelin and glucosylceramide (Acc-CSG) allowed us to suggest NPC diagnoses for these patients, who were free of neurologic symptoms. From two patients no material for confirmatory studies was available, but in two other patients NPC diagnoses could be confirmed with the filipin cytochemical cholesterol assay and NPC1 gene analysis, respectively. However, these tests and also HE1 gene analysis were negative in a third patient. Since the Acc-CSG lipid pattern seems to indicate a multi-lipid trafficking defect rather than being highly specific for NPC, this patient, if not affected with very atypical NPC, may be a candidate for a different lipid trafficking disorder. The Acc-CSG pattern was considered to be similar to the lipid pattern known for the lipid rafts, these functional cell structures being probably disorganised and accumulated in late endosomes and lysosomes of NPC cells.  相似文献   

16.
Understanding neurodegenerative disease progression and its treatment requires the systematic characterization and manipulation of relevant cell types and molecular pathways. The neurodegenerative lysosomal storage disorder Niemann-Pick disease type C (NPC) is highly amenable to genetic approaches that allow exploration of the disease biology at the organismal, cellular and molecular level. Although NPC is a rare disease, genetic analysis of the associated neuropathology promises to provide insight into the logic of disease neural circuitry, selective neuron vulnerability and neural-glial interactions. The ability to control the disorder cell-autonomously and in naturally occurring spontaneous animal models that recapitulate many aspects of the human disease allows for an unparalleled dissection of the disease neurobiology in vivo. Here, we review progress in mouse-model-based studies of NPC disease, specifically focusing on the subtype that is caused by a deficiency in NPC1, a sterol-binding late endosomal membrane protein involved in lipid trafficking. We also discuss recent findings and future directions in NPC disease research that are pertinent to understanding the cellular and molecular mechanisms underlying neurodegeneration in general.  相似文献   

17.
The effects of dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO) on sphingomyelinase activity measured at pH range 3.5-8.0 were examined in normal and Niemann-Pick disease type A, B and C fibroblasts culture. In normal cells, a minor activity was observed at pH 7.5, which was 3- to 4-fold lower than a major one at pH 5.0. Both activities at pH 5.0 and 7.5 were Mg2+-independent and localized to lysosomes. Niemann-Pick type C cells had 30-50% residual sphingomyelinase activity at both pH 5.0 and 7.5, as compared to normal control cells, whereas type A and B cells exhibited virtually no activity over the entire pH range examined. Treatment with 2% DMSO caused a marked increase in sphingomyelinase activities at pH 5.0 and 7.5 in normal and Niemann-Pick disease type C cells, while in type A and B cells, both activities remained virtually unchanged after DMSO treatment. The increase in sphingomyelinase activity at pH 5.0 induced in normal cells by DMSO resulted in an increase in the Vmax without a substantial change in the Km and was inhibited by the simultaneous addition of 10 micrograms/ml of cycloheximide. By comparison, a less than 2-fold increase in other lysosomal hydrolase activities was observed after DMSO treatment in all cell lines examined.  相似文献   

18.
Vitamin E (α-tocopherol) is the major lipid-soluble antioxidant in many species. Niemann-Pick type C (NPC) disease is a lysosomal storage disorder caused by mutations in the NPC1 or NPC2 gene, which regulates lipid transport through the endocytic pathway. NPC disease is characterized by massive intracellular accumulation of unesterified cholesterol and other lipids in lysosomal vesicles. We examined the roles that NPC1/2 proteins play in the intracellular trafficking of tocopherol. Reduction of NPC1 or NPC2 expression or function in cultured cells caused a marked lysosomal accumulation of vitamin E in cultured cells. In vivo, tocopherol significantly accumulated in murine Npc1-null and Npc2-null livers, Npc2-null cerebella, and Npc1-null cerebral cortices. Plasma tocopherol levels were within the normal range in Npc1-null and Npc2-null mice, and in plasma samples from human NPC patients. The binding affinity of tocopherol to the purified sterol-binding domain of NPC1 and to purified NPC2 was significantly weaker than that of cholesterol (measurements kindly performed by R. Infante, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX). Taken together, our observations indicate that functionality of NPC1/2 proteins is necessary for proper bioavailability of vitamin E and that the NPC pathology might involve tissue-specific perturbations of vitamin E status.  相似文献   

19.
Alterations in lipid homeostasis are implicated in several neurodegenerative diseases, although the mechanisms responsible are poorly understood. We evaluated the impact of cholesterol accumulation, induced by U18666A, quinacrine or mutations in the cholesterol transporting Niemann-Pick disease type C1 (NPC1) protein, on lysosomal stability and sensitivity to lysosome-mediated cell death. We found that neurons with lysosomal cholesterol accumulation were protected from oxidative stress-induced apoptosis. In addition, human fibroblasts with cholesterol-loaded lysosomes showed higher lysosomal membrane stability than controls. Previous studies have shown that cholesterol accumulation is accompanied by the storage of lipids such as sphingomyelin, glycosphingolipids and sphingosine and an up regulation of lysosomal associated membrane protein-2 (LAMP-2), which may also influence lysosomal stability. However, in this study the use of myriocin and LAMP deficient fibroblasts excluded these factors as responsible for the rescuing effect and instead suggested that primarily lysosomal cholesterol content determineD the cellular sensitivity to toxic insults. Further strengthening this concept, depletion of cholesterol using methyl-β-cyclodextrin or 25-hydroxycholesterol decreased the stability of lysosomes and cells became more prone to undergo apoptosis. In conclusion, cholesterol content regulated lysosomal membrane permeabilization and thereby influenced cell death sensitivity. Our data suggests that lysosomal cholesterol modulation might be used as a therapeutic strategy for conditions associated with accelerated or repressed apoptosis.  相似文献   

20.
Lysosomal lipid storage diseases, or lipidoses, are inherited metabolic disorders in which typically lipids accumulate in cells and tissues. Complex lipids, such as glycosphingolipids, are constitutively degraded within the endolysosomal system by soluble hydrolytic enzymes with the help of lipid binding proteins in a sequential manner. Because of a functionally impaired hydrolase or auxiliary protein, their lipid substrates cannot be degraded, accumulate in the lysosome, and slowly spread to other intracellular membranes. In Niemann-Pick type C disease, cholesterol transport is impaired and unesterified cholesterol accumulates in the late endosome. In most lysosomal lipid storage diseases, the accumulation of one or few lipids leads to the coprecipitation of other hydrophobic substances in the endolysosomal system, such as lipids and proteins, causing a “traffic jam.” This can impair lysosomal function, such as delivery of nutrients through the endolysosomal system, leading to a state of cellular starvation. Therapeutic approaches are currently restricted to mild forms of diseases with significant residual catabolic activities and without brain involvement.Lysosomal lipid storage diseases are a group of inherited catabolic disorders in which typically large amounts of complex lipids accumulate in cells and tissues. Macromolecules such as complex lipids and oligosaccharides are constitutively degraded in the acidic compartments of the cell, the endosomes, and lysosomes, into their building blocks. The resulting catabolites are exported to the cytosol and reused in cellular metabolism. When lysosomal function is impaired because of a defect in a catabolic step, degradation cannot proceed normally and undegraded compounds accumulate. Lysosomal lipid storage diseases comprise mainly the sphingolipidoses, Niemann-Pick type C disease (NPC), and Wolman disease, including the less severe form of this disease, called cholesteryl ester storage. NPC is a complex lipid storage disease mainly characterized by the accumulation of unesterified cholesterol in the late endosomal/lysosomal compartment (Bi and Liao 2010). The sphingolipidoses are caused by defects in genes encoding proteins involved in the lysosomal degradation of sphingolipids (Kolter and Sandhoff 2006). First reports on these diseases were given more than a century ago. Already in 1881, Warren Tay described the clinical symptoms of a disease, which is today called Tay-Sachs disease (Tay 1881). After Christian de Duve discovered the lysosome in 1955 (de Duve 2005), Henri-Géry Hers established the first correlation between an enzyme deficiency and a lysosomal storage disorder (Pompe’s disease) in 1963 (Hers 1963). In the following decades, the enzymes and cofactors deficient in the sphingolipidoses have been identified. Though lysosomal lipid storage diseases have been known for a long time, treatment is only available for a few mild forms of the diseases, such as the adult forms of Gaucher disease (Barton et al. 1991). For several lysosomal storage diseases, therapies like enzyme replacement or bone marrow transplantation are in the clinical trial stage (Platt and Lachmann 2009). For a long time, lysosomal diseases have been considered a problem of superabundance (storage) in which the storage material can slowly spread to other cellular membranes, impairing their function. More recently, it came into focus that massive storage prevents lysosomal functions such as nutrition delivery through the endolysosomal system, leading to a state of cellular starvation. In mouse models of both GM1 and GM2 gangliosidoses iron is progressively depleted in brain tissue. Administration of iron prolonged survival in the diseased mice by up to 38% (Jeyakumar et al. 2009).  相似文献   

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