Accéder au contenu
Merck

Sphingolipid depletion increases formation of the scrapie prion protein in neuroblastoma cells infected with prions.

The Journal of biological chemistry (1999-07-20)
N Naslavsky, H Shmeeda, G Friedlander, A Yanai, A H Futerman, Y Barenholz, A Taraboulos
RÉSUMÉ

Sphingolipid-rich rafts play an essential role in the posttranslational (Borchelt, D. R., Scott, M., Taraboulos, A., Stahl, N., and Prusiner, S. B. (1990) J. Cell Biol. 110, 743-752)) formation of the scrapie prion protein PrP(Sc) from its normal conformer PrP(C) (Taraboulos, A., Scott, M., Semenov, A., Avrahami, D., Laszlo, L., Prusiner, S. B., and Avraham, D. (1995) J. Cell Biol. 129, 121-132). We investigated the importance of sphingolipids in the metabolism of the PrP isoforms in scrapie-infected ScN2a cells. The ceramide synthase inhibitor fumonisin B(1) (FB(1)) reduced both sphingomyelin (SM) and ganglioside GM1 in cells by up to 50%, whereas PrP(Sc) increased by 3-4-fold. Whereas FB(1) profoundly altered the cell lipid composition, the raft residents PrP(C), PrP(Sc), caveolin 1, and GM1 remained insoluble in Triton X-100. Metabolic radiolabeling demonstrated that PrP(C) production was either unchanged or slightly reduced in FB(1)-treated cells, whereas PrP(Sc) formation was augmented by 3-4-fold. To identify the sphingolipid species the decrease of which correlates with increased PrP(Sc), we used two other reagents. When cells were incubated with sphingomyelinase for 3 days, SM levels decreased, GM1 was unaltered, and PrP(Sc) increased by 3-4-fold. In contrast, the glycosphingolipid inhibitor PDMP reduced PrP(Sc) while increasing SM. Thus, PrP(Sc) seems to correlate inversely with SM levels. The effects of SM depletion contrasted with those previously obtained with the cholesterol inhibitor lovastatin, which reduced PrP(Sc) and removed it from detergent-insoluble complexes.

MATÉRIAUX
Référence du produit
Marque
Description du produit

Sigma-Aldrich
Sous-unité B de la toxine cholérique, ≥95% (SDS-PAGE), lyophilized powder
Sigma-Aldrich
Fumonisin B1 from Fusarium moniliforme, ≥98% (HPLC)
Sigma-Aldrich
Sphingomyelinase from Bacillus cereus, lyophilized powder, ≥100 units/mg protein