Back to Search
Start Over
Protein catabolism in fibroblasts cultured from patients with mucolipidosis II and other lysosomal disorders
- Source :
- Biochemical Journal. 295:577-580
- Publication Year :
- 1993
- Publisher :
- Portland Press Ltd., 1993.
-
Abstract
- Protein catabolism in fibroblasts cultured from the skin of normal individuals and of patients with mucolipidosis II (I-cell disease) and several other lysosomal storage diseases was examined by metabolic labelling with [3H]leucine and following the fate of radioactive proteins in pulse-chase experiments. In mucolipidosis II cells, overall protein degradative rates were found to be distinctly lower than in normal control cells. To distinguish lysosomal from non-lysosomal degradation, labelling experiments were carried out in the presence and absence of 10 mM NH4Cl, an inhibitor of lysosomal function. It was found that mucolipidosis II fibroblasts exhibited a markedly reduced rate of lysosomal protein degradation, whereas the rate of nonlysosomal degradation appeared normal. Serum and amino acid starvation led to a marked increase in lysosomal protein degradation in normal cells, but had only a minimal effect on that in mucolipidosis II fibroblasts. The specific activities of cathepsins B, H and L were profoundly diminished in all mucolipidosis II cell lines tested. Lysosomal protein degradation in a mucolipidosis III cell line was impaired to a similar degree as in mucolipidosis II cells, whereas it was decreased to a lesser extent in fibroblasts from patients with mucopolysaccharidoses I and VI, galactosialidosis and GM1-gangliosidosis. We conclude that fibroblasts from patients with mucolipidosis II and III have a severely compromised capacity for endogenous lysosomal protein degradation that appears to result from multiple cathepsin deficiency. This lysosomal defect is likely to have pathophysiological consequences.
- Subjects :
- Cathepsin H
medicine.medical_specialty
Cathepsin L
Biology
Biochemistry
Cathepsin B
Mucolipidoses
Internal medicine
Lysosome
Endopeptidases
medicine
Humans
Fibroblast
Molecular Biology
Cells, Cultured
Cathepsin
Mucolipidosis
Catabolism
Proteins
Cell Biology
Fibroblasts
medicine.disease
Cathepsins
Lysosomal Storage Diseases
Cysteine Endopeptidases
Protein catabolism
Endocrinology
medicine.anatomical_structure
I-cell disease
Galactosialidosis
Research Article
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 14708728 and 02646021
- Volume :
- 295
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Biochemical Journal
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....0279caa8ac917bdff6eaf88309a46495
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1042/bj2950577