Abstract

Niemann–Pick type C (NPC), a lysosomal storage disorder, is mainly caused by mutations in the NPC1 gene. Niemann–Pick type C patients and mice show intracellular cholesterol accumulation leading to hepatic failure with increased inflammatory response. The complement cascade, which belongs to the innate immunity response, recognizes danger signals from injured tissues. We aimed to determine whether there is activation of the complement system in the liver of the NPC mouse and to assess the relationship between C3 activation, a final component of the pathway, and NPC liver pathology. Niemann–Pick type C mice showed high levels of C3 staining in the liver which unexpectedly decreased with aging. Using an inducible NPC1 hepatocyte rescue mouse model, we restored NPC1 expression for a short time in young mice. We found C3 positive cells only in non-rescued cells, suggesting that C3 activation in NPC cells is reversible. Then, we studied the effect of C3 ablation on NPC liver damage at two postnatal time points, P56 and P72. Deletion of C3 reduced the presence of hepatic CD68-positive cells at postnatal day 56 and prevented the increase of transaminase levels in the blood of NPC mice. These positive effects were abrogated at P72, indicating that the complement cascade participates only during the early stages of liver damage in NPC mice, and that its inhibition may serve as a new potential therapeutic strategy for the disease.

Highlights

  • Lysosomal storage disorders (LSDs) encompass approximately 70 different diseases that arise from deficiencies in lysosomal enzymes or transporters [1]

  • We studied the role of the complement cascade in Niemann–Pick type C (NPC) liver damage. We found that this pathway is highly activated during the early stages of liver disease in the NPC mouse

  • We found intense C3 deposition in cuboid liver cells which is the characteristic morphology of hepatocytes in young Npc1−/− mice

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Summary

Introduction

Lysosomal storage disorders (LSDs) encompass approximately 70 different diseases that arise from deficiencies in lysosomal enzymes or transporters [1]. Niemann–Pick type C (NPC) disease belongs to the LSD group. Niemann–Pick type C is caused by loss of function variants in either the NPC1 or NPC2 genes [3,4], leading to intracellular cholesterol accumulation in every tissue. Niemann–Pick type C 50% of NPC patients suffer from neonatal cholestasis, jaundice, and enlarged liver and/or spleen [6]. Of these patients, 10% die from liver failure before they reach 6 months of age [7]

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