G(M2)-ganglioside metabolism in situ in mucolipidosis IV fibroblasts.

Neurochem Res

NYU Medical Center, Dept. of Neurology, New York, NY 10016, USA.

Published: April 1999

Mucolipidosis IV (ML IV) is an inherited lysosomal disorder for which the primary biochemical defect has not been identified. In order to detect any defect in glycosphingolipid metabolism, we have examined the metabolism of sphingosine-labeled (3H)G(M2) in situ in fibroblasts from patients diagnosed with ML IV. Fibroblasts were exposed for 10 days in medium containing (3H)G(M2) (15 uM; Sp. Act. 35000 cpm/nmole), washed, harvested and analyzed for radioactivity in extracted lipids. Control cells metabolized about half of the internalized ganglioside, mostly to ceramide. In ML IV fibroblasts, 70-80% of the cellular radioactivity was present as G(M2) indicating reduced degradation. This is not as severe as in G(M2) gangliosidosis as a small amount of G(M2) was metabolized in ML IV cells to ceramide. Since there is no defect in the lysosomal enzyme profile in these cells, it is possible that an abnormality in the translocation of membrane constituents to the lysosomes may explain the slower ganglioside metabolism.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1023/a:1022523527283DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

gm2-ganglioside metabolism
4
metabolism situ
4
situ mucolipidosis
4
fibroblasts
4
mucolipidosis fibroblasts
4
fibroblasts mucolipidosis
4
mucolipidosis inherited
4
inherited lysosomal
4
lysosomal disorder
4
disorder primary
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!