Correction of sphingomyelinase deficiency in Niemann‐Pick type C fibroblasts by removal of lipoprotein fraction from culture media

Abstract
Summary: The average sphingomyelinase activity of fibroblasts obtained from 12 Niemann‐Pick type C patients was 37.9% of that of normal fibroblasts (27.2versus 72nmol(mg protein)−1h−1) when the cells were cultured in minimum essential medium containing 13% fetal bovine serum. Following replacement of the above medium with medium in which the lipoprotein fraction had been removed from the fetal bovine serum, the sphingomyelinase activity rose over a 7‐day period from about 1/3 of normal to normal or above. Upon reintroduction of medium containing 10% fetal bovine serum which had not been extracted, the sphingomyelinase activity of the Niemann‐Pick type C cells again fell within 48h to 30% of the normal controls. In contrast, cell lines from patients with either Niemann‐Pick Type A or B were not influenced by the presence or the absence of lipoprotein, i.e. lacked sphingomyelinase activity under all culture conditions examined. Histochemical staining with filipin showed an inverse relationship between the sphingomyelinase activity and intracellular, free, unesterified, cholesterol level. Moreover, immunochemical staining with an antibody against a lysosomal membrane protein provided direct evidence that the accumulation of unesterified cholesterol in cells cultured in regular (non‐extracted) medium occurred within lysosomes and/or related organelles.

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