118 results on '"Niemann-Pick C1"'
Search Results
2. An overview of the role of Niemann-pick C1 (NPC1) in viral infections and inhibition of viral infections through NPC1 inhibitor
- Author
-
Irfan Ahmad, Seyede Narges Fatemi, Mohammad Ghaheri, Ali Rezvani, Dorsa Azizi Khezri, Mohammad Natami, Saman Yasamineh, Omid Gholizadeh, and Zahra Bahmanyar
- Subjects
Niemann-pick C1 ,Viral infection ,Ebola virus ,SARS-CoV-2 ,NPC1 inhibitor ,Medicine ,Cytology ,QH573-671 - Abstract
Abstract Viruses communicate with their hosts through interactions with proteins, lipids, and carbohydrate moieties on the plasma membrane (PM), often resulting in viral absorption via receptor-mediated endocytosis. Many viruses cannot multiply unless the host’s cholesterol level remains steady. The large endo/lysosomal membrane protein (MP) Niemann-Pick C1 (NPC1), which is involved in cellular cholesterol transport, is a crucial intracellular receptor for viral infection. NPC1 is a ubiquitous housekeeping protein essential for the controlled cholesterol efflux from lysosomes. Its human absence results in Niemann-Pick type C disease, a deadly lysosomal storage disorder. NPC1 is a crucial viral receptor and an essential host component for filovirus entrance, infection, and pathogenesis. For filovirus entrance, NPC1’s cellular function is unnecessary. Furthermore, blocking NPC1 limits the entry and replication of the African swine fever virus by disrupting cholesterol homeostasis. Cell entrance of quasi-enveloped variants of hepatitis A virus and hepatitis E virus has also been linked to NPC1. By controlling cholesterol levels, NPC1 is also necessary for the effective release of reovirus cores into the cytoplasm. Drugs that limit NPC1’s activity are effective against several viruses, including SARS-CoV and Type I Feline Coronavirus (F-CoV). These findings reveal NPC1 as a potential therapeutic target for treating viral illnesses and demonstrate its significance for several viral infections. This article provides a synopsis of NPC1’s function in viral infections and a review of NPC1 inhibitors that may be used to counteract viral infections. Video Abstract Graphical Abstract
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. An overview of the role of Niemann-pick C1 (NPC1) in viral infections and inhibition of viral infections through NPC1 inhibitor.
- Author
-
Ahmad, Irfan, Fatemi, Seyede Narges, Ghaheri, Mohammad, Rezvani, Ali, Khezri, Dorsa Azizi, Natami, Mohammad, Yasamineh, Saman, Gholizadeh, Omid, and Bahmanyar, Zahra
- Subjects
- *
VIRUS diseases , *AFRICAN swine fever virus , *HEPATITIS E virus - Abstract
Viruses communicate with their hosts through interactions with proteins, lipids, and carbohydrate moieties on the plasma membrane (PM), often resulting in viral absorption via receptor-mediated endocytosis. Many viruses cannot multiply unless the host's cholesterol level remains steady. The large endo/lysosomal membrane protein (MP) Niemann-Pick C1 (NPC1), which is involved in cellular cholesterol transport, is a crucial intracellular receptor for viral infection. NPC1 is a ubiquitous housekeeping protein essential for the controlled cholesterol efflux from lysosomes. Its human absence results in Niemann-Pick type C disease, a deadly lysosomal storage disorder. NPC1 is a crucial viral receptor and an essential host component for filovirus entrance, infection, and pathogenesis. For filovirus entrance, NPC1's cellular function is unnecessary. Furthermore, blocking NPC1 limits the entry and replication of the African swine fever virus by disrupting cholesterol homeostasis. Cell entrance of quasi-enveloped variants of hepatitis A virus and hepatitis E virus has also been linked to NPC1. By controlling cholesterol levels, NPC1 is also necessary for the effective release of reovirus cores into the cytoplasm. Drugs that limit NPC1's activity are effective against several viruses, including SARS-CoV and Type I Feline Coronavirus (F-CoV). These findings reveal NPC1 as a potential therapeutic target for treating viral illnesses and demonstrate its significance for several viral infections. This article provides a synopsis of NPC1's function in viral infections and a review of NPC1 inhibitors that may be used to counteract viral infections. -4T4PJskCMhCY2kYwCvwTk Video Abstract [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Pharmacologically induced endolysosomal cholesterol imbalance through clinically licensed drugs itraconazole and fluoxetine impairs Ebola virus infection in vitro
- Author
-
Susann Kummer, Angelika Lander, Jonas Goretzko, Norman Kirchoff, Ursula Rescher, and Sebastian Schloer
- Subjects
ebola virus ,niemann-pick c1 ,itraconazole ,fiasma ,fluoxetine ,viral entry ,endolysosomal interference ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
Ebola virus disease (EVD) is a severe and frequently lethal disease caused by Ebola virus (EBOV). The latest occasional EVD outbreak (2013–2016) in Western African, which was accompanied by a high fatality rate, showed the great potential of epidemic and pandemic spread. Antiviral therapies against EBOV are very limited, strain-dependent (only antibody therapies are available) and mostly restricted to symptomatic treatment, illustrating the urgent need for novel antiviral strategies. Thus, we evaluated the effect of the clinically widely used antifungal itraconazole and the antidepressant fluoxetine for a repurposing against EBOV infection. While itraconazole, similar to U18666A, directly binds to and inhibits the endosomal membrane protein Niemann-Pick C1 (NPC1), fluoxetine, which belongs to the structurally unrelated group of weakly basic, amphiphile so-called “functional inhibitors of acid sphingomyelinase” (FIASMA) indirectly acts on the lysosome-residing acid sphingomyelinase via enzyme detachment leading to subsequent lysosomal degradation. Both, the drug-induced endolysosomal cholesterol accumulation and the altered endolysosomal pH, might interfere with the fusion of viral and endolysosomal membrane, preventing infection with EBOV. We further provide evidence that cholesterol imbalance is a conserved cross-species mechanism to hamper EBOV infection. Thus, exploring the endolysosomal host–pathogen interface as a suitable antiviral treatment may offer a general strategy to combat EBOV infection.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Ebola Virus: Overview, Genome Analysis and Its Antagonists
- Author
-
Qazi, Sahar, Khanam, Ayesha, Raza, Khalid, and Ahmad, Shamim I., editor
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Redirecting Imipramine against Bluetongue Virus Infection: Insights from a Genome-wide Haploid Screening Study.
- Author
-
John, Lijo, Vernersson, Caroline, Kwon, Hyesoo, Elling, Ulrich, Penninger, Josef M., and Mirazimi, Ali
- Subjects
BLUETONGUE virus ,VIRUS diseases ,IMIPRAMINE ,MEDICAL screening ,MEMBRANE proteins ,ANTIVIRAL agents - Abstract
Bluetongue virus (BTV), an arbovirus of ruminants, is a causative agent of numerous epidemics around the world. Due to the emergence of novel reassortant BTV strains and new outbreaks, there is an unmet need for efficacious antivirals. In this study, we used an improved haploid screening platform to identify the relevant host factors for BTV infection. Our screening tool identified and validated the host factor Niemann–Pick C1 (NPC1), a lysosomal membrane protein that is involved in lysosomal cholesterol transport, as a critical factor in BTV infection. This finding prompted us to investigate the possibility of testing imipramine, an antidepressant drug known to inhibit NPC1 function by interfering with intracellular cholesterol trafficking. In this study, we evaluated the sensitivity of BTV to imipramine using in vitro assays. Our results demonstrate that imipramine pretreatment inhibited in vitro replication and progeny release of BTV-4, BTV-8, and BTV-16. Collectively, our findings highlight the importance of NPC1 for BTV infection and recommend the reprofiling of imipramine as a potential antiviral drug against BTV. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Spatiotemporal Developmental Upregulation of Prestin Correlates With the Severity and Location of Cyclodextrin-Induced Outer Hair Cell Loss and Hearing Loss
- Author
-
Dalian Ding, Haiyan Jiang, Senthilvelan Manohar, Xiaopeng Liu, Li Li, Guang-Di Chen, and Richard Salvi
- Subjects
cyclodextrin ,prestin ,Niemann-Pick C1 ,spiral ganglion neurons ,outer hair cells ,inner hair cells ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
2-Hyroxypropyl-beta-cyclodextrin (HPβCD) is being used to treat Niemann-Pick C1, a fatal neurodegenerative disease caused by abnormal cholesterol metabolism. HPβCD slows disease progression, but unfortunately causes severe, rapid onset hearing loss by destroying the outer hair cells (OHC). HPβCD-induced damage is believed to be related to the expression of prestin in OHCs. Because prestin is postnatally upregulated from the cochlear base toward the apex, we hypothesized that HPβCD ototoxicity would spread from the high-frequency base toward the low-frequency apex of the cochlea. Consistent with this hypothesis, cochlear hearing impairments and OHC loss rapidly spread from the high-frequency base toward the low-frequency apex of the cochlea when HPβCD administration shifted from postnatal day 3 (P3) to P28. HPβCD-induced histopathologies were initially confined to the OHCs, but between 4- and 6-weeks post-treatment, there was an unexpected, rapid and massive expansion of the lesion to include most inner hair cells (IHC), pillar cells (PC), peripheral auditory nerve fibers, and spiral ganglion neurons at location where OHCs were missing. The magnitude and spatial extent of HPβCD-induced OHC death was tightly correlated with the postnatal day when HPβCD was administered which coincided with the spatiotemporal upregulation of prestin in OHCs. A second, massive wave of degeneration involving IHCs, PC, auditory nerve fibers and spiral ganglion neurons abruptly emerged 4–6 weeks post-HPβCD treatment. This secondary wave of degeneration combined with the initial OHC loss results in a profound, irreversible hearing loss.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Redirecting Imipramine against Bluetongue Virus Infection: Insights from a Genome-wide Haploid Screening Study
- Author
-
Lijo John, Caroline Vernersson, Hyesoo Kwon, Ulrich Elling, Josef M. Penninger, and Ali Mirazimi
- Subjects
bluetongue virus ,haploid screening ,imipramine ,Niemann–Pick C1 ,BTV serotypes ,Medicine - Abstract
Bluetongue virus (BTV), an arbovirus of ruminants, is a causative agent of numerous epidemics around the world. Due to the emergence of novel reassortant BTV strains and new outbreaks, there is an unmet need for efficacious antivirals. In this study, we used an improved haploid screening platform to identify the relevant host factors for BTV infection. Our screening tool identified and validated the host factor Niemann–Pick C1 (NPC1), a lysosomal membrane protein that is involved in lysosomal cholesterol transport, as a critical factor in BTV infection. This finding prompted us to investigate the possibility of testing imipramine, an antidepressant drug known to inhibit NPC1 function by interfering with intracellular cholesterol trafficking. In this study, we evaluated the sensitivity of BTV to imipramine using in vitro assays. Our results demonstrate that imipramine pretreatment inhibited in vitro replication and progeny release of BTV-4, BTV-8, and BTV-16. Collectively, our findings highlight the importance of NPC1 for BTV infection and recommend the reprofiling of imipramine as a potential antiviral drug against BTV.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Haploinsufficiency of tau decreases survival of the mouse model of Niemann–Pick disease type C1 but does not alter tau phosphorylation.
- Author
-
Smith, Angela F., Vanderah, Todd W., and Erickson, Robert P.
- Abstract
Niemann–Pick C1 (NPC1) mouse models show neurofibrillary tangles as do human patients. A previous study in NPC1/tau double–null mutant mice showed that tau knockout nulls and heterozygotes unexpectedly had decreased survival when compared with NPC1 single mutants (Pacheco et al., Hum Molec Genetics 18:956–965, 2009). This was done in a null model of NPC1 (Npc1
−/− ). We have extended these results to a hypomorphic model (Npc1nmf164 ) and additionally studied tau phosphorylation, which has not been previously done in a tau heterozygote. As before, NPC1/tau double-mutant mice had shortened survival when compared with the NPC1 single mutant. Tau dosage was not affected by the Npc1 mutation. The increased phosphorylation of tau-ser396 previously noted in NPC1 mouse models was also present, but unaffected by the tau knockout, indicating that changes in tau phosphorylation are not the cause of decreased survival in NPC1/tau double mutants. Thus, the reason for shortened survival of NPC1 mouse models with concomitant tau haploinsufficiency is uncertain. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. High‐content imaging and structure‐based predictions reveal functional differences between Niemann‐Pick C1 variants.
- Author
-
Vanharanta, Lauri, Peränen, Johan, Pfisterer, Simon G., Enkavi, Giray, Vattulainen, Ilpo, and Ikonen, Elina
- Subjects
- *
FORECASTING , *MOLECULAR dynamics , *DISEASE vectors , *PROTEIN expression , *LYSOSOMAL storage diseases - Abstract
The human Niemann‐Pick C1 (NPC1) gene encoding a 1278 amino acid protein is very heterogeneous. While some variants represent benign polymorphisms, NPC disease carriers and patients may possess rare variants, whose functional importance remains unknown. An NPC1 cDNA construct known as NPC1 wild‐type variant (WT‐V), distributed between laboratories and used as a WT control in several studies, also contains changes regarding specific amino acids compared to the NPC1 Genbank reference sequence. To improve the dissection of subtle functional differences, we generated human cells stably expressing NPC1 variants from the AAVS1 safe‐harbor locus on an NPC1‐null background engineered by CRISPR/Cas9 editing. We then employed high‐content imaging with automated image analysis to quantitatively assess LDL‐induced, time‐dependent changes in lysosomal cholesterol content and lipid droplet formation. Our results indicate that the L472P change present in NPC1 WT‐V compromises NPC1 functionality in lysosomal cholesterol export. All‐atom molecular dynamics simulations suggest that the L472P change alters the relative position of the NPC1 middle and the C‐terminal luminal domains, disrupting the recently characterized cholesterol efflux tunnel. These results reveal functional defects in NPC1 WT‐V and highlight the strength of simulations and quantitative imaging upon stable protein expression in elucidating subtle differences in protein function. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Decreased membrane cholesterol in liver mitochondria of the point mutation mouse model of juvenile Niemann–Pick C1, Npc1nmf164.
- Author
-
Erickson, Robert P., Aras, Siddhesh, Purandare, Neeraja, Hüttemann, Maik, Liu, Jenney, Dragotto, Jessica, Fiorenza, Maria Teresa, and Grossman, Lawrence I.
- Subjects
- *
LIVER mitochondria , *CYTOCHROME oxidase , *CHOLESTEROL , *MITOCHONDRIAL membranes , *MICE , *HEAT shock proteins , *PLANT mitochondria , *LYSOSOMES - Abstract
• Mutant mouse NPC1 liver mitochondria have decreased mitochondrial membrane cholesterol. • Mitochondrial stress regulator MNRR1 is deficient in mutant mouse livers. • MNRR1 stimulates NPC1 synthesis. • Mutant mice contain a lesser number of mitochondria that are morphologically abnormal. It has long been known that there is decreased mitochondrial function in several tissues of Niemann–Pick C1 model mice and cultured cells. These defects contribute to the accumulation of Reactive Oxygen Species (ROS) and tissue damage. It is also well established that there is increased unesterified cholesterol, stored in late endosomes/lysosomes, in many tissues in mutant humans, mouse models, and mutant cultured cells. Using a mouse model with an NPC1 point mutation that is more typical of the most common form of the disease, and highly purified liver mitochondria, we find markedly decreased mitochondrial membrane cholesterol. This is compared to previous reports of increased mitochondrial membrane cholesterol. We also find that, although in wild-type or heterozygous mitochondria cytochrome c oxidase (COX) activity decreases with age as expected, surprisingly, COX activity in homozygous mutant mice improves with age. COX activity is less than half of wild-type amounts in young mutant mice but later reaches wild-type levels while total liver cholesterol is decreasing. Mutant mice also contain a decreased number of mitochondria that are morphologically abnormal. We suggest that the decreased mitochondrial membrane cholesterol is causative for the mitochondrial energy defects. In addition, we find that the mitochondrial stress regulator protein MNRR1 can stimulate NPC1 synthesis and is deficient in mutant mouse livers. Furthermore, the age curve of MNRR1 deficiency paralleled levels of total cholesterol. The role of such altered mitochondria in initiating the abnormal autophagy and neuroinflammation found in NPC1 mouse models is discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Anomalies in Dopamine Transporter Expression and Primary Cilium Distribution in the Dorsal Striatum of a Mouse Model of Niemann-Pick C1 Disease
- Author
-
Micaela Lucarelli, Chiara Di Pietro, Gina La Sala, Maria Teresa Fiorenza, Daniela Marazziti, and Sonia Canterini
- Subjects
Niemann-Pick C1 ,mouse model ,striatum ,primary cilium ,dopamine ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
The Niemann-Pick type C1 (NPC1) is a rare genetic disease characterized by the accumulation of endocytosed cholesterol and other lipids in the endosome/lysosome compartments. In the brain, the accumulation/mislocalization of unesterified cholesterol, gangliosides and sphingolipids is responsible for the appearance of neuropathological hallmarks, and progressive neurological decline in patients. The imbalance of unesterified cholesterol and other lipids, including GM2 and GM3 gangliosides, alters a number of signaling mechanisms impacting on the overall homeostasis of neurons. In particular, lipid depletion experiments have shown that lipid rafts regulate the cell surface expression of dopamine transporter (DAT) and modulate its activity. Dysregulated dopamine transporter’s function results in imbalanced dopamine levels at synapses and severely affects dopamine-induced locomotor responses and dopamine receptor-mediated synaptic signaling. Recent studies begin to correlate dopaminergic stimulation with the length and function of the primary cilium, a non-motile organelle that coordinates numerous signaling pathways. In particular, the absence of dopaminergic D2 receptor stimulation induces the elongation of dorso-striatal neuron’s primary cilia. This study has used a mouse model of the NPC1 disease to correlate cholesterol dyshomeostasis with dorso-striatal anomalies in terms of DAT expression and primary cilium (PC) length and morphology. We found that juvenile Npc1nmf164 mice display a reduction of dorso-striatal DAT expression, with associated alterations of PC number, length-frequency distribution, and tortuosity.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Structural Insights into the Interaction of Filovirus Glycoproteins with the Endosomal Receptor Niemann-Pick C1: A Computational Study
- Author
-
Manabu Igarashi, Takatsugu Hirokawa, Yoshihiro Takadate, and Ayato Takada
- Subjects
filovirus ,ebolavirus ,marburgvirus ,glycoprotein ,Niemann-Pick C1 ,structure ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
Filoviruses, including marburgviruses and ebolaviruses, have a single transmembrane glycoprotein (GP) that facilitates their entry into cells. During entry, GP needs to be cleaved by host proteases to expose the receptor-binding site that binds to the endosomal receptor Niemann-Pick C1 (NPC1) protein. The crystal structure analysis of the cleaved GP (GPcl) of Ebola virus (EBOV) in complex with human NPC1 has demonstrated that NPC1 has two protruding loops (loops 1 and 2), which engage a hydrophobic pocket on the head of EBOV GPcl. However, the molecular interactions between NPC1 and the GPcl of other filoviruses remain unexplored. In the present study, we performed molecular modeling and molecular dynamics simulations of NPC1 complexed with GPcls of two ebolaviruses, EBOV and Sudan virus (SUDV), and one marburgvirus, Ravn virus (RAVV). Similar binding structures were observed in the GPcl–NPC1 complexes of EBOV and SUDV, which differed from that of RAVV. Specifically, in the RAVV GPcl–NPC1 complex, the tip of loop 2 was closer to the pocket edge comprising residues at positions 79–88 of GPcl; the root of loop 1 was predicted to interact with P116 and Q144 of GPcl. Furthermore, in the SUDV GPcl–NPC1 complex, the tip of loop 2 was slightly closer to the residue at position 141 than those in the EBOV and RAVV GPcl–NPC1 complexes. These structural differences may affect the size and/or shape of the receptor-binding pocket of GPcl. Our structural models could provide useful information for improving our understanding the differences in host preference among filoviruses as well as contributing to structure-based drug design.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Anomalies in Dopamine Transporter Expression and Primary Cilium Distribution in the Dorsal Striatum of a Mouse Model of Niemann-Pick C1 Disease.
- Author
-
Lucarelli, Micaela, Di Pietro, Chiara, La Sala, Gina, Fiorenza, Maria Teresa, Marazziti, Daniela, and Canterini, Sonia
- Subjects
NIEMANN-Pick diseases ,MONOAMINE transporters ,CILIA & ciliary motion ,DOPAMINE receptors ,DOPAMINE ,LIPID rafts ,SPHINGOLIPIDS - Abstract
The Niemann-Pick type C1 (NPC1) is a rare genetic disease characterized by the accumulation of endocytosed cholesterol and other lipids in the endosome/lysosome compartments. In the brain, the accumulation/mislocalization of unesterified cholesterol, gangliosides and sphingolipids is responsible for the appearance of neuropathological hallmarks, and progressive neurological decline in patients. The imbalance of unesterified cholesterol and other lipids, including GM2 and GM3 gangliosides, alters a number of signaling mechanisms impacting on the overall homeostasis of neurons. In particular, lipid depletion experiments have shown that lipid rafts regulate the cell surface expression of dopamine transporter (DAT) and modulate its activity. Dysregulated dopamine transporter's function results in imbalanced dopamine levels at synapses and severely affects dopamine-induced locomotor responses and dopamine receptor-mediated synaptic signaling. Recent studies begin to correlate dopaminergic stimulation with the length and function of the primary cilium, a non-motile organelle that coordinates numerous signaling pathways. In particular, the absence of dopaminergic D2 receptor stimulation induces the elongation of dorso-striatal neuron's primary cilia. This study has used a mouse model of the NPC1 disease to correlate cholesterol dyshomeostasis with dorso-striatal anomalies in terms of DAT expression and primary cilium (PC) length and morphology. We found that juvenile Npc1
nmf 164 mice display a reduction of dorso-striatal DAT expression, with associated alterations of PC number, length-frequency distribution, and tortuosity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Endo-Lysosome Function in the Retinal Pigment Epithelium in Health and Disease
- Author
-
Lakkaraju, Aparna, LaVail, Matthew M., editor, Ash, John D., editor, Anderson, Robert E., editor, Hollyfield, Joe G., editor, and Grimm, Christian, editor
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. In Niemann-Pick C1 mouse models, glial-only expression of the normal gene extends survival much further than do changes in genetic background or treatment with hydroxypropyl-beta-cyclodextrin.
- Author
-
Marshall, Craig A., Watkins-Chow, Dawn E., Palladino, Giampiero, Deutsch, Gail, Chandran, Keshav, Pavan, William J., and Erickson, Robert P.
- Subjects
- *
ANIMAL models in research , *NIEMANN-Pick diseases , *PHENOTYPES , *GENETIC regulation , *MOLECULAR genetics - Abstract
The Npc1 nmf164 allele of Npc1 provides a mouse model for Niemann-Pick disease type C1 (NPC1), a genetic disease known to have a widely variable phenotype. The transfer of the Npc1 nmf164 mutation from the C57BL/6J inbred strain to the BALB/cJ inbred strain increased the mean lifespan from 117.8 days to 153.1 days, confirming that the severity of the NPC1 phenotype is strongly influenced by genetic background. The transfer of another Npc1 allele, Npc1 nih , to this background also extended survival of the homozygotes indicating that the modifying effect of BALB/cJ is not limited to a single allele of Npc1 . The increased longevity due to the BALB/cJ background did not map to a previously mapped modifier on chromosome 19, indicating the presence of additional genes impacting disease severity. The previously studied Glial Fibrillary Acidic Protein promoter- Npc1 cDNA transgene (GFAP-Npc1) which only expresses NPC1 in astrocytes further extended the lifespan of Npc1 nmf164 homozygotes on a BALB/cJ background (up to 600 days). Hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrin (HPβCD) treatment, not previously tested in the Npc1 nmf164 mutant, extended life in the Npc1 nmf164 homozygotes but not the transgenic, Npc1 nmf164 mice on the BALB/cJ background. In all cases, lack of weight gain and early cerebellar symptoms of loss of motor control were found. At termination, the one mouse sacrificed for histological studies showed severe, diffuse pulmonary alveolar proteinosis suggesting that pulmonary abnormalities in NPC1 mouse models are not unique to the Npc1 nih allele. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Redirecting Imipramine against Bluetongue Virus Infection: Insights from a Genome-wide Haploid Screening Study
- Author
-
Mirazimi, Lijo John, Caroline Vernersson, Hyesoo Kwon, Ulrich Elling, Josef M. Penninger, and Ali
- Subjects
bluetongue virus ,haploid screening ,imipramine ,Niemann–Pick C1 ,BTV serotypes - Abstract
Bluetongue virus (BTV), an arbovirus of ruminants, is a causative agent of numerous epidemics around the world. Due to the emergence of novel reassortant BTV strains and new outbreaks, there is an unmet need for efficacious antivirals. In this study, we used an improved haploid screening platform to identify the relevant host factors for BTV infection. Our screening tool identified and validated the host factor Niemann–Pick C1 (NPC1), a lysosomal membrane protein that is involved in lysosomal cholesterol transport, as a critical factor in BTV infection. This finding prompted us to investigate the possibility of testing imipramine, an antidepressant drug known to inhibit NPC1 function by interfering with intracellular cholesterol trafficking. In this study, we evaluated the sensitivity of BTV to imipramine using in vitro assays. Our results demonstrate that imipramine pretreatment inhibited in vitro replication and progeny release of BTV-4, BTV-8, and BTV-16. Collectively, our findings highlight the importance of NPC1 for BTV infection and recommend the reprofiling of imipramine as a potential antiviral drug against BTV.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Cytochrome b561, copper, β-cleaved amyloid precursor protein and niemann-pick C1 protein are involved in ascorbate-induced release and membrane penetration of heparan sulfate from endosomal S-nitrosylated glypican-1.
- Author
-
Cheng, Fang, Fransson, Lars-Åke, and Mani, Katrin
- Subjects
- *
CYTOCHROME b , *AMYLOID beta-protein precursor , *NIEMANN-Pick diseases , *VITAMIN C , *HEPARAN sulfate - Abstract
Ascorbate-induced release of heparan sulfate from S-nitrosylated heparan sulfate proteoglycan glypican-1 takes place in endosomes. Heparan sulfate penetrates the membrane and is transported to the nucleus. This process is dependent on copper and on expression and processing of the amyloid precursor protein. It remains unclear how exogenously supplied ascorbate can generate HS-anMan in endosomes and how passage through the membrane is facilitated. Here we have examined wild-type, Alzheimer Tg2576 and amyloid precursor protein (-/-) mouse fibroblasts and human fetal and Niemann-Pick C1 fibroblasts by using deconvolution immunofluorescence microscopy, siRNA technology and [S 35 ]sulfate-labeling, vesicle isolation and gel chromatography. We found that ascorbate-induced release of heparan sulfate was dependent on expression of endosomal cytochrome b561. Formation and nuclear transport of heparan sulfate was suppressed by inhibition of β-processing of the amyloid precursor protein and formation was restored by copper (I) ions. Membrane penetration was not dependent on amyloid beta channel formation. Inhibition of endosomal exit resulted in accumulation of heparan sulfate in vesicles that exposed the C-terminal of the amyloid precursor protein externally. Endosome-to-nucleus transport was also dependent on expression of the Niemann-Pick C1 protein. We propose that ascorbate is taken up from the medium and is oxidized by cytochrome b561 which, in turn, reduces copper (II) to copper (I) present in the N-terminal, β-cleaved domain of the amyloid precursor protein. Re-oxidation of copper (I) is coupled to reductive, deaminative release of heparan sulfate from glypican-1. Passage through the membrane may be facilitated by the C-terminal, β-cleaved fragment of the amyloid precursor protein and the Niemann-Pick C1 protein. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. The Niemann-Pick C1 gene interacts with a high-fat diet to promote weight gain through differential regulation of central energy metabolism pathways.
- Author
-
Castillo, Joseph J., Jelinek, David, Hao Wei, Gannon, Nicholas P., Vaughan, Roger A., Horwood, L. John, Meaney, F. John, Garcia-Smith, Randi, Trujillo, Kristina A., Heidenreich, Randall A., Meyre, David, Orlando, Robert A., LeBoeuf, Renee C., and Garver, William S.
- Subjects
- *
OBESITY genetics , *ENERGY metabolism regulation , *HIGH-fat diet - Abstract
A genome-wide association study (GWAS) reported that common variation in the human Niemann-Pick C1 gene (NPC1) is associated with morbid adult obesity. This study was confirmed using our BALB/cJ Npc1 mouse model, whereby heterozygous mice (Npc1-/-) with decreased gene dosage were susceptible to weight gain when fed a high-fat diet (HFD) compared with homozygous normal mice (Npc1-/-) fed the same diet. The objective for our current study was to validate this Npc1 gene-diet interaction using statistical modeling with fitted growth trajectories, conduct body weight analyses for different measures, and define the physiological basis responsible for weight gain. Metabolic phenotype analysis indicated no significant difference between Npc1-/- and Npc1-/- mice fed a HFD for food and water intake, oxygen consumption, carbon dioxide production, locomotor activity, adaptive thermogenesis, and intestinal lipid absorption. However, the livers from Npc1-/- mice had significantly increased amounts of mature sterol regulatory element-binding protein-1 (SREBP-1) and increased expression of SREBP-1 target genes that regulate glycolysis and lipogenesis with an accumulation of triacylglycerol and cholesterol. Moreover, white adipose tissue from Npc1-/- mice had significantly decreased amounts of phosphorylated hormone-sensitive lipase with decreased triacylglycerol lipolysis. Consistent with these results, cellular energy metabolism studies indicated that Npc1-/- fibroblasts had signifi- cantly increased glycolysis and lipogenesis, in addition to significantly decreased substrate (glucose and endogenous fatty acid) oxidative metabolism with an accumulation of triacylglycerol and cholesterol. In conclusion, these studies demonstrate that the Npc1 gene interacts with a HFD to promote weight gain through differential regulation of central energy metabolism pathways. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. A Single Residue in Ebola Virus Receptor NPC1 Influences Cellular Host Range in Reptiles
- Author
-
Esther Ndungo, Andrew S. Herbert, Matthijs Raaben, Gregor Obernosterer, Rohan Biswas, Emily Happy Miller, Ariel S. Wirchnianski, Jan E. Carette, Thijn R. Brummelkamp, Sean P. Whelan, John M. Dye, and Kartik Chandran
- Subjects
Ebola virus ,NPC1 ,Niemann-Pick C1 ,endosomal receptor ,filovirus ,intracellular receptor ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
ABSTRACT Filoviruses are the causative agents of an increasing number of disease outbreaks in human populations, including the current unprecedented Ebola virus disease (EVD) outbreak in western Africa. One obstacle to controlling these epidemics is our poor understanding of the host range of filoviruses and their natural reservoirs. Here, we investigated the role of the intracellular filovirus receptor, Niemann-Pick C1 (NPC1) as a molecular determinant of Ebola virus (EBOV) host range at the cellular level. Whereas human cells can be infected by EBOV, a cell line derived from a Russell’s viper (Daboia russellii) (VH-2) is resistant to infection in an NPC1-dependent manner. We found that VH-2 cells are resistant to EBOV infection because the Russell’s viper NPC1 ortholog bound poorly to the EBOV spike glycoprotein (GP). Analysis of panels of viper-human NPC1 chimeras and point mutants allowed us to identify a single amino acid residue in NPC1, at position 503, that bidirectionally influenced both its binding to EBOV GP and its viral receptor activity in cells. Significantly, this single residue change perturbed neither NPC1’s endosomal localization nor its housekeeping role in cellular cholesterol trafficking. Together with other recent work, these findings identify sequences in NPC1 that are important for viral receptor activity by virtue of their direct interaction with EBOV GP and suggest that they may influence filovirus host range in nature. Broader surveys of NPC1 orthologs from vertebrates may delineate additional sequence polymorphisms in this gene that control susceptibility to filovirus infection. IMPORTANCE Identifying cellular factors that determine susceptibility to infection can help us understand how Ebola virus is transmitted. We asked if the EBOV receptor Niemann-Pick C1 (NPC1) could explain why reptiles are resistant to EBOV infection. We demonstrate that cells derived from the Russell’s viper are not susceptible to infection because EBOV cannot bind to viper NPC1. This resistance to infection can be mapped to a single amino acid residue in viper NPC1 that renders it unable to bind to EBOV GP. The newly solved structure of EBOV GP bound to NPC1 confirms our findings, revealing that this residue dips into the GP receptor-binding pocket and is therefore critical to the binding interface. Consequently, this otherwise well-conserved residue in vertebrate species influences the ability of reptilian NPC1 proteins to bind to EBOV GP, thereby affecting viral host range in reptilian cells.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. High‐content imaging and structure‐based predictions reveal functional differences between Niemann‐Pick C1 variants
- Author
-
Ilpo Vattulainen, Lauri Vanharanta, Johan Peränen, Elina Ikonen, Simon G. Pfisterer, Giray Enkavi, Medicum, Department of Anatomy, Faculty of Medicine, STEMM - Stem Cells and Metabolism Research Program, Research Programs Unit, Institute of Biotechnology, Biosciences, University of Helsinki, Materials Physics, Department of Physics, Lipid Trafficking Lab, Tampere University, Physics, and Research group: Biological Physics and Soft Matter
- Subjects
congenital, hereditary, and neonatal diseases and abnormalities ,lipid droplets ,late endosomes ,Locus (genetics) ,Molecular Dynamics Simulation ,Biology ,114 Physical sciences ,gene variants ,Biochemistry ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Niemann-Pick C1 Protein ,Structural Biology ,cholesterol transport ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,Lipid droplet ,Complementary DNA ,Genetics ,Niemann-Pick C1 ,Humans ,CRISPR ,lysosomal storage diseases ,Molecular Biology ,Gene ,030304 developmental biology ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,0303 health sciences ,Intracellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins ,Proteins ,nutritional and metabolic diseases ,Biological Transport ,217 Medical engineering ,Cell Biology ,Amino acid ,Cell biology ,Cholesterol ,chemistry ,GenBank ,1182 Biochemistry, cell and molecular biology ,lipids (amino acids, peptides, and proteins) ,3111 Biomedicine ,NPC1 ,Lysosomes ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
The human Niemann-Pick C1 (NPC1) gene encoding a 1278 amino acid protein is very heterogeneous. While some variants represent benign polymorphisms, NPC disease carriers and patients may possess rare variants, whose functional importance remains unknown. An NPC1 cDNA construct known as NPC1 wild-type variant (WT-V), distributed between laboratories and used as a WT control in several studies, also contains changes regarding specific amino acids compared to the NPC1 Genbank reference sequence. To improve the dissection of subtle functional differences, we generated human cells stably expressing NPC1 variants from the AAVS1 safe-harbor locus on an NPC1-null background engineered by CRISPR/Cas9 editing. We then employed high-content imaging with automated image analysis to quantitatively assess LDL-induced, time-dependent changes in lysosomal cholesterol content and lipid droplet formation. Our results indicate that the L472P change present in NPC1 WT-V compromises NPC1 functionality in lysosomal cholesterol export. All-atom molecular dynamics simulations suggest that the L472P change alters the relative position of the NPC1 middle and the C-terminal luminal domains, disrupting the recently characterized cholesterol efflux tunnel. These results reveal functional defects in NPC1 WT-V and highlight the strength of simulations and quantitative imaging upon stable protein expression in elucidating subtle differences in protein function. publishedVersion
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Niemann-Pick C1 (NPC1)/NPC1-like1 Chimeras Define Sequences Critical for NPC1’s Function as a Filovirus Entry Receptor
- Author
-
Esther Ndungo, John M. Dye, Sean P. Whelan, Melinda Ng, Andrew S. Herbert, Anuja Krishnan, Emily Happy Miller, and Kartik Chandran
- Subjects
Ebola virus ,Marburg virus ,filovirus ,viral entry ,Niemann-Pick C1 ,NPC1 ,Niemann-Pick C1-like1 ,NPC1L1 ,host factor ,viral receptor ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
We recently demonstrated that Niemann-Pick C1 (NPC1), a ubiquitous 13-pass cellular membrane protein involved in lysosomal cholesterol transport, is a critical entry receptor for filoviruses. Here we show that Niemann-Pick C1-like1 (NPC1L1), an NPC1 paralog and hepatitis C virus entry factor, lacks filovirus receptor activity. We exploited the structural similarity between NPC1 and NPC1L1 to construct and analyze a panel of chimeras in which NPC1L1 sequences were replaced with cognate sequences from NPC1. Only one chimera, NPC1L1 containing the second luminal domain (C) of NPC1 in place of its own, bound to the viral glycoprotein, GP. This engineered protein mediated authentic filovirus infection nearly as well as wild-type NPC1, and more efficiently than did a minimal NPC1 domain C-based receptor recently described by us. A reciprocal chimera, NPC1 containing NPC1L1’s domain C, was completely inactive. Remarkably, an intra-domain NPC1L1-NPC1 chimera bearing only a ~130-amino acid N–terminal region of NPC1 domain C could confer substantial viral receptor activity on NPC1L1. Taken together, these findings account for the failure of NPC1L1 to serve as a filovirus receptor, highlight the central role of the luminal domain C of NPC1 in filovirus entry, and reveal the direct involvement of N–terminal domain C sequences in NPC1’s function as a filovirus receptor.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Identification of NPC1 as the target of U18666A, an inhibitor of lysosomal cholesterol export and Ebola infection
- Author
-
Feiran Lu, Qiren Liang, Lina Abi-Mosleh, Akash Das, Jef K De Brabander, Joseph L Goldstein, and Michael S Brown
- Subjects
Niemann-Pick C1 ,cholesterol transport ,endosomes/lysosomes ,U18666A ,crosslinking ,sterol-sensing domain ,Medicine ,Science ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Niemann-Pick C1 (NPC1) is a lysosomal membrane protein that exports cholesterol derived from receptor-mediated uptake of LDL, and it also mediates cellular entry of Ebola virus. Cholesterol export is inhibited by nanomolar concentrations of U18666A, a cationic sterol. To identify the target of U18666A, we synthesized U-X, a U18666A derivative with a benzophenone that permits ultraviolet-induced crosslinking. When added to CHO cells, U-X crosslinked to NPC1. Crosslinking was blocked by U18666A derivatives that block cholesterol export, but not derivatives lacking blocking activity. Crosslinking was prevented by point mutation in the sterol-sensing domain (SSD) of NPC1, but not by point mutation in the N-terminal domain (NTD). These data suggest that the SSD contains a U18666A-inhibitable site required for cholesterol export distinct from the cholesterol-binding site in the NTD. Inasmuch as inhibition of Ebola requires 100-fold higher concentrations of U18666A, the high affinity U16888A-binding site is likely not required for virus entry.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Filovirus receptor NPC1 contributes to species-specific patterns of ebolavirus susceptibility in bats
- Author
-
Melinda Ng, Esther Ndungo, Maria E Kaczmarek, Andrew S Herbert, Tabea Binger, Ana I Kuehne, Rohit K Jangra, John A Hawkins, Robert J Gifford, Rohan Biswas, Ann Demogines, Rebekah M James, Meng Yu, Thijn R Brummelkamp, Christian Drosten, Lin-Fa Wang, Jens H Kuhn, Marcel A Müller, John M Dye, Sara L Sawyer, and Kartik Chandran
- Subjects
Ebola virus ,Filovirus ,viral receptor ,Niemann-Pick C1 ,Virus-host co-evolution ,Positive selection ,Medicine ,Science ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Biological factors that influence the host range and spillover of Ebola virus (EBOV) and other filoviruses remain enigmatic. While filoviruses infect diverse mammalian cell lines, we report that cells from African straw-colored fruit bats (Eidolon helvum) are refractory to EBOV infection. This could be explained by a single amino acid change in the filovirus receptor, NPC1, which greatly reduces the affinity of EBOV-NPC1 interaction. We found signatures of positive selection in bat NPC1 concentrated at the virus-receptor interface, with the strongest signal at the same residue that controls EBOV infection in Eidolon helvum cells. Our work identifies NPC1 as a genetic determinant of filovirus susceptibility in bats, and suggests that some NPC1 variations reflect host adaptations to reduce filovirus replication and virulence. A single viral mutation afforded escape from receptor control, revealing a pathway for compensatory viral evolution and a potential avenue for expansion of filovirus host range in nature.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Extensive macrophage accumulation in young and old Niemann–Pick C1 model mice involves the alternative, M2, activation pathway and inhibition of macrophage apoptosis.
- Author
-
Deutsch, Gail, Muralidhar, Akshay, Le, Ellen, Borbon, Ivan A., and Erickson, Robert P.
- Subjects
- *
MACROPHAGES , *APOPTOSIS , *PATHOLOGICAL physiology , *NIEMANN-Pick diseases , *BIOACCUMULATION , *LUNG diseases , *LABORATORY mice , *GENETICS - Abstract
We have studied the pathophysiology of lung disease which occurs in two mouse models of Niemann–Pick C1 disease. We utilized Npc1 −/− mice transgenic for normal gene expression in glia or neurons and glia at ages several fold the usual and a mouse model of the juvenile form of NPC1 , a point mutation, at one age to confirm some findings. Lung weights, as per cent of body weight, increase much more than liver and spleen weights. Although pulmonary function parameters only vary for hysteresis between young and older Npc1 −/− mice, they are markedly different than those found in normal control mice. Cholesterol accumulation continued in the older mice but sphingosine-1-phosphate was not increased. Bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) showed a massive increase (26 ×) in the number of macrophages. Histologic examination from the older, transgenic Npc1 −/− mice showed small foci of alveolar proteinosis and evidence of hemorrhage, as well as dense macrophage accumulation. A large subset of macrophages was immunopositive for Fizz1 or arginase-1, markers of the alternative activation pathway, while no Fizz1 or arginase-1 positive macrophages were found in wild-type mice. The percentage of marker positive macrophages was relatively stable at 5–10% at various ages and within the 2 transgenic models. Phosphohistone H3 and Ki67 showed low levels of proliferation of these macrophages. Apoptosis was prominent within lung capillary endothelial cells, but limited within macrophages. Thus, activation of the alternative pathway is involved in Niemann–Pick C1 associated pulmonary macrophage accumulation, with low proliferation of these cells balanced by low levels of apoptosis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Structural Insights into the Interaction of Filovirus Glycoproteins with the Endosomal Receptor Niemann-Pick C1: A Computational Study
- Author
-
1000010374240, Igarashi, Manabu, 1000020357867, Hirokawa, Takatsugu, Takadate, Yoshihiro, 1000010292062, Takada, Ayato, 1000010374240, Igarashi, Manabu, 1000020357867, Hirokawa, Takatsugu, Takadate, Yoshihiro, 1000010292062, and Takada, Ayato
- Abstract
Filoviruses, including marburgviruses and ebolaviruses, have a single transmembrane glycoprotein (GP) that facilitates their entry into cells. During entry, GP needs to be cleaved by host proteases to expose the receptor-binding site that binds to the endosomal receptor Niemann-Pick C1 (NPC1) protein. The crystal structure analysis of the cleaved GP (GPcl) of Ebola virus (EBOV) in complex with human NPC1 has demonstrated that NPC1 has two protruding loops (loops 1 and 2), which engage a hydrophobic pocket on the head of EBOV GPcl. However, the molecular interactions between NPC1 and the GPcl of other filoviruses remain unexplored. In the present study, we performed molecular modeling and molecular dynamics simulations of NPC1 complexed with GPcls of two ebolaviruses, EBOV and Sudan virus (SUDV), and one marburgvirus, Ravn virus (RAVV). Similar binding structures were observed in the GPcl-NPC1 complexes of EBOV and SUDV, which differed from that of RAVV. Specifically, in the RAVV GPcl-NPC1 complex, the tip of loop 2 was closer to the pocket edge comprising residues at positions 79-88 of GPcl; the root of loop 1 was predicted to interact with P116 and Q144 of GPcl. Furthermore, in the SUDV GPcl-NPC1 complex, the tip of loop 2 was slightly closer to the residue at position 141 than those in the EBOV and RAVV GPcl-NPC1 complexes. These structural differences may affect the size and/or shape of the receptor-binding pocket of GPcl. Our structural models could provide useful information for improving our understanding the differences in host preference among filoviruses as well as contributing to structure-based drug design.
- Published
- 2021
27. Structural Insights into the Interaction of Filovirus Glycoproteins with the Endosomal Receptor Niemann-Pick C1: A Computational Study
- Author
-
Igarashi, Manabu, Hirokawa, Takatsugu, Takadate, Yoshihiro, Takada, Ayato, Igarashi, Manabu, Hirokawa, Takatsugu, Takadate, Yoshihiro, and Takada, Ayato
- Abstract
Filoviruses, including marburgviruses and ebolaviruses, have a single transmembrane glycoprotein (GP) that facilitates their entry into cells. During entry, GP needs to be cleaved by host proteases to expose the receptor-binding site that binds to the endosomal receptor Niemann-Pick C1 (NPC1) protein. The crystal structure analysis of the cleaved GP (GPcl) of Ebola virus (EBOV) in complex with human NPC1 has demonstrated that NPC1 has two protruding loops (loops 1 and 2), which engage a hydrophobic pocket on the head of EBOV GPcl. However, the molecular interactions between NPC1 and the GPcl of other filoviruses remain unexplored. In the present study, we performed molecular modeling and molecular dynamics simulations of NPC1 complexed with GPcls of two ebolaviruses, EBOV and Sudan virus (SUDV), and one marburgvirus, Ravn virus (RAVV). Similar binding structures were observed in the GPcl-NPC1 complexes of EBOV and SUDV, which differed from that of RAVV. Specifically, in the RAVV GPcl-NPC1 complex, the tip of loop 2 was closer to the pocket edge comprising residues at positions 79-88 of GPcl; the root of loop 1 was predicted to interact with P116 and Q144 of GPcl. Furthermore, in the SUDV GPcl-NPC1 complex, the tip of loop 2 was slightly closer to the residue at position 141 than those in the EBOV and RAVV GPcl-NPC1 complexes. These structural differences may affect the size and/or shape of the receptor-binding pocket of GPcl. Our structural models could provide useful information for improving our understanding the differences in host preference among filoviruses as well as contributing to structure-based drug design.
- Published
- 2021
28. Potential pharmacological strategies targeting the Niemann-Pick C1receptor and Ebola virus glycoprotein interaction
- Author
-
La Caixa, Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), Instituto de Salud Carlos III, European Commission, Morales-Tenorio, Marcos [0000-0001-9439-6314], Ginex, Tiziana [0000-0002-5739-8713], Cuesta-Geijo, Miguel Ángel [0000-0003-4694-1968], Campillo, Nuria E. [0000-0002-9948-2665], Muñoz-Fontela, César [0000-0002-7725-2586], Alonso, Covandoga [0000-0002-0862-6177], Delgado, Rafael [0000-0002-6912-4736], Gil, Carmen [0000-0002-3882-6081], Morales-Tenorio, Marcos, Ginex, Tiziana, Cuesta-Geijo, Miguel Ángel, Campillo, Nuria E., Muñoz-Fontela, César, Alonso Martí, Covadonga, Delgado, Rafael, Gil, Carmen, La Caixa, Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), Instituto de Salud Carlos III, European Commission, Morales-Tenorio, Marcos [0000-0001-9439-6314], Ginex, Tiziana [0000-0002-5739-8713], Cuesta-Geijo, Miguel Ángel [0000-0003-4694-1968], Campillo, Nuria E. [0000-0002-9948-2665], Muñoz-Fontela, César [0000-0002-7725-2586], Alonso, Covandoga [0000-0002-0862-6177], Delgado, Rafael [0000-0002-6912-4736], Gil, Carmen [0000-0002-3882-6081], Morales-Tenorio, Marcos, Ginex, Tiziana, Cuesta-Geijo, Miguel Ángel, Campillo, Nuria E., Muñoz-Fontela, César, Alonso Martí, Covadonga, Delgado, Rafael, and Gil, Carmen
- Abstract
Niemann-Pick C1 (NPC1) receptor is an intracellular protein located in late endosomes and lysosomes whose main function is to regulate intracellular cholesterol trafficking. Besides being postulated as necessary for the infection of highly pathogenic viruses in which the integrity of cholesterol transport is required, this protein also allows the entry of the Ebola virus (EBOV) into the host cells acting as an intracellular receptor. EBOV glycoprotein (EBOV-GP) interaction with NPC1 at the endosomal membrane triggers the release of the viral material into the host cell, starting the infective cycle. Disruption of the NPC1/EBOV-GP interaction could represent an attractive strategy for the development of drugs aimed at inhibiting viral entry and thus infection. Some of the today available EBOV inhibitors were proposed to interrupt this interaction, but molecular and structural details about their mode of action are still preliminary thus more efforts are needed to properly address these points. Here, we provide a critical discussion of the potential of NPC1 and its interaction with EBOV-GP as a therapeutic target for viral infections.
- Published
- 2021
29. Spatiotemporal Developmental Upregulation of Prestin Correlates With the Severity and Location of Cyclodextrin-Induced Outer Hair Cell Loss and Hearing Loss
- Author
-
Senthilvelan Manohar, Haiyan Jiang, Dalian Ding, Xiaopeng Liu, Guang-Di Chen, Richard Salvi, and Li Li
- Subjects
outer hair cells ,Hearing loss ,QH301-705.5 ,otoacoustic emissions ,Lesion ,Cell and Developmental Biology ,Ototoxicity ,medicine ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,Niemann-Pick C1 ,prestin ,Biology (General) ,Prestin ,Spiral ganglion ,Cochlea ,Original Research ,biology ,inner hair cells ,business.industry ,spiral ganglion neurons ,Cell Biology ,medicine.disease ,compound action potential ,Cell biology ,Compound muscle action potential ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,cyclodextrin ,biology.protein ,Hair cell ,sense organs ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
2-Hyroxypropyl-beta-cyclodextrin (HPβCD) is being used to treat Niemann-Pick C1, a fatal neurodegenerative disease caused by abnormal cholesterol metabolism. HPβCD slows disease progression, but unfortunately causes severe, rapid onset hearing loss by destroying the outer hair cells (OHC). HPβCD-induced damage is believed to be related to the expression of prestin in OHCs. Because prestin is postnatally upregulated from the cochlear base toward the apex, we hypothesized that HPβCD ototoxicity would spread from the high-frequency base toward the low-frequency apex of the cochlea. Consistent with this hypothesis, cochlear hearing impairments and OHC loss rapidly spread from the high-frequency base toward the low-frequency apex of the cochlea when HPβCD administration shifted from postnatal day 3 (P3) to P28. HPβCD-induced histopathologies were initially confined to the OHCs, but between 4- and 6-weeks post-treatment, there was an unexpected, rapid and massive expansion of the lesion to include most inner hair cells (IHC), pillar cells (PC), peripheral auditory nerve fibers, and spiral ganglion neurons at location where OHCs were missing. The magnitude and spatial extent of HPβCD-induced OHC death was tightly correlated with the postnatal day when HPβCD was administered which coincided with the spatiotemporal upregulation of prestin in OHCs. A second, massive wave of degeneration involving IHCs, PC, auditory nerve fibers and spiral ganglion neurons abruptly emerged 4–6 weeks post-HPβCD treatment. This secondary wave of degeneration combined with the initial OHC loss results in a profound, irreversible hearing loss.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Role of PGC-1α during acute exercise-induced autophagy and mitophagy in skeletal muscle.
- Author
-
Vainshtein, Anna, Tryon, Liam D., Pauly, Marion, and Hood, David A.
- Subjects
- *
PGC-1 protein , *EXERCISE physiology , *MITOCHONDRIA formation , *SKELETAL muscle injuries , *AUTOPHAGY , *DELETION mutation - Abstract
Regular exercise leads to systemic metabolic benefits, which require remodeling of energy resources in skeletal muscle. During acute exercise, the increase in energy demands initiate mitochondrial biogenesis, orchestrated by the transcriptional coactivator peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-γ coactivator-1α (PGC-1α). Much less is known about the degradation of mitochondria following exercise, although new evidence implicates a cellular recycling mechanism, autophagy/mitophagy, in exercise-induced adaptations. How mitophagy is activated and what role PGC-1α plays in this process during exercise have yet to be evaluated. Thus we investigated autophagy/mitophagy in muscle immediately following an acute bout of exercise or 90 min following exercise in wild-type (WT) and PGC-1α knockout (KO) animals. Deletion of PGC-1α resulted in a 40% decrease in mitochondrial content, as well as a 25% decline in running performance, which was accompanied by severe acidosis in KO animals, indicating metabolic distress. Exercise induced significant increases in gene transcripts of various mitochondrial (e.g., cytochrome oxidase subunit IV and mitochondrial transcription factor A) and autophagy-related (e.g., p62 and light chain 3) genes in WT, but not KO, animals. Exercise also resulted in enhanced targeting of mitochondria for mitophagy, as well as increased autophagy and mitophagy flux, in WT animals. This effect was attenuated in the absence of PGC-1α. We also identified Niemann-Pick C1, a transmembrane protein involved in lysosomal lipid trafficking, as a target of PGC-1α that is induced with exercise. These results suggest that mitochondrial turnover is increased following exercise and that this effect is at least in part coordinated by PGC-1α. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Receptor-Mediated Host Cell Preference of a Bat-Derived Filovirus, Lloviu Virus
- Author
-
Takadate, Yoshihiro, Manzoor, Rashid, 1000040153811, Saito, Takeshi, Kida, Yurie, Maruyama, Junki, Kondoh, Tatsunari, Miyamoto, Hiroko, 1000080455237, Ogawa, Hirohito, 1000070711894, Kajihara, Masahiro, 1000010374240, Igarashi, Manabu, 1000010292062, Takada, Ayato, Takadate, Yoshihiro, Manzoor, Rashid, 1000040153811, Saito, Takeshi, Kida, Yurie, Maruyama, Junki, Kondoh, Tatsunari, Miyamoto, Hiroko, 1000080455237, Ogawa, Hirohito, 1000070711894, Kajihara, Masahiro, 1000010374240, Igarashi, Manabu, 1000010292062, and Takada, Ayato
- Abstract
Lloviu virus (LLOV), a bat-derived filovirus that is phylogenetically distinct from human pathogenic filoviruses such as Ebola virus (EBOV) and Marburg virus (MARV), was discovered in Europe. However, since infectious LLOV has never been isolated, the biological properties of this virus remain poorly understood. We found that vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) pseudotyped with the glycoprotein (GP) of LLOV (VSV-LLOV) showed higher infectivity in one bat (Miniopterus sp.)-derived cell line than in the other bat-derived cell lines tested, which was distinct from the tropism of VSV pseudotyped with EBOV (VSV-EBOV) and MARV GPs. We then focused on the interaction between GP and Niemann-Pick C1 (NPC1) protein, one of the cellular receptors of filoviruses. We introduced the Miniopterus bat and human NPC1 genes into NPC1-knockout Vero E6 cells and their susceptibilities to the viruses were compared. The cell line expressing the bat NPC1 showed higher susceptibility to VSV-LLOV than that expressing human NPC1, whereas the opposite preference was seen for VSV-EBOV. Using a site-directed mutagenesis approach, amino acid residues involved in the differential tropism were identified in the NPC1 and GP molecules. Our results suggest that the interaction between GP and NPC1 is an important factor in the tropism of LLOV to a particular bat species.
- Published
- 2020
32. Cell entry by a novel European filovirus requires host endosomal cysteine proteases and Niemann–Pick C1.
- Author
-
Ng, Melinda, Ndungo, Esther, Jangra, Rohit K., Cai, Yingyun, Postnikova, Elena, Radoshitzky, Sheli R., Dye, John M., Ramírez de Arellano, Eva, Negredo, Ana, Palacios, Gustavo, Kuhn, Jens H., and Chandran, Kartik
- Subjects
- *
FILOVIRIDAE , *VIRAL receptors , *HOSTS (Biology) , *ETIOLOGY of diseases , *EBOLA virus , *GENE expression , *MEMBRANE fusion , *VIRAL proteins - Abstract
Lloviu virus (LLOV), a phylogenetically divergent filovirus, is the proposed etiologic agent of die-offs of Schreibers׳s long-fingered bats ( Miniopterus schreibersii ) in western Europe. Studies of LLOV remain limited because the infectious agent has not yet been isolated. Here, we generated a recombinant vesicular stomatitis virus expressing the LLOV spike glycoprotein (GP) and used it to show that LLOV GP resembles other filovirus GP proteins in structure and function. LLOV GP must be cleaved by endosomal cysteine proteases during entry, but is much more protease-sensitive than EBOV GP. The EBOV/MARV receptor, Niemann–Pick C1 (NPC1), is also required for LLOV entry, and its second luminal domain is recognized with high affinity by a cleaved form of LLOV GP, suggesting that receptor binding would not impose a barrier to LLOV infection of humans and non-human primates. The use of NPC1 as an intracellular entry receptor may be a universal property of filoviruses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Receptor-Mediated Host Cell Preference of a Bat-Derived Filovirus, Lloviu Virus
- Author
-
Takeshi Saito, Yoshihiro Takadate, Rashid Manzoor, Hiroko Miyamoto, Manabu Igarashi, Ayato Takada, Yurie Kida, Hirohito Ogawa, Junki Maruyama, Masahiro Kajihara, and Tatsunari Kondoh
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Microbiology (medical) ,glycoprotein ,filovirus ,congenital, hereditary, and neonatal diseases and abnormalities ,Miniopterus sp ,viruses ,030106 microbiology ,host range ,bat ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Microbiology ,Article ,Virus ,Marburg virus ,03 medical and health sciences ,Virology ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,medicine ,insectivorous bat ,lcsh:QH301-705.5 ,Tropism ,Lloviu virus ,Ebola virus ,Niemann–Pick C1 ,nutritional and metabolic diseases ,biology.organism_classification ,030104 developmental biology ,lcsh:Biology (General) ,Vesicular stomatitis virus ,Vero cell ,NPC1 ,lloviu virus - Abstract
Lloviu virus (LLOV), a bat-derived filovirus that is phylogenetically distinct from human pathogenic filoviruses such as Ebola virus (EBOV) and Marburg virus (MARV), was discovered in Europe. However, since infectious LLOV has never been isolated, the biological properties of this virus remain poorly understood. We found that vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) pseudotyped with the glycoprotein (GP) of LLOV (VSV&ndash, LLOV) showed higher infectivity in one bat (Miniopterus sp.)-derived cell line than in the other bat-derived cell lines tested, which was distinct from the tropism of VSV pseudotyped with EBOV (VSV&ndash, EBOV) and MARV GPs. We then focused on the interaction between GP and Niemann&ndash, Pick C1 (NPC1) protein, one of the cellular receptors of filoviruses. We introduced the Miniopterus bat and human NPC1 genes into NPC1-knockout Vero E6 cells and their susceptibilities to the viruses were compared. The cell line expressing the bat NPC1 showed higher susceptibility to VSV&ndash, LLOV than that expressing human NPC1, whereas the opposite preference was seen for VSV&ndash, EBOV. Using a site-directed mutagenesis approach, amino acid residues involved in the differential tropism were identified in the NPC1 and GP molecules. Our results suggest that the interaction between GP and NPC1 is an important factor in the tropism of LLOV to a particular bat species.
- Published
- 2020
34. Decreased membrane cholesterol in liver mitochondria of the point mutation mouse model of juvenile Niemann–Pick C1, Npc1nmf164
- Author
-
Erickson, Robert P, Aras, Siddhesh, Purandare, Neeraja, Hüttemann, Maik, Liu, Jenney, Dragotto, Jessica, Fiorenza, Maria Teresa, and Grossman, Lawrence I.
- Subjects
mitochondria ,mitophagy ,unesterified cholesterol ,Niemann-Pick C1 ,liver ,cytochrome c oxidase - Published
- 2020
35. Pharmacologically induced endolysosomal cholesterol imbalance through clinically licensed drugs itraconazole and fluoxetine impairs Ebola virus infection in vitro .
- Author
-
Kummer S, Lander A, Goretzko J, Kirchoff N, Rescher U, and Schloer S
- Subjects
- Ebolavirus genetics, Ebolavirus physiology, Endosomes drug effects, Hemorrhagic Fever, Ebola drug therapy, Hemorrhagic Fever, Ebola genetics, Hemorrhagic Fever, Ebola virology, Humans, Niemann-Pick C1 Protein genetics, Niemann-Pick C1 Protein metabolism, Sphingomyelin Phosphodiesterase antagonists & inhibitors, Sphingomyelin Phosphodiesterase genetics, Sphingomyelin Phosphodiesterase metabolism, Virus Internalization drug effects, Antiviral Agents pharmacology, Cholesterol metabolism, Ebolavirus drug effects, Endosomes metabolism, Fluoxetine pharmacology, Hemorrhagic Fever, Ebola metabolism, Itraconazole pharmacology
- Abstract
Ebola virus disease (EVD) is a severe and frequently lethal disease caused by Ebola virus (EBOV). The latest occasional EVD outbreak (2013-2016) in Western African, which was accompanied by a high fatality rate, showed the great potential of epidemic and pandemic spread. Antiviral therapies against EBOV are very limited, strain-dependent (only antibody therapies are available) and mostly restricted to symptomatic treatment, illustrating the urgent need for novel antiviral strategies. Thus, we evaluated the effect of the clinically widely used antifungal itraconazole and the antidepressant fluoxetine for a repurposing against EBOV infection. While itraconazole, similar to U18666A, directly binds to and inhibits the endosomal membrane protein Niemann-Pick C1 (NPC1), fluoxetine, which belongs to the structurally unrelated group of weakly basic, amphiphile so-called "functional inhibitors of acid sphingomyelinase" (FIASMA) indirectly acts on the lysosome-residing acid sphingomyelinase via enzyme detachment leading to subsequent lysosomal degradation. Both, the drug-induced endolysosomal cholesterol accumulation and the altered endolysosomal pH, might interfere with the fusion of viral and endolysosomal membrane, preventing infection with EBOV. We further provide evidence that cholesterol imbalance is a conserved cross-species mechanism to hamper EBOV infection. Thus, exploring the endolysosomal host-pathogen interface as a suitable antiviral treatment may offer a general strategy to combat EBOV infection.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Different effects of two mutations on the infectivity of Ebola virus glycoprotein in nine mammalian species
- Author
-
Yusuke Nakano, Yoshio Koyanagi, Yohei Kurosaki, So Nakagawa, Jiro Yasuda, Kei Sato, and Mahoko Takahashi Ueda
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Primates ,Glycoprotein viral infectivity ,Short Communication ,viruses ,Virus-host interaction ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Virus ,Negative-strand RNA Viruses ,Cell Line ,03 medical and health sciences ,Viral Proteins ,Ebola virus ,Viral entry ,Niemann-Pick C1 Protein ,Virology ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Glycoproteins ,Ebolavirus ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Infectivity ,Mammals ,Niemann-pick C1 ,Animal ,Hemorrhagic Fever, Ebola ,Models, Structural ,030104 developmental biology ,chemistry ,Amino Acid Substitution ,Cell culture ,Host-Pathogen Interactions ,Mutation ,Reston virus ,Pseudotyping ,Glycoprotein ,Sequence Alignment ,Viral Fusion Proteins - Abstract
Ebola virus (EBOV), which belongs to the genus Ebolavirus, causes a severe and often fatal infection in primates, including humans, whereas Reston virus (RESTV) only causes lethal disease in non-human primates. Two amino acids (aa) at positions 82 and 544 of the EBOV glycoprotein (GP) are involved in determining viral infectivity. However, it remains unclear how these two aa residues affect the infectivity of Ebolavirus species in various hosts. Here we performed viral pseudotyping experiments with EBOV and RESTV GP derivatives in 10 cell lines from 9 mammalian species. We demonstrated that isoleucine at position 544/545 increases viral infectivity in all host species, whereas valine at position 82/83 modulates viral infectivity, depending on the viral and host species. Structural modelling suggested that the former residue affects viral fusion, whereas the latter residue influences the interaction with the viral entry receptor, Niemann-Pick C1., Journal of General Virology, 99(2), pp.181-186; 2018
- Published
- 2018
37. Potential pharmacological strategies targeting the Niemann-Pick C1 receptor and Ebola virus glycoprotein interaction
- Author
-
Tiziana Ginex, Rafael Delgado, Nuria E. Campillo, Miguel Ángel Cuesta-Geijo, Marcos Morales-Tenorio, César Muñoz-Fontela, Covadonga Alonso, Carmen Gil, La Caixa, Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), Instituto de Salud Carlos III, European Commission, Morales-Tenorio, Marcos [0000-0001-9439-6314], Ginex, Tiziana [0000-0002-5739-8713], Cuesta-Geijo, Miguel Ángel [0000-0003-4694-1968], Campillo, Nuria E. [0000-0002-9948-2665], Muñoz-Fontela, César [0000-0002-7725-2586], Alonso, Covandoga [0000-0002-0862-6177], Delgado, Rafael [0000-0002-6912-4736], Gil, Carmen [0000-0002-3882-6081], Morales-Tenorio, Marcos, Ginex, Tiziana, Cuesta-Geijo, Miguel Ángel, Campillo, Nuria E., Muñoz-Fontela, César, Alonso, Covandoga, Delgado, Rafael, and Gil, Carmen
- Subjects
Endosome ,Ebola virus disease ,medicine.disease_cause ,01 natural sciences ,Antibodies ,Small Molecule Libraries ,03 medical and health sciences ,Niemann-Pick C1 Protein ,Viral entry ,Drug Discovery ,Intracellular receptor ,medicine ,Humans ,Niemann-Pick C1 ,Receptor ,Mode of action ,Glycoproteins ,030304 developmental biology ,Pharmacology ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,0303 health sciences ,Ebola virus ,010405 organic chemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,General Medicine ,Hemorrhagic Fever, Ebola ,Virus Internalization ,Ebolavirus ,NPC1 ,0104 chemical sciences ,3. Good health ,Cell biology ,Molecular Docking Simulation ,Cholesterol ,chemistry ,Viruses ,Glycoprotein ,Protein Binding ,EBOV - Abstract
12 p.-5 fig.-2 tab.-1 graph. abst., Niemann-Pick C1 (NPC1) receptor is an intracellular protein located in late endosomes and lysosomes whose main function is to regulate intracellular cholesterol trafficking. Besides being postulated as necessary for the infection of highly pathogenic viruses in which the integrity of cholesterol transport is required, this protein also allows the entry of the Ebola virus (EBOV) into the host cells acting as an intracellular receptor. EBOV glycoprotein (EBOV-GP) interaction with NPC1 at the endosomal membrane triggers the release of the viral material into the host cell, starting the infective cycle. Disruption of the NPC1/EBOV-GP interaction could represent an attractive strategy for the development of drugs aimed at inhibiting viral entry and thus infection. Some of the today available EBOV inhibitors were proposed to interrupt this interaction, but molecular and structural details about their mode of action are still preliminary thus more efforts are needed to properly address these points. Here, we provide a critical discussion of the potential of NPC1 and its interaction with EBOV-GP as a therapeutic target for viral infections., The project leading to these results has received funding from “la Caixa” Banking Foundation under the project code LCF/PR/HR19/52160012. This research was partially supported through the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation (RTI2018-097305-R-I00), the Instituto de Investigación Carlos III, ISCIII, (FIS PI 1801007) and the European Commission Horizon 2020 Framework Programme Project VIRUSCAN FETPROACT-2016: 731868. M. M. holds a pre-doctoral FPU grant (FPU18/03493) from MICINN.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. The C57BL/6J Niemann–Pick C1 mouse model with decreased gene dosage has impaired glucose tolerance independent of body weight.
- Author
-
Jelinek, David, Castillo, Joseph J., and Garver, William S.
- Subjects
- *
NIEMANN-Pick diseases , *LABORATORY mice , *GENE dosage , *GLUCOSE tolerance tests , *BODY weight , *OBESITY , *TYPE 2 diabetes - Abstract
Abstract: The human Niemann–Pick C1 (NPC1) gene has been found to be associated with extreme (early-onset and morbid-adult) obesity and type 2 diabetes independent of body weight. We previously performed growth studies using BALB/cJ Npc1 normal (Npc1 +/+) and Npc1 heterozygous (Npc1 +/−) mice and determined that decreased Npc1 gene dosage interacts with a high-fat diet to promote weight gain and adiposity. The present study was performed using both BALB/cJ and C57BL/6J Npc1 +/+ and Npc1 +/− mice to determine if decreased Npc1 gene dosage predisposes to metabolic features associated with type 2 diabetes. The results indicated that C57BL/6J Npc1 +/− mice, but not BALB/cJ Npc1 +/− mice, have impaired glucose tolerance when fed a low-fat diet and independent of body weight. The results also suggest that an accumulation of liver free fatty acids and hepatic lipotoxicity marked by an elevation in the amount of plasma alanine aminotransferase (ALT) may be responsible for hepatic insulin resistance and impaired glucose tolerance. Finally, the peroxisome-proliferator activated receptor α (PPARα) and sterol regulatory element-binding protein-1 (SREBP-1) pathways known to have a central role in regulating free fatty acid metabolism were downregulated in the livers, but not in the adipose or muscle, of C57BL/6J Npc1 +/− mice compared to C57BL/6J Npc1 +/+ mice. Therefore, decreased Npc1 gene dosage among two different mouse strains interacts with undefined modifying genes to manifest disparate yet often related metabolic diseases. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Niemann-Pick C1 (NPC1)/NPC1-like1 Chimeras Define Sequences Critical for NPC1's Function as a Filovirus Entry Receptor.
- Author
-
Krishnan, Anuja, Miller, Emily Happy, Herbert, Andrew S., Melinda, Ng, Ndungo, Esther, Whelan, Sean P., Dye, John M., and Chandran, Kartik
- Subjects
- *
EBOLA virus , *MARBURG virus , *NIEMANN-Pick diseases , *VIRAL receptors , *CHIMERISM , *HEPATITIS C virus - Abstract
We recently demonstrated that Niemann-Pick C1 (NPC1), a ubiquitous 13-pass cellular membrane protein involved in lysosomal cholesterol transport, is a critical entry receptor for filoviruses. Here we show that Niemann-Pick C1-like1 (NPC1L1), an NPC1 paralog and hepatitis C virus entry factor, lacks filovirus receptor activity. We exploited the structural similarity between NPC1 and NPC1L1 to construct and analyze a panel of chimeras in which NPC1L1 sequences were replaced with cognate sequences from NPC1. Only one chimera, NPC1L1 containing the second luminal domain (C) of NPC1 in place of its own, bound to the viral glycoprotein, GP. This engineered protein mediated authentic filovirus infection nearly as well as wild-type NPC1, and more efficiently than did a minimal NPC1 domain C-based receptor recently described by us. A reciprocal chimera, NPC1 containing NPC1L1's domain C, was completely inactive. Remarkably, an intra-domain NPC1L1-NPC1 chimera bearing only a ∼130-amino acid N-terminal region of NPC1 domain C could confer substantial viral receptor activity on NPC1L1. Taken together, these findings account for the failure of NPC1L1 to serve as a filovirus receptor, highlight the central role of the luminal domain C of NPC1 in filovirus entry, and reveal the direct involvement of N-terminal domain C sequences in NPC1's function as a filovirus receptor [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. The role of decreased levels of Niemann-Pick C1 intracellular cholesterol transport on obesity is reversed in the C57BL/6J, metabolic syndrome mouse strain: a metabolic or an inflammatory effect?
- Author
-
Borbon, Ivan, Campbell, Erin, Ke, Wangjing, and Erickson, Robert
- Abstract
We have previously shown that decreased dosage of Niemann-Pick C1 (Npc1) protein, caused by heterozygosity at the null mutation, Npc1, locus, causes altered lipid metabolism in mice. When studied on the 'lean' BALB/cJ genetic background, the decreased protein was associated with no weight changes in either males or females when on a regular diet but increased weights and adiposity when on a high fat diet Jelinek et al. (Obesity 18: 1457-1459, , Gene 491:128-134, ). When the heterozygotes were studied on a mixed C57BL/6J, BALB/cJ background, increased weight and adiposity were also found on a regular diet (sexes pooled Jelinek et al. [Hum Molec Genet 20:312-321, ]). We find somewhat different results when the hypomorphic Npc1 mutation, Npc1, is studied on a pure C57BL/6J, 'metabolic syndrome' genetic background with male, but not female, heterozygotes having lower weights on the regular diet. The result does not seem to be due to the difference in the two mutations as heterozygous Npc1 mice on the BALB/cJ background acted like the null mutant heterozygotes. Studies of glucose tolerance, liver enzymes, liver triglycerides and fat deposition, and adipose tissue caveolin 1 levels did not disclose reasons for these differing results. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Characterization of the Niemann-Pick C pathway in alveolar type II cells and lamellar bodies of the lung.
- Author
-
Roszell, Blair R., Jian-Qin Tao, Yu, Kevin J., Shaohui Huang, and Bates, Sandra R.
- Abstract
The Niemann-Pick C (NPC) pathway plays an essential role in the intracellular trafficking of cholesterol by facilitating the release of lipoprotein-derived sterol from the lumen of lysosomes. Regulation of cellular cholesterol homeostasis is of particular importance to lung alveolar type II cells because of the need for production of surfactant with an appropriate lipid composition. We performed microscopic and biochemical analysis of NPC proteins in isolated rat type II pneumocytes. NPC1 and NPC2 proteins were present in the lung, isolated type II cells in culture, and alveolar macrophages. The glycosylated and nonglycosylated forms of NPC1 were prominent in the lung and the lamellar body organelles. Immunocytochemical analysis of isolated type II pneumocytes showed localization of NPC1 to the limiting membrane of lamellar bodies. NPC2 and lysosomal acid lipase were found within these organelles, as confirmed by z-stack analysis of confocal images. All three proteins also were identified in small, lysosome-like vesicles. In the presence of serum, pharmacological inhibition of the NPC pathway with compound U18666A resulted in doubling of the cholesterol content of the type II cells. Filipin staining revealed a striking accumulation of cholesterol within lamellar bodies. Thus the NPC pathway functions to control cholesterol accumulation in lamellar bodies of type II pneumocytes and, thereby, may play a role in the regulation of surfactant cholesterol content. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Pulmonary function and pathology in hydroxypropyl-beta-cyclodextin-treated and untreated Npc1 −/− mice
- Author
-
Muralidhar, Akshay, Borbon, Ivan A., Esharif, Dyadin M., Ke, Wangjing, Manacheril, Rinu, Daines, Michael, and Erickson, Robert P.
- Subjects
- *
LUNG diseases , *PATHOLOGY , *CYCLODEXTRINS , *NEURODEGENERATION , *NIEMANN-Pick diseases , *HISTOLOGY , *MACROPHAGES , *CHOLESTEROL - Abstract
Abstract: Lung dysfunction is an important part of the pathology of the neurodegenerative disorder, Niemann–Pick C1 (NPC1). We have studied the pulmonary disease in the Npc1 NIH/NIH mouse model. On histology, we find large numbers of alveolar foamy macrophages but no alveolar proteinosis. Lung weight as percent of body weight was markedly increased; using the flexiVent small animal ventilator (SCIREQ, Inc.), we find inspiratory capacity, elastance and hysterisivity to be increased while resistance was not changed. Cholesterol measurements show a doubling of lung cholesterol levels. Collagen is also increased. Treatment of Npc1 −/− mice with hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrin (HPBCD), despite efficacious effects in brain and liver, results in little difference from age-matched controls (using a CNS-expressed transgene to extend the life expectancy of the Npc1 −/− mice) for these variables. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Combined antioxidants and anti-inflammatory therapies fail to attenuate the early and late phases of cyclodextrin-induced cochlear damage and hearing loss.
- Author
-
Manohar, Senthilvelan, Ding, Dalian, Jiang, Haiyan, Li, Li, Chen, Guang-Di, Kador, Peter, and Salvi, Richard
- Subjects
- *
SENSORINEURAL hearing loss , *OTOACOUSTIC emissions , *CORTI'S organ , *HAIR cells , *SPIRAL ganglion - Abstract
Niemann-Pick C1 (NPC1) is a fatal neurodegenerative disease caused by aberrant cholesterol metabolism. The progression of the disease can be slowed by removing excess cholesterol with high-doses of 2-hyroxypropyl-beta-cyclodextrin (HPβCD). Unfortunately, HPβCD causes hearing loss; the initial first phase involves a rapid destruction of outer hair cells (OHCs) while the second phase, occurring 4–6 weeks later, involves the destruction of inner hair cells (IHCs), pillar cells, collapse of the organ of Corti and spiral ganglion neuron degeneration. To determine whether the first and/or second phase of HPβCD-induced cochlear damage is linked, in part, to excess oxidative stress or neuroinflammation, rats were treated with a single-dose of 3000 mg/kg HPβCD alone or together with one of two combination therapies. Each combination therapy was administered from 2-days before to 6-weeks after the HPβCD treatment. Combination 1 consisted of minocycline, an antibiotic that suppresses neuroinflammation, and HK-2, a multifunctional redox modulator that suppresses oxidative stress. Combination 2 was comprised of minocycline plus N-acetyl cysteine (NAC), which upregulates glutathione, a potent antioxidant. To determine if either combination therapy could prevent HPβCD-induced hearing impairment and cochlear damage, distortion product otoacoustic emissions (DPOAE) were measured to assess OHC function and the cochlear compound action potential (CAP) was measured to assess the function of IHCs and auditory nerve fibers. Cochleograms were prepared to quantify the amount of OHC, IHC and pillar cell (PC) loss. HPβCD significantly reduced DPOAE and CAP amplitudes and caused significant OHC, IHC and OPC losses with losses greater in the high-frequency base of the cochlea than the apex. Neither minocycline + HK-2 (MIN+ HK-2) nor minocycline + NAC (MIN+NAC) prevented the loss of DPOAEs, CAPs, OHCs, IHCs or IPCs caused by HPβCD. These results suggest that oxidative stress and neuroinflammation are unlikely to play major roles in mediating the first or second phase of HPβCD-induced cochlear damage. Thus, HPβCD-induced ototoxicity must be mediated by some other unknown cell-death pathway possibly involving loss of trophic support from damaged support cells or disrupted cholesterol metabolism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Variation in NPC1, the gene encoding Niemann–Pick C1, a protein involved in intracellular cholesterol transport, is associated with Alzheimer disease and/or aging in the Polish population
- Author
-
Erickson, Robert P., Larson-Thomé, Katherine, Weberg, Lyndon, Szybinska, Aleksandra, Mossakowska, Malgorzata, Styczynska, Maria, Barcikowska, Maria, and Kuznicki, Jacek
- Subjects
- *
GENETICS of Alzheimer's disease , *PROTEINS , *CENTENARIANS , *AGING , *HUMAN genetic variation , *GENE frequency - Abstract
Abstract: There is abundant evidence that cholesterol metabolism, especially as mediated by the intercellular transporter APOE, is involved in the pathogenesis of sporadic, late-onset Alzheimer disease (SLAD). Identification of other genes involved in SLAD pathogenesis has been hampered since gene association studies, whether individual or genome-wide, experience difficulty in finding appropriate controls in as much as 25% or more of normal adults will develop SLAD. Using 152 centenarians as additional controls and 120 “regular”, 65–75-year-old controls, we show an association of genetic variation in NPC1 with SLAD and/or aging. In this preliminary study, we find gradients of two non-synonymous SNP’s allele frequencies in NPC1 from centenarians through normal controls to SLAD in this non-stratified Polish population. An intervening intronic SNP is not in Hardy–Weinberg equilibria and differs between centenarians and controls/SLAD. Haplotypes frequencies determined by fastPHASE were somewhat different, and the predicted genotype frequencies were very different between the three groups. These findings can also be interpreted as indicating a role for NPC1 in aging, a role also suggested by NPC1’s role in Dauer formation (hibernation, a longevity state) in Caenorhabditis elegans. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. The Niemann–Pick C1 protein in feline fibroblasts
- Author
-
Garver, William S., Somers, Kyra, Krishnan, Kumar, Mitchell, Thomas, Heidenreich, Randall A., and Anna Thrall, Mary
- Subjects
- *
METABOLIC disorders , *LIPIDOSES , *FIBROBLASTS - Abstract
Niemann–Pick type C (NPC) disease is a rare inherited metabolic disorder characterized by hepatosplenomegaly, progressive neurodegeneration, and storage of lipids such as cholesterol and glycosphingolipids in most tissues. The current study was conducted to characterize the Niemann–Pick C1 (NPC1) protein in feline fibroblasts. This was accomplished by generating rabbit polyclonal antibodies against a peptide corresponding to amino acids 1256–1275 of the feline NPC1 protein. The results obtained using immunoblot analysis identified two major proteins that migrated at approximately 140 and 180 kDa. These two proteins were absent when immunoblots were incubated in the presence of feline NPC1 antibody and immunizing peptide, or preimmune serum. Fluorescence microscopy of feline fibroblasts incubated with the feline NPC1 antibody revealed granular staining within the perinuclear region of the cell. This granular staining was diminished when feline fibroblasts were incubated in the presence of feline NPC1 antibody and immunizing peptide, or was completely absent when feline fibroblasts were incubated in the presence of preimmune serum. Additional studies using double-labeled fluorescence microscopy indicated that feline NPC1 partially colocalized with markers for late endosomes/lysosomes, endoplasmic reticulum, and microtubules, but not the trans-Golgi network. In summary, the results presented in this report demonstrate that the NPC1 protein in feline fibroblasts has a similar distribution as that previously described for human and murine fibroblasts. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. The role of cholesterol in Shh signaling and teratogen-induced holoprosencephaly.
- Author
-
Incardona, J. P. and Roelink, H.
- Subjects
CHOLESTEROL ,ISOPENTENOIDS ,TERATOGENIC agents ,HUMAN abnormality etiology ,CELLULAR signal transduction - Abstract
Holoprosencephaly, or an undivided forebrain, is a complex brain malformation associated with Sonic hedgehog (Shh) mutations. Other causes of holoprosencephaly have converged upon the Shh signaling pathway: genetic and pharmacologic impairment of cholesterol synthesis, and the action of the steroidal alkaloid cyclopamine. This review focuses on recent studies aimed at determining how Shh signaling is affected by these causes of holoprosencephaly, whether they involve a common mechanism and the role played by cholesterol. Cholesterol is potentially important for both biogenesis of Shh and in signal transduction in Shh-responsive cells. Teratogens that induce holoprosencephaly appear to affect Shh signal transduction rather than Shh biogenesis. Analysis of these agents and other compounds that affect various aspects of cellular cholesterol distribution indicates that the role of cholesterol in Shh signal transduction is novel and complicated. The similarity of the Shh receptor, Patched (Ptc), to the Niemann-Pick C1 protein, which is involved in the vesicular trafficking of cholesterol, provides insight into the role of cholesterol and the action of compounds like cyclopamine. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Potential pharmacological strategies targeting the Niemann-Pick C1 receptor and Ebola virus glycoprotein interaction.
- Author
-
Morales-Tenorio, Marcos, Ginex, Tiziana, Cuesta-Geijo, Miguel Ángel, Campillo, Nuria E., Muñoz-Fontela, César, Alonso, Covadonga, Delgado, Rafael, and Gil, Carmen
- Subjects
- *
EBOLA virus , *PATHOGENIC viruses , *VIRUS diseases , *EBOLA virus disease , *DRUG development - Abstract
Niemann-Pick C1 (NPC1) receptor is an intracellular protein located in late endosomes and lysosomes whose main function is to regulate intracellular cholesterol trafficking. Besides being postulated as necessary for the infection of highly pathogenic viruses in which the integrity of cholesterol transport is required, this protein also allows the entry of the Ebola virus (EBOV) into the host cells acting as an intracellular receptor. EBOV glycoprotein (EBOV-GP) interaction with NPC1 at the endosomal membrane triggers the release of the viral material into the host cell, starting the infective cycle. Disruption of the NPC1/EBOV-GP interaction could represent an attractive strategy for the development of drugs aimed at inhibiting viral entry and thus infection. Some of the today available EBOV inhibitors were proposed to interrupt this interaction, but molecular and structural details about their mode of action are still preliminary thus more efforts are needed to properly address these points. Here, we provide a critical discussion of the potential of NPC1 and its interaction with EBOV-GP as a therapeutic target for viral infections. [Display omitted] • Niemann-Pick C1 (NPC1) receptor is essential for Ebola virus (EBOV) infection. • Discussion around the druggability of the interaction between NPC1 and EBOV-GP. • Inhibitors of NPC1/EBOV-GP interaction as an attractive class of antiviral agents. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Different effects of two mutations on the infectivity of Ebola virus glycoprotein in nine mammalian species
- Author
-
Kurosaki, Yohei, Ueda, Mahoko Takahashi, Nakano, Yusuke, Yasuda, Jiro, Koyanagi, Yoshio, Sato, Kei, Nakagawa, So, Kurosaki, Yohei, Ueda, Mahoko Takahashi, Nakano, Yusuke, Yasuda, Jiro, Koyanagi, Yoshio, Sato, Kei, and Nakagawa, So
- Abstract
Ebola virus (EBOV), which belongs to the genus Ebolavirus, causes a severe and often fatal infection in primates, including humans, whereas Reston virus (RESTV) only causes lethal disease in non-human primates. Two amino acids (aa) at positions 82 and 544 of the EBOV glycoprotein (GP) are involved in determining viral infectivity. However, it remains unclear how these two aa residues affect the infectivity of Ebolavirus species in various hosts. Here we performed viral pseudotyping experiments with EBOV and RESTV GP derivatives in 10 cell lines from 9 mammalian species. We demonstrated that isoleucine at position 544/545 increases viral infectivity in all host species, whereas valine at position 82/83 modulates viral infectivity, depending on the viral and host species. Structural modelling suggested that the former residue affects viral fusion, whereas the latter residue influences the interaction with the viral entry receptor, Niemann-Pick C1., Journal of General Virology, 99(2), pp.181-186; 2018
- Published
- 2018
49. Engineered Human Monoclonal scFv to Receptor Binding Domain of Ebolavirus.
- Author
-
Densumite, Jaslan, Phanthong, Siratcha, Seesuay, Watee, Sookrung, Nitat, Chaisri, Urai, Chaicumpa, Wanpen, and Yamazaki, Tatsuya
- Subjects
EBOLA virus ,EBOLA virus disease ,MOLECULAR docking ,BINDING sites ,DRUG development ,VIRUS cloning - Abstract
(1) Background: Ebolavirus (EBOV) poses as a significant threat for human health by frequently causing epidemics of the highly contagious Ebola virus disease (EVD). EBOV glycoprotein (GP), as a sole surface glycoprotein, needs to be cleaved in endosomes to fully expose a receptor-binding domain (RBD) containing a receptor-binding site (RBS) for receptor binding and genome entry into cytoplasm for replication. RBDs are highly conserved among EBOV species, so they are an attractive target for broadly effective anti-EBOV drug development. (2) Methods: Phage display technology was used as a tool to isolate human single-chain antibodies (HuscFv) that bind to recombinant RBDs from a human scFv (HuscFv) phage display library. The RBD-bound HuscFvs were fused with cell-penetrating peptide (CPP), and cell-penetrating antibodies (transbodies) were made, produced from the phage-infected E. coli clones and characterized. (3) Results: Among the HuscFvs obtained from phage-infected E. coli clones, HuscFvs of three clones, HuscFv4, HuscFv11, and HuscFv14, the non-cell-penetrable or cell-penetrable HuscFv4 effectively neutralized cellular entry of EBOV-like particles (VLPs). While all HuscFvs were found to bind cleaved GP (GPcl), their presumptive binding sites were markedly different, as determined by molecular docking. (4) Conclusions: The HuscFv4 could be a promising therapeutic agent against EBOV infection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Design, synthesis and biological evaluation of 2-substituted-6-[(4-substituted-1-piperidyl)methyl]-1H-benzimidazoles as inhibitors of ebola virus infection.
- Author
-
Bessières, Maxime, Plebanek, Elżbieta, Chatterjee, Payel, Shrivastava-Ranjan, Punya, Flint, Mike, Spiropoulou, Christina F., Warszycki, Dawid, Bojarski, Andrzej J., Roy, Vincent, and Agrofoglio, Luigi A.
- Subjects
- *
VIRUS inhibitors , *BIOSYNTHESIS , *EBOLA virus , *CHEMICAL synthesis , *SMALL molecules - Abstract
Novel 2-substituted-6-[(4-substituted-1-piperidyl)methyl]-1H-benzimidazoles were designed and synthesized as Ebola virus inhibitors. The proposed structures of the new prepared benzimidazole-piperidine hybrids were confirmed based on their spectral data and CHN analyses. The target compounds were screened in vitro for their anti-Ebola activity. Among tested molecules, compounds 26a (EC 50= 0.93 μM, SI = 10) and 25a (EC 50= 0.64 μM, SI = 20) were as potent as and more selective than Toremifene reference drug (EC 50 = 0.38 μM, SI = 7) against cell line. Data suggests that the mechanism by which 25a and 26a block EBOV infection is through the inhibition of viral entry at the level of NPC1. Furthermore, a docking study revealed that several of the NPC1 amino acids that participate in binding to GP are involved in the binding of the most active compounds 25a and 26a. Finally, in silico ADME prediction indicates that 26a is an idealy drug-like candidate. Our results could enable the development of small molecule drug capable of inhibiting Ebola virus, especially at the viral entry step. Image 1 • Novel 2-substituted-6-[(4-substituted-1-piperidyl)methyl]-1H-benzimidazoles were synthesized as inhibitors of EBOV virus. • The synthesized compounds were screened for their in vitro efficacy to inhibit EBOV entry. • Compounds 25a and 26a displayed excellent EBOV entry inhibitory activity. • Compounds 26a (EC 50= 0.93 μM, SI = 10) and 25a (EC 50= 0.64 μM, SI = 20) were as potent and more selective than Toremifene. • The mechanism by which 25a and 26a block EBOV infection is through the inhibition of viral entry at the level of NPC1. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.