Abstract

25-hydroxycholesterol (25-OHC), an oxysterol that potently regulates cellular cholesterol metabolism, induced formation of novel fibrillar structures in normal mouse astrocytes as observed by fluorescence microscopy with the cholesterol probe, filipin. These fibrils were identified as lysosomes by their immunoreactivity for the lysosome associated membrane glycoprotein (LAMP). In contrast, astrocytes derived from the Niemann-Pick disease type C (NPC) mutant mouse were resistant to this oxysterol-induced lysosomal reorganization. NPC astrocytes have abnormal intracellular cholesterol storage as observed by brightly positive filipin staining of their lysosomes. These results show that lysosomal cholesterol storage in NPC astrocytes is associated with a block in oxysterol-mediated fibrillar reorganization of lysosomes.

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