Abstract
Concanavalin A (ConA) binding to lipopigments (LPs) of the lipofuscin type was proved to be due to the high content of mannose. The nature of the mannose bearing compound was twofold. One part was soluble in modified chloroform-methanol-water mixture (10:10:3) corresponding possibly to the oligosaccharyl diphosphodolichol (oligo-PP-Dol) described to be increased in LPs especially of inherited types. The second part, most probably a glycoprotein (GP), was entirely resistant to various extraction procedures. The ratio of the two components varied. The deposition of the typical lipofuscin (age pigment) was dominated by the GP component. Its amount was greatest in neurolipofuscin (especially in the olivary nucleus) and in the myocardium but very little in hepatocytic lipofuscin. In human neuronal ceroid lipofuscinoses (of early juvenile, and juvenile types) both components were found in large quantities in the storage granules of the affected neurons. The “protein type variant” of the storage material (Elleder 1978) displayed the highest degree of lipid-bound mannose accumulation, the GP component being extremely low or entirely absent. In the late infantile, infantile and Kufs variants studied in paraffin sections only, the GP component was detetable, too as in the case of the secondary neuronal LP in mucopolysaccharidoses and gangliosidoses. In the dog model of NCL lipid bound mannose clearly predominated, the GP component being concentrated in the cytoplasm and on the periphery od some storage granules. The nature of the GP component, a new finding of LP analysis, is discussed. The metabolic relationship between the two components is uncertain. Neither could be identified as the component resposible for autofluorescence. However, both are most probably responsible for PAS positivity of lipofuscins. The ceroid-type histiocytic LP did not display any detectable increase in any of the mannose bearing components.