SAP-1 is a sphingolipid activator protein found in human tissues required for the enzymatic hydrolysis of GM1 ganglioside and sulfatide. It appears to be missing in patients who have a genetic lipidosis resembling juvenile metachromatic leukodystrophy. Using rabbit antibodies against human SAP-1 it could be visualized in extracts from cultured human skin fibroblasts after sodium dodecylsulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, followed by electroblotting to nitrocellulose membrane and immunochemical staining (Western blotting). A series of 23 human-Chinese hamster ovary cell hybrids containing different human chromosomes were examined. The parent Chinese hamster ovary cells did not have a reacting protein in the region of human SAP-1. Only in the eight hybrid clones containing human chromosome 10 was a reacting protein identified. Other chromosomes were excluded by this method. Therefore the gene for SAP-1 and the genetic mutation resulting in a fatal lipidosis are located on human chromosome 10.
It has been shown that somatostatin inhibits the antidiuretic action of vasopressin in toad urinary bladder in vitro and in dogs and rats in vivo. The presence of somatostatin-like immunoreactivity (SLI) in the urinary bladder and kidney of the toad has suggested the possibility that somatostatin may act as a local paracrine hormone modulating the effect of vasopressin in the toad; however, the inability to localize SLI in mammalian kidney has raised doubt about the physiological role of somatostatin in the mammalian renal function. We identified SLI in rat kidney. Chromatography of rat kidney extracts of Sephadex G50 superfine revealed a single peak of SLI that co-eluted with somatostatin-14. Using the avidin-biotin-peroxidase conjugate technique, we localized SLI exclusively to small cells in the glomerulus with an estimated number of four to eight cells per glomerulus. Functional significance of somatostatin in the mammalian kidney is to be determined.
On DEAE cellulose column chromatography, alpha-L-iduronidase in cultured skin fibroblasts was resolved into two distinct components, forms A and B. They had similar Km values for 4-methylumbelliferyl-alpha-L-iduronide, but differed in pH optima and thermal stability. Form B was more heat-stable than form A. Residual alpha-L-iduronidase activity in Hurler fibroblasts was heat-stable, while that in Scheie fibroblasts was heat-labile, and moreover, that in Hurler-Scheie compound fibroblasts lay intermediate between Hurler and Scheie syndromes. These findings demonstrated that Hurler syndrome, Scheie syndrome and Hurler-Scheie compound were enzymatically distinguishable.
Sphingolipid activator proteins (SAP) stimulate the enzymatic hydrolysis of sphingolipids. The results of biochemical studies have suggested that SAP are located within lysosomes. In this study we sought immunocytochemical verification of the lysosomal location of SAP-1, a SAP that stimulates the hydrolysis of sulfatide and GM1 ganglioside. We stained adjacent sections of normal adult liver and colon for either SAP-1, by peroxidase-labeled antibodies, or acid phosphatase, by enzyme histochemistry. At the light microscopic level, SAP-1 and acid phosphatase were present in similar cells of the colonic lamina propria and hepatic sinusoids, and in similar supranuclear sites of colonic epithelial cells. By electron microscopy, SAP-1 was present in vesicular structures morphologically similar to those containing acid phosphatase. Thus, SAP-1 is present in lysosomes of several different kinds of cells in the normal human liver and colon.
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