Originally published In Press as doi:10.1074/jbc.R400040200 on April 14, 2005
J. Biol. Chem., Vol. 280, Issue 22, 20917-20920, June 3, 2005
Minireview
Niemann-Pick Type C Disease and Intracellular Cholesterol Trafficking*
Ta-Yuan Chang
,
Patrick C. Reid¶,
Shigeki Sugii||,
Nobutaka Ohgami
,
Jonathan C. Cruz**, and
Catherine C. Y. Chang
From the
Department of Biochemistry, Dartmouth Medical School, Hanover, New Hampshire 03755, ¶Department of Molecular Biology and Medicine, RCAST, University of Tokyo, Tokyo 153-8904, Japan, ||Gene Expression Laboratory, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, The Salk Institute for Biological Studies, La Jolla, California 92037, and **Department of Pathology, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115
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INTRODUCTION
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Niemann-Pick type C (NPC)1 disease is a rare neurovisceral disorder characterized by progressive hepatosplenomegaly and central nervous system neurodegeneration (reviewed in Ref. 1). The estimated prevalence is 1:150,000 individuals. The disease involves the accumulation of unesterified cholesterol, sphingolipids, and other lipids within cells of the endosomal/lysosomal system, various tissues, and the brain. The disease is autosomal recessive and is caused by mutations in one of two genetic loci, npc1 and npc2. Mutations in npc1 account for 95% of NPC cases. Affected individuals usually die before adulthood. Currently there is no cure; however, new biochemical insight has provided clues to how to slow the disease.
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Biochemical Studies on NPC1 and NPC2 Proteins
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The human NPC1 encodes a 1278-amino acid (170190 kDa) glycoprotein with 13 putative transmembrane domains, including a conserved "sterol-sensing domain" (SSD) located between the third and seventh transmembrane domains. SSDs consist of
180 amino acids organized in five consecutive transmembrane domains. The SSD is found in several other polytopic membrane proteins that are involved in cellular cholesterol homeostasis (2), cell-cell signaling (3), and the dietary uptake of cholesterol (4). SSDs are needed for NPC1 protein to function in intact cells (5). Binding occurs between NPC1 and a photoactivable analog of cholesterol (azocholestanol); the binding is partially blocked by cholesterol and is much diminished in NPC1 proteins that contain mutations within the SSD (6). Thus, one function of the SSD in NPC1 protein is to mediate sterol binding. NPC1 may work as a lipid permease (7); however, the substrate specificity and the role of the SSD in mediating permease activity have not yet been determined. In addition to the SSD, a cysteine-rich luminal loop between TMD 8 and 9 (8) and the region between amino acids 1038 and 1253 are also important for NPC1 function (9).
NPC1 protein is predominantly located within the late endosomal membrane but is also transiently associated with lysosomes and the trans-Golgi network (10). Multiple peptide sequences within the protein are responsible for targeting to the endosomal compartment (11). Late endosomes are comprised of limiting membranes and internal membranes (12). The exact location of the NPC1 protein in the late endosomal membranes is not known.
NPC2 is a soluble lysosomal protein that can be secreted from cells. It uses mannose 6-phosphate marker for targeting to the late endosome (13) and is a high affinity cholesterol-binding protein (14). NPC2 also binds fatty acids in vitro but with lower affinity (14). A crystal structure in the ligand free state shows that the protein has three small hydrophobic cavities that form a "gate," which may represent the incipient cholesterol-binding site that dilates to accommodate the cholesterol molecule; the gate involves tyrosine 100 and phenylalanine 66 (15).
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Roles of NPC1 and NPC2 in Endosomal/Lysosomal Lipid Trafficking
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Low Density Lipoprotein (LDL)-derived CholesterolIn mammalian cells, LDL, the principal cholesterol carrier in the blood, binds to the LDL receptor, internalizes, and enters the endocytic compartment. There, its main cargo, comprised of cholesteryl esters, is dissimilated by hydrolysis to cholesterol and fatty acids. Hydrolysis of cholesteryl esters requires the enzyme acid lipase. In tissue culture cells, most of the lipase is located in endocytic compartments that are distinct from the late endosomes/lysosomes; after lipase action, the liberated cholesterol appears in the late endosomes/lysosomes (16). In NPC1 cells (i.e. cells affected by the NPC1 mutation), the transport of cholesterol from the late endosomes to various destinations, including the plasma membrane, is defective (17). At present, it is not clear how NPC1 and NPC2 work in concert to transport cholesterol.
Oxysterols play an important role in mediating cellular cholesterol homeostasis. Cells produce more oxysterols when cultured in the presence of LDL, and this production is decreased in cells overexpressing NPC1 and NPC2 (18). These results suggest that NPC1 and NPC2 may participate in delivering LDL-derived cholesterol to proper cellular site(s) for conversion to oxysterols.
Sterols Synthesized from AcetateIn mammals, extrahepatic tissues synthesize as much cholesterol as the liver (19). In Chinese hamster ovary cells and human fibroblast cells, biosynthesis of sterols takes place at the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). After synthesis, most sterols are rapidly transported from the ER to the caveolae/lipid raft domain of the plasma membrane (PM) in an energy-dependent manner. This process does not require NPC1 (20). After reaching the PM, the newly synthesized sterol may recycle rapidly (within minutes) between the PM and the recycling endosome (21). After 8 or more hours, the endogenously synthesized sterols accumulate in the late endosomal/lysosomal compartment of NPC1 cells but not in normal cells. The recycling of these sterols from the late endosomes to the PM, and the esterification of these molecules within the ER are also partially defective in NPC1 cells (2224). The effect of NPC1 on trafficking of endogenously synthesized sterols is cell-type dependent: macrophages and glial cells are prominently affected by the NPC1 mutation, whereas embryonic fibroblasts are less affected (25, 26).

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FIG. 1. Cholesterol accumulation in Purkinje neurons of NPC1 mice at postnatal day 9. Cerebellar brain sections from PND 9 NPC1 (BALB/c NPC1NIH) mice and WT mice were stained with the cholesterol binding agent BC-theta (red) and anti-Calbindin antibodies (a Purkinje cell marker protein; blue). Main panel, NPC1 Purkinje dendrite, cholesterol accumulation indicated by arrows, scale bar is 5 µm; lower left panel, NPC1 Purkinje cell body, indicated by asterisk; lower right panel, WT Purkinje dendrite, scale bar is 10 µm. Reproduced with permission from Reid et al. (53).
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Sterol Synthesis, Transport, and Secretion in Brain CellsIn mammals, the brain contains more unesterified cholesterol, most of which is acquired by endogenous synthesis, than any other organ in the body (27). Both neurons and astrocytes isolated from the NPC1/ mouse exhibit trafficking defects in exogenously provided cholesterol and endogenously synthesized sterol (2830, 25). Despite these defects, NPC1/ mouse astrocytes synthesize and secrete the NPC2 and apolipoprotein E proteins (31, 32).
Glycosphingolipids and Other LipidsIn addition to cholesterol, various other lipids, such as sphingomyelin, glucosylceramide, certain gangliosides (especially GM2 and GM3), and lysobisphosphatidic acid, also accumulate in NPC1 cells (1). Gangliosides are acidic glycosphingolipids that are normally present in cell membranes at high levels. Mutations in genes encoding enzymes or proteins involved in the catabolism of glycosphingolipids cause various glycosphingolipids to accumulate within lysosomes, leading to secondary cholesterol accumulation (33, 34). N-Butyl deoxynojirimycin (NB-DNJ) is an inhibitor of the enzyme glucosylceramide synthetase, a key enzyme involved in the biosynthesis of gangliosides in animal cells. In NPC1 cells, some of the endosomal malfunction can be corrected by treating cells with NB-DNJ (35); however, the drug has little effect on reversing the cholesterol trafficking defect (22, 35). Thus, it is unlikely that the cholesterol trafficking defects observed in NPC1 cells are due to secondary consequence of glycosphingolipid accumulation.
The accumulation of glycosphingolipid in NPC1 cells may be explained by the high affinity between cholesterol and sphingolipids, which are the major components of lipid microdomains or "rafts." Accumulation of one raft lipid in late endosomes/lysosomes may lead to the trapping and accumulation of another raft lipid (36). In addition, it has been shown that in NPC1 cells endosomal/lysosomal cholesterol accumulation causes inhibition of lysosomal sphingomyelinase (37) and lysosomal glucosylceramidase (the enzymes responsible for degrading sphingomyelin and glucosylceramides) (38). The lower glucosylceramidase activity in NPC1 cells has been attributed to mislocalization of the enzyme due to cholesterol loading. It is also possible that, in addition to cholesterol trafficking, NPC1 may also be involved in sphingolipid recycling. Studies in yeast show that a mutation in the sterol-sensing domain of NPC1 results in defective recycling, localization, and increased quantities of complex glycosphingolipids, without obvious changes in sterol metabolism (39).
Endosomal Cholesterol and Rab ProteinsVarious abnormalities can cause endosomal cholesterol to accumulate and perturb the functions of Rab7 and Rab4 proteins. Late endosomes and lysosomes exhibit bidirectional motility, moving back and forth between the periphery and the pericentriolar region of cells. Endosomal motility is controlled in part by Rab proteins, small GTPases that are intimately involved in various membrane trafficking events. Rab7 and the related Rab9 are located in the late endosomes. Rab7 interacts more with earlier endosomes and lysosomes, whereas Rab9 interacts more with the trans-Golgi (40). Rab4 is located in early endosomes. Mammalian cells treated with the hydrophobic amine "U-drug" or cells doubly deficient in the major late endosomal/lysosomal membrane proteins Lamp1/Lamp2, exhibit significantly reduced motility of the late endosomes, accumulate endosomal cholesterol, and exhibit NPC-like phenotypes (41, 42). The above observations may be explained by cholesterol accumulation due to various endosomal abnormalities, leading in turn to the inhibition of Rab7 and Rab4 (42, 43). The inhibition of Rab7 reduces the motility of the late endosomes (42). Strikingly, overexpressing Rab9 corrects the lipid trafficking defects in NPC1 cells (44, 45). Despite the predicted pleiotropic effect of overexpressing certain Rab proteins, this procedure may provide novel therapeutic treatment of NPC disease, which is fatal and currently has no cure.
Mutations in Other Proteins That Produce an NPC-like PhenotypeSeveral other proteins residing in late endosomes/lysosomes, including MLN64 and MENTHO (46), may also be involved in endosomal cholesterol movement. The role of MLN64 in sterol trafficking is not clear because mice with targeted mutation of MLN64 are healthy and display only minimal disturbances in sterol dynamics (47). A novel CHO cell mutant without the NPC1 mutation but with defects in late endosomal cholesterol trafficking has been isolated (48). ABCA1 is a key protein that mediates apoA-I-dependent sterol efflux. In cells lacking ABCA1, cholesterol and sphingomyelin accumulate in abnormally structured late endocytic vesicles, and these lipids exhibit impaired intracellular movement (49). Two cell models for the disease cystic fibrosis (50), and fibroblast cells with mutations in the 3
-hydroxysteroid
(7)-reductase gene (51), also accumulate intracellular cholesterol in a manner similar to NPC1 cells.
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Neuropathological Studies
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The mouse model for NPC disease, the BALB/c NPC1NIH mouse (designated as the NPC1 mouse), has a well defined mutation in the npc1 gene and exhibits clinical phenotypes very similar to those of human NPC disease (1). In 30-postnatal day (PND) NPC1 mice, Purkinje neurons of the cerebellum undergo significant death, a hallmark of NPC disease. Many other abnormalities have been reported in very young NPC1 mice. Starting at PND 9, mild abnormalities occur in the corpus callosum, cerebellar white matter, and nerve fibers (52). Also, neuronal cholesterol accumulation occurs in various regions of the brain (53) (Fig. 1). At PND 10, hypomyelination and axonal spheroids (indicative of axonal injury) in the corpus callosum and subcortical white matter are observed (54). By PND 22, activated astrocytes become abundant in selective regions; these cells also accumulate intracellular cholesterol (53). At this stage, significant GM2 and GM3 also accumulate in various cells (55); both astrocyte cells in corpus callosum and Purkinje cells in the cerebellum suffer significant cell loss (48 and 13%, respectively) (56). Between 4 and 6 weeks, clinical symptoms develop. At the 7th week, severe losses in myelin protein and cholesterol occur (57). Death occurs between the 10th and 12th weeks. The neurodegeneration in the NPC1 mice can be prevented by transgenic expression of a NPC1 cDNA that expresses the functional NPC1 protein mainly in the central nervous system (58).
A mouse model for NPC2 disease, with much lower expression of the NPC2 protein (04% of normal), has been produced (59). In terms of disease onset, progression, pathology, neuronal storage, etc., the phenotypes of NPC1 mice, NPC2 mice, and NPC1:NPC2 double mutant mice are similar or identical.
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Potential Drug Therapy
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In terms of delaying the syndrome, two experimental drug therapies, both tested in NPC1 mice only, have achieved limited success.
Substrate Reduction Therapy by NB-DNJIn animal studies, NB-DNJ treatment in NPC1 mice and cats delays the onset of clinical neurological symptoms, increases longevity of NPC1 mice by 25%, and reduces cellular pathology in the cerebellum (60).
Neurosteroid TherapyNeurosteroids, which are steroids made by brain cells, affect neuronal growth and differentiation and modulate neurotransmitter receptors (reviewed in Ref. 61). NPC1 mice at PND 4850 contain far fewer neurosteroids than wild-type mice. Administration of allopregnanolone in early postnatal NPC1 mice delays the onset of neurological symptoms, increases Purkinje and granule cell survival, reduces cortical GM2 and GM3 ganglioside accumulation, and doubles the lifespan of the treated NPC1 mice. Most impressively, a single injection at PND 7 provides the most effective treatment to NPC1 mice (62).
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Conclusion
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Much is yet to be learned about lipid trafficking in general. Abnormalities in endosomal lipid transport have serious consequences, especially in the brain. Future NPC-related research will provide insight into cellular lipid trafficking and the etiology of the disease.
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FOOTNOTES
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* This minireview will be reprinted in the 2005 Minireview Compendium, which will be available in January, 2006. This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grant R01 HL36709. 
To whom correspondence should be addressed: Dept. of Biochemistry, Dartmouth Medical School, 7200 Vail, Rm. 304, Hanover, NH 03755. Tel.: 603-650-1622; Fax: 603-650-1128; E-mail: Ta.Yuan.Chang{at}dartmouth.edu.
1 The abbreviations used are: NPC, Niemann-Pick type C; SSD, sterol-sensing domain; TMD, transmembrane domain; LDL, low density lipoprotein; ER, endoplasmic reticulum; PM, plasma membrane; NB-DNJ, N-butyl deoxynojirimycin; PND, postnatal day. 
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
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We thank Helina Morgan and Ellen Chang for careful editing of the manuscript.
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G. Liao, Y. Yao, J. Liu, Z. Yu, S. Cheung, A. Xie, X. Liang, and X. Bi
Cholesterol Accumulation Is Associated with Lysosomal Dysfunction and Autophagic Stress in Npc1 / Mouse Brain
Am. J. Pathol.,
September 1, 2007;
171(3):
962 - 975.
[Abstract]
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M.-D. Wang, V. Franklin, M. Sundaram, R. S. Kiss, K. Ho, M. Gallant, and Y. L. Marcel
Differential Regulation of ATP Binding Cassette Protein A1 Expression and ApoA-I Lipidation by Niemann-Pick Type C1 in Murine Hepatocytes and Macrophages
J. Biol. Chem.,
August 3, 2007;
282(31):
22525 - 22533.
[Abstract]
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B. Liu, C. Xie, J. A. Richardson, S. D. Turley, and J. M. Dietschy
Receptor-mediated and bulk-phase endocytosis cause macrophage and cholesterol accumulation in Niemann-Pick C disease
J. Lipid Res.,
August 1, 2007;
48(8):
1710 - 1723.
[Abstract]
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S. J. Charette and P. Cosson
A LYST/beige homolog is involved in biogenesis of Dictyostelium secretory lysosomes
J. Cell Sci.,
July 15, 2007;
120(14):
2338 - 2343.
[Abstract]
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E. Ikonen
Mechanisms for cellular cholesterol transport: defects and human disease.
Physiol Rev,
October 1, 2006;
86(4):
1237 - 1261.
[Abstract]
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S. Sugii, S. Lin, N. Ohgami, M. Ohashi, C. C. Y. Chang, and T.-Y. Chang
Roles of Endogenously Synthesized Sterols in the Endocytic Pathway
J. Biol. Chem.,
August 11, 2006;
281(32):
23191 - 23206.
[Abstract]
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K. Mani, F. Cheng, and L.-A. Fransson
Defective nitric oxide-dependent, deaminative cleavage of glypican-1 heparan sulfate in Niemann-Pick C1 fibroblasts
Glycobiology,
August 1, 2006;
16(8):
711 - 718.
[Abstract]
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T. Yoshiyama, T. Namiki, K. Mita, H. Kataoka, and R. Niwa
Neverland is an evolutionally conserved Rieske-domain protein that is essential for ecdysone synthesis and insect growth
Development,
July 1, 2006;
133(13):
2565 - 2574.
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I. G. Ganley and S. R. Pfeffer
Cholesterol Accumulation Sequesters Rab9 and Disrupts Late Endosome Function in NPC1-deficient Cells
J. Biol. Chem.,
June 30, 2006;
281(26):
17890 - 17899.
[Abstract]
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B. A. Tate and P. M. Mathews
Targeting the Role of the Endosome in the Pathophysiology of Alzheimer's Disease: A Strategy for Treatment
Sci. Aging Knowl. Environ.,
June 28, 2006;
2006(10):
re2 - re2.
[Abstract]
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C. Xie, J. A. Richardson, S. D. Turley, and J. M. Dietschy
Cholesterol substrate pools and steroid hormone levels are normal in the face of mutational inactivation of NPC1 protein
J. Lipid Res.,
May 1, 2006;
47(5):
953 - 963.
[Abstract]
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B. Karten, R. B. Campenot, D. E. Vance, and J. E. Vance
The Niemann-Pick C1 protein in recycling endosomes of presynaptic nerve terminals
J. Lipid Res.,
March 1, 2006;
47(3):
504 - 514.
[Abstract]
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