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Query: EC:3.2.1.23 (
beta-galactosidase
)
14,648
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Fibroblastic cell lines derived from a galactosialidosis patient, stably expressing the chimaeric green fluorescent protein variant (EGFP) gene fused to the wild-type and mutant human
lysosomal protective protein
/cathepsin A (PPCA) cDNA, were first established as a model system for revealing the sorting and processing of lysosomal enzymes and for investigating the molecular bases of their deficiencies. In the cell line expressing the wild-type PPCA-EGFP chimaera gene (EGFP-PPwild), an 81 kDa form (27 kDa EGFP fused to the C-terminus of the 54 kDa PPCA precursor) was produced, then processed into the mature 32/20 kDa two-chain form free of the EGFP domain. The intracellular cathepsin A, alpha-N-acetylneuraminidase and
beta-galactosidase
activities, which are deficient in the parent fibroblastic cells, could also be significantly restored in the cells. In contrast with the uniform and strong fluorescence throughout the cytoplasm and nucleus in the mock-cell line expressing only EGFP cDNA, weak reticular and punctate fluorescence was distributed throughout the EGFP-PPwild cell line. Bafilomycin A1, a potent inhibitor of vacuolar ATPase and intracellular acidification, induced the distribution of Golgi-like perinuclear fluorescence throughout the living and fixed cells, in which only the 81 kDa product was detected. After removal of the agent, time-dependent transport of the chimaeric protein from the Golgi apparatus to the prelysosomal structure in living cells was monitored with a confocal laser scanning microscope system. Leupeptin caused the distribution of lysosome-like granular fluorescence throughout the cytoplasm in the fixed cells, although it was hardly observed in living cells. The latter agent also dose-dependently induced an increase in the intracellular amount of the 81 kDa product containing the EGFP domain and inhibited the restoration of cathepsin A activity in the EGFP-PPwild cells after the removal of bafilomycin A1. In parallel, both the mature two-chain form and PPCA function disappeared. These results suggested that the chimaera gene product was transported to acidic compartments (endosomes/lysosomes), where proteolytic processing of the PPCA precursor/zymogen, quenching of the fluorescence, and random degradation of the EGFP portion occurred. A cell line stably expressing a chimaeric gene with a mutant PPCA cDNA containing an A1184-->G (Y395C) mutation, commonly detected in Japanese severe early-infantile type of galactosialidosis patients, showed an endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-like reticular fluorescence pattern. The PPCA-immunoreactive gene product was hardly detected in this cell line. The mutant chimaeric product was suggested to be degraded rapidly in the ER before transport to post-ER compartments. A cell line expressing the chimaeric gene with a T746-->A (Y249N) PPCA mutation exhibited both ER-like reticular and granular fluorescence on the reticular structure that was stronger than that in the EGFP-PPwild cells. Some of them contained large fluorescent inclusion-body-like structures. The ineffectiveness of transport inhibitors in the distribution changes in the two mutant chimaeric proteins suggested that they were not delivered to acidic compartments. Therefore this expression system can possibly be applied to the direct analysis of the sorting defects of mutant gene products in living cells and will be useful for the molecular investigation of lysosomal diseases, including galactosialidosis.
...
PMID:Stable expression of protective protein/cathepsin A-green fluorescent protein fusion genes in a fibroblastic cell line from a galactosialidosis patient. Model system for revealing the intracellular transport of normal and mutated lysosomal enzymes. 1033 91
Cathepsin A/protective protein [3.4.16.5], carboxypeptidase A, is a lysosomal serine protease with structural homology to yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) carboxypeptidase Y. Cathepsin A is a member of the alpha/beta hydrolase fold family and has been suggested to share a common ancestral relationship with other alpha/beta hydrolase fold enzymes, such as cholinesterases. Several lines of evidence indicate that cathepsin A is a multicatalytic enzyme with deamidase and esterase in addition to carboxypeptidase activities. Cathepsin A was recently identified in human platelets as deamidase. In vitro, it hydrolyzes a variety of bioactive peptide hormones including tachykinins, suggesting that extralysosomal cathepsin A plays a role in regulation of bioactive peptide functions. Recent reports emphasize the lysosomal protective function of cathepsin A rather than its protease function. The protective function of cathepsin A is distinct from its catalytic function. Human lysosomal
beta-galactosidase
and neuraminidase exist as a high molecular weight enzyme complex, in which there is a 54-kDa glycoprotein termed '
lysosomal protective protein
'. Based on cell culture studies, protective protein was found to protect both
beta-galactosidase
and neuraminidase from intralysosomal proteolysis by forming a multienzyme complex and was shown to be deficient in patients with galactosialidosis, a combined deficiency of
beta-galactosidase
and neuraminidase. Molecular cloning and gene expression studies have disclosed that protective protein is cathepsin A. The cathepsin A precursor has the potential to restore both
beta-galactosidase
and neuraminidase activities in fibroblasts from patients with galactosialidosis. Cathepsin A knockout mice showed a phenotype similar to human galactosialidosis and the deficient phenotype found in the mutant mice was corrected by transplanting erythroid precursor cells overexpressing cathepsin A. Collectively, these findings demonstrate the significance of cathepsin A as a key molecule in the onset of galactosialidosis and also highlight the therapeutic potential of the cathepsin A precursor for patients with galactosialidosis.
...
PMID:Cathepsin A/protective protein: an unusual lysosomal multifunctional protein. 1121 24
Human neuroblastoma GOTO cell lines were established that stably express recombinant human
lysosomal protective protein
/cathepsin A (PPCA) cDNA by transfection. Intracellular cathepsin A (acid serine carboxypeptidase) activity increased four-fold compared with in those of the parent and mock-transfected cell lines. The immunoreactive 54 kDa precursor/zymogen and mature 32/20 kDa two-chain forms were produced in the cells. The amount of the latter form expressed in the GOTO cells was significantly larger than those in the PPCA-overexpressing CHO cell lines previously established. The intracellular proteins showed a typical lysosomal granular distribution and the glycosylated 54 kDa precursor was secreted into the culture medium without the addition of an alkalizing agent. The PPCA-overexpressing cell lines also retained the ability to differentiate bi-directionally as well as the parent cells; into neuronal cells on induction by dibutyryl cAMP in serum-free medium and into Schwannian cells on induction by bromodeoxyuridine. During the course of differentiation into neuronal and Schwannian cells, the intracellular cathepsin A activity further increased two and five times, respectively, which was associated with an increase in the expression of the 32/20 kDa two-chain form. The glycosylated precursor proteins were taken up via the mannose 6-phosphate receptors, and the cathepsin A, alpha-neuraminidase and
beta-galactosidase
(beta-Gal) activities deficient in the fibroblasts derived from a patient with PPCA deficiency (
galactosialidosis)
were restored. These results suggest that the bi-directional differentiation of GOTO cell lines stably expressing the recombinant human PPCA gene could be a model system for analyzing the functions of PPCA in peripheral neuronal cells and Schwannian cells as well as the recombinant PPCA could be a useful source for enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) for galactosialidosis patients.
...
PMID:Expression of lysosomal protective protein/cathepsin A in a stably transformed human neuroblastoma cell line during bi-directional differentiation into neuronal and Schwannian cells. 1468 10
Sialidosis and galactosialidosis are lysosomal storage diseases caused by the genetic defects of lysosomal sialidase (neuraminidase-1; NEU1) and
lysosomal protective protein
/cathepsin A (PPCA), respectively, associated with a NEU1 deficiency, excessive accumulation of sialylglycoconjugates, and development of progressive neurosomatic manifestations; in addition, the latter disorder is accompanied by simultaneous deficiencies of
beta-galactosidase
and cathepsin A. We demonstrated that a few soluble N-glycosylated proteins carrying sialyloligosaccharides sensitive to glycopeptidase F (GPF) can be specifically detected in cultured fibroblasts from sialidosis and galactosialidosis cases by blotting with a Maackia amurensis (MAM) lectin. We also examined the therapeutic effects of normal gene transfer and enzyme replacement by evaluating the decreases in sialylglycoconjugates accumulated in fibroblasts with these NEU1 deficiencies. The specific N-glycosylated proteins detected on MAM lectin blotting as well as the granular lysosomal fluorescence due to an avidin-FITC/biotinylated MAM lectin conjugate in sialidosis and galactosialidosis fibroblasts disappeared in parallel with the restoration of the intracellular NEU1 activity after transfection of the recombinant NEU1 fused to HA tag sequence and the wild-type PPCA cDNA as well as administration of the recombinant PPCA precursor protein. The detection method for the abnormal sialylglycoproteins in cultured cells involving MAM lectin was demonstrated to be useful not only for biochemical and diagnostic analyses of NEU1 deficiencies but also for therapeutic evaluation of these conditions.
...
PMID:Elimination of abnormal sialylglycoproteins in fibroblasts with sialidosis and galactosialidosis by normal gene transfer and enzyme replacement. 1636 Dec 47
Lysosomal carboxypeptidases play important roles in catabolism of proteins and peptides and in posttranslational processing of other lysosomal enzymes. The major lysosomal serine carboxypeptidase A (cathepsin A [CathA]), also known as protective protein, activates and stabilizes two other lysosomal enzymes,
beta-galactosidase
and neuraminidase/sialidase 1. Genetic deficiency of CathA (
galactosialidosis)
causes the lysosomal storage of sialylated glycoconjugates and leads to a multiorgan pathology. The galactosialidosis patients also show arterial hypertension and cardiomyopathy, conditions not predicted from the lysosomal storage of glycoconjugates. This review summarizes the experimental data suggesting that both cardiovascular pathologies associate with persisted vasoconstrictions and impaired formation of the elastic fibers triggered by the deficiency of CathA. We also discuss the homologous serine carboxypeptidases, Scpep1 and vitellogenic-like carboxypeptidase, that are secreted from endothelial cells and could potentially affect the cardiovascular system.
...
PMID:Serine carboxypeptidases in regulation of vasoconstriction and elastogenesis. 1946 48
beta-galactosidase
(GLB1) forms a functional lysosomal multienzyme complex with
lysosomal protective protein
(PPCA) and neuraminidase 1 (NEU1) which is important for its intracellular processing and activity. Mutations in the
beta-galactosidase
gene cause the lysosomal storage disease G(M1)-gangliosidosis. In order to identify additional molecular changes associated with the presence of
beta-galactosidase
mutations, the expression of canine lysosomal multienzyme complex components in GLB1(+/+), GLB1(+/-) and GLB1(-/-) fibroblasts was investigated by quantitative RT-PCR, Western blot and enzymatic assays. Quantitative RT-PCR revealed differential regulation of total
beta-galactosidase
,
beta-galactosidase
variants and protective protein for beta-galactosidase gene (PPGB) in GLB1(+/-) and GLB1(-/-) compared to GLB1(+/+) fibroblasts. Furthermore, it was shown that PPGB levels gradually increased with the number of mutant
beta-galactosidase
alleles while no change in the NEU1 expression was observed. This is the first study that simultaneously examine the effect of GLB1(+/+), GLB1(+/-) and GLB1(-/-) genotypes on the expression of lysosomal multienzyme complex components. The findings reveal a possible adaptive process in GLB1 homozygous mutant and heterozygous individuals that could facilitate the design of efficient therapeutic strategies.
...
PMID:Impact of beta-galactosidase mutations on the expression of the canine lysosomal multienzyme complex. 1960 15
Human
lysosomal protective protein
/cathepsin A (CathA) is a multifunctional protein that exhibits not only protective functions as to lysosomal glycosidases, i.e., neuraminidase 1 (NEU1) and
beta-galactosidase
(GLB), but also its own serine carboxypeptidase activity, and exhibits conserved structural similarity to yeast and wheat homologs (CPY and CPW). Our previous study revealed that the R344 (Arg344) residue in CathA could contribute to the binding and recognition of the serine peptidase inhibitor chymostatin. We examined here the effects of substitution of R344 with other amino acids, including A, D, E, G, I, K, M, N, P, Q, S, and V, denoted as R344X, including the wild-type CathA, on expression of CathA activity and intracellular processing. Among the mutant gene products, the 54-kDa precursor/zymogen with the R344D substitution was not processed to the 32/20-kDa mature form with CathA activity in a fibroblastic cell line derived from a galactosialidosis patient. Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations on the total twelve R344X mutants and the wild-type revealed that only R344D takes on a significantly different conformation of S293-D295 in the excision peptide (M285-R298) compared to the other R344X mutants; the side chains of S293 and D295 in R344D are exposed on the molecular surface, although those in the other twelve R344X mutants are buried inside the protein. The results of the current work strongly suggest that the distinct conformational change of the S293-D295 region in the R344D protein causes the processing defect of the 54-kDa precursor of the R344D mutant gene product in cultured cells.
...
PMID:Expression and molecular dynamics studies on effect of amino acid substitutions at Arg344 in human cathepsin A on the protein local conformation. 1967 97
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