Literature DB >> 2451509

Defective lysosomal release of glycoprotein-derived sialic acid in fibroblasts from patients with sialic acid storage disease.

K Mendla1, J Baumkötter, C Rosenau, B Ulrich-Bott, M Cantz.   

Abstract

Fibroblasts from patients with sialic acid storage disease (SASD), sialidosis, mucolipidosis II, and from normal controls, were incubated in the presence of the glycoprotein fetuin that was tritium-labelled in its sialic acid residues by the periodate/[3H]borohydride reduction method, and the fate of the intracellular radioactive sialic acid (C7-sialic acid) followed in pulse-chase experiments. The model glycoprotein was readily endocytosed and degraded, more than 90% of the radioactivity being trichloroacetic acid (TCA)-soluble after 4 days of incubation. In all of the patients' fibroblasts, there was an increased accumulation of TCA-soluble radioactivity and, upon chase, a much lower rate of elimination than in normal controls. Gel chromatography of the material from the chase experiment showed that, in normal cells, most of the radioactivity at zero time behaved as free C7-sialic acid. This, as well as material of larger size (sialyloligosaccharides), was very much diminished by 48 h. In cells from two patients with SASD, there were large peaks both in the sialic acid and oligosaccharide positions; whereas the oligosaccharides were somewhat decreased by the end of the chase period, the sialic acid was essentially unchanged. In sialidosis fibroblasts, the radioactive material consisted of oligosaccharides, but very little C7-sialic acid; the elimination of the oligosaccharides was retarded. In normal cells, about 80% of the radioactivity released into the medium after 48 h chase behaved as free C7-sialic acid upon gel chromatography and t.l.c. Subcellular fractionation in Percoll gradients showed that the radioactive C7-sialic acid remaining in normal cells after 48 h of chase was mainly localized in the cytosol. In SASD cells, on the other hand, it was associated with lysosomal fractions which, unexpectedly, exhibited an abnormally low density. Our findings demonstrate that SASD fibroblasts degrade the sialoglycoprotein but, unlike normal cells, accumulate the liberated C7-sialic acid along with sialyloligosaccharides in their lysosomes. The results therefore support the concept of a defective transport system for sialic acid in the lysosomal membrane of patients with SASD.

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Year:  1988        PMID: 2451509      PMCID: PMC1148842          DOI: 10.1042/bj2500261

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biochem J        ISSN: 0264-6021            Impact factor:   3.857


  23 in total

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Journal:  Am J Hum Genet       Date:  1979-01       Impact factor: 11.025

2.  Two species of lysosomal organelles in cultured human fibroblasts.

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Journal:  Cell       Date:  1979-05       Impact factor: 41.582

3.  Specificity studies on the oligosaccharide neuraminidase of human fibroblasts.

Authors:  K Mendla; M Cantz
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4.  Familial lysosomal storage disease with generalized vacuolization and sialic aciduria. Sporadic Salla disease.

Authors:  K Wolburg-Buchholz; W Schlote; J Baumkötter; M Cantz; H Holder; K Harzer
Journal:  Neuropediatrics       Date:  1985-05       Impact factor: 1.947

5.  Free N-acetylneuraminic acid in tissues in Salla disease and the enzymes involved in its metabolism.

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Journal:  Eur J Biochem       Date:  1983-01-17

6.  N-acetylneuraminic acid and sialoglycoconjugate metabolism in fibroblasts from a patient with generalized N-acetylneuraminic acid storage disease.

Authors:  L W Hancock; A L Horwitz; G Dawson
Journal:  Biochim Biophys Acta       Date:  1983-10-04

7.  Cystine transport is defective in isolated leukocyte lysosomes from patients with cystinosis.

Authors:  W A Gahl; N Bashan; F Tietze; I Bernardini; J D Schulman
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8.  Infantile form of sialic acid storage disorder: clinical, ultrastructural, and biochemical studies in two siblings.

Authors:  M Tondeur; J Libert; E Vamos; F Van Hoof; G H Thomas; G Strecker
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9.  Sialic acid storage disease with sialuria: clinical and biochemical features in the severe infantile type.

Authors:  R E Stevenson; M Lubinsky; H A Taylor; D A Wenger; R J Schroer; P M Olmstead
Journal:  Pediatrics       Date:  1983-10       Impact factor: 7.124

10.  Defect in vitamin B12 release from lysosomes: newly described inborn error of vitamin B12 metabolism.

Authors:  D S Rosenblatt; A Hosack; N V Matiaszuk; B A Cooper; R Laframboise
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3.  Sialic acid storage diseases. A multiple lysosomal transport defect for acidic monosaccharides.

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Review 6.  Disorders of glycoprotein degradation.

Authors:  M Cantz; B Ulrich-Bott
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Journal:  Eur J Pediatr       Date:  1992-08       Impact factor: 3.183

Review 8.  Free sialic acid storage disorder: Progress and promise.

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9.  Inhibition of the key enzyme of sialic acid biosynthesis by C6-Se modified N-acetylmannosamine analogs.

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10.  Label-free mass spectrometry proteome quantification of human embryonic kidney cells following 24 hours of sialic acid overproduction.

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