期刊名称:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
印刷版ISSN:0027-8424
电子版ISSN:1091-6490
出版年度:1999
卷号:96
期号:4
页码:1657-1662
DOI:10.1073/pnas.96.4.1657
语种:English
出版社:The National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
摘要:Niemann-Pick type C disease (NP-C) is an inherited neurovisceral lipid storage disorder characterized by progressive neurodegeneration. Most cases of NP-C result from inactivating mutations of NPC1, a recently identified member of a family of genes encoding membrane-bound proteins containing putative sterol sensing domains. By using a specific antipeptide antibody to human NPC1, we have here investigated the cellular and subcellular localization and regulation of NPC1. By light and electron microscopic immunocytochemistry of monkey brain, NPC1 was expressed predominantly in perisynaptic astrocytic glial processes. At a subcellular level, NPC1 localized to vesicles with the morphological characteristics of lysosomes and to sites near the plasma membrane. Analysis of the temporal and spatial pattern of neurodegeneration in the NP-C mouse, a spontaneous mutant model of human NP-C, by amino-cupric-silver staining, showed that the terminal fields of axons and dendrites are the earliest sites of degeneration that occur well before the appearance of a neurological phenotype. Western blots of cultured human fibroblasts and monkey brain homogenates revealed NPC1 as a 165-kDa protein. NPC1 levels in cultured fibroblasts were unchanged by incubation with low density lipoproteins or oxysterols but were increased 2- to 3-fold by the drugs progesterone and U-18666A, which block cholesterol transport out of lysosomes, and by the lysosomotropic agent NH4Cl. These studies show that NPC1 in brain is predominantly a glial protein present in astrocytic processes closely associated with nerve terminals, the earliest site of degeneration in NP-C. Given the vesicular localization of NPC1 and its proposed role in mediating retroendocytic trafficking of cholesterol and other lysosomal cargo, these results suggest that disruption of NPC1-mediated vesicular trafficking in astrocytes may be linked to neuronal degeneration in NP-C.