Literature DB >> 18450647

GM2/GD2 and GM3 gangliosides have no effect on cellular cholesterol pools or turnover in normal or NPC1 mice.

Hao Li1, Stephen D Turley, Benny Liu, Joyce J Repa, John M Dietschy.   

Abstract

These studies investigated the role of gangliosides in governing the steady-state concentration and turnover of unesterified cholesterol in normal tissues and in those of mice carrying the NPC1 mutation. In animals lacking either GM2/GD2 or GM3 synthase, tissue cholesterol concentrations and synthesis rates were normal in nearly all organs, and whole-animal sterol pools and turnover also were not different from control animals. Mice lacking both synthases, however, had small elevations in cholesterol concentrations in several organs, and the whole-animal cholesterol pool was marginally elevated. None of these three groups, however, had changes in any parameter of cholesterol homeostasis in the major regions of the central nervous system. When either the GM2/GD2 or GM3 synthase activity was deleted in mice lacking NPC1 function, the clinical phenotype was not changed, but lifespan was shortened. However, the abnormal cholesterol accumulation seen in the tissues of the NPC1 mouse was unaffected by loss of either synthase, and clinical and molecular markers of hepatic and cerebellar disease also were unchanged. These studies demonstrate that hydrophobic interactions between cholesterol and various gangliosides do not play an important role in determining cellular cholesterol concentrations in the normal animal or in the mouse with the NPC1 mutation.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18450647      PMCID: PMC3072295          DOI: 10.1194/jlr.M800180-JLR200

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Lipid Res        ISSN: 0022-2275            Impact factor:   5.922


  50 in total

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Review 6.  Receptor-mediated endocytosis: insights from the lipoprotein receptor system.

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Review 7.  Thematic review series: brain Lipids. Cholesterol metabolism in the central nervous system during early development and in the mature animal.

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Journal:  J Lipid Res       Date:  1981-05       Impact factor: 5.922

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10.  Depletion of plasma-membrane sphingomyelin rapidly alters the distribution of cholesterol between plasma membranes and intracellular cholesterol pools in cultured fibroblasts.

Authors:  J P Slotte; E L Bierman
Journal:  Biochem J       Date:  1988-03-15       Impact factor: 3.857

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Review 5.  Cholesterol in Niemann-Pick Type C disease.

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Review 6.  Complex lipid trafficking in Niemann-Pick disease type C.

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8.  Cholesterogenic genes expression in brain and liver of ganglioside-deficient mice.

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