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Lysosomal and extracellular GlcCer degradation: Protein and lipid | 4047
Journal of Glycobiology

Journal of Glycobiology
Open Access

ISSN: 2168-958X

+44 1478 350008

Lysosomal & extracellular GlcCer degradation: Protein & lipid modifiers


Glycobiology World Congress

August 10-12, 2015 Philadelphia, USA

Konrad Sandhoff

Scientific Tracks Abstracts: J Glycobiol

Abstract :

Lysosomal sphingolipid degradation requires the presence of water-soluble hydrolases, SAPs, anionic phospholipids like BMP,
and an acidic pH value. Inherited defects of catabolic hydrolases or SAPs cause various sphingolipidoses. SAPs are membraneperturbing
proteins which facilitate glycolipid digestion by presenting insoluble lipid molecules to soluble catabolic enzymes. SAPs
(the GM2-activator and saposins A-D) bind to lipid bilayers and mobilize lipids out of them at acidic pH values. As demonstrated
by plasmon resonance studies for saposins A and B, low cholesterol levels and increasing concentrations of BMP favour lipid
extraction and membrane disintegration. Variant saposins as identified in patients with Krabbe disease and metachromatic
leukodystrophy, respectively, are deficient in mobilizing membrane lipids. The inherited absence of all four saposins (A-D) causes
a severe membrane and sphingolipid storage disease, also disrupting the water permeability barrier of the skin.
Saposins and glucosylceramidase are also involved in the extracellular catabolism of ultralongchain acylglucosylceramides, key
components for the generation of the extracellular lipid layers forming the immune and the water permeability barrier in the stratum
corneum of the mammalian skin. Their complete functional deficiency causes perinatal fatal diseases of the collodion baby type.
Ongoing in vitro studies indicate that PM-stabilizing lipids, i.e. SM and cholesterol, inhibit several steps of lysosomal SL
and glycosphingolipid catabolism, and also lipid solubilisation as studied by Surface Plasmon Resonance and intervesicular
(glyco-) lipid transfer activities of several SAPs and NPC2, even in the presence of activating anionic PLs.

Biography :

Konrad Sandhoff completed his PhD in biochemistry in Munich. After research stays in Munich, Israel and the USA he became a full professor of biochemistry
at the University of Bonn in 1979. Since 2007 he is a senior professor at the LIMES institute, Bonn. Major Research Interests: Molecular life sciences: analysis
and pathobiochemistry of lysosomal (glyco-)sphingolipid storage diseases, structure and function of lysosomal enzymes and lipid binding proteins, topology of
endocytosis and glycolipid metabolism, and regulation of glycolipid biosynthesis. He has published more than 480 peer-reviewed papers. Among many other prizes
he also received the International Glycoconjugate Organization Award (2005).

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