Abstract

Inhibition of protein kinase C [PK-C] activity by sphingosine and its derivatives has been suggested to play a role in the pathogenesis of sphingolipidoses. In the present study, PK-C activity and PK-C-mediated phosphorylation of endogenous substrates were studied in skin fibroblasts from patients with mucolipidosis type 4 [ML-4], in which there is accumulation of the phospholipids phosphatidylcholine, lysophosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylethanolamine as well as gangliosides. Cytosolic PK-C activity in 5 ML-4 cell lines was comparable to that in control cells. PK-C activity in the particulate fraction of these cells was 84±14 pmol 32P/mg protein per min compared with 267±26 in control cells. Increasing the concentrations of the activating lipids in the reaction mixture did not enhance PK-C activity in ML-4 cells, suggesting a non-competitive inhibition of the kinase. Following partial purification of the enzyme from the particulate fraction PK-C activity increased to 288±14 and 339±12 pmol 32P/mg protein per min in ML-4 and control cells, respectively. The phosphorylation pattern of endogenous substrates in the particulate fraction of ML-4 cells differed from that in control cells both in the absence and in the presence of calcium and activating lipids. We suggest that PK-C may be involved in the pathogenesis of sphingolipidoses and that this may represent an example for a new type of pathogenetic mechanisms in inborn errors of metabolism.

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