Lysosomal acid lipase (LAL) plays an important role in lipid metabolism by performing hydrolysis of triglycerides and cholesteryl esters in the lysosome. Based upon characteristics of LAL purified from human liver, it has been proposed that LAL is a proprotein with a 55 residue propeptide that may be essential for proper folding, intracellular transport, or enzymatic function. However, the biological significance of such a propeptide has not been fully elucidated. In this study, we have performed a series of studies in cultured HepG2 and HeLa cells to determine the role of the putative propeptide. However, by Western blot analysis and subcellular fractionation, we have not been able to identify a cleaved LAL lacking the N‐terminal 55 residues. Moreover, mutating residues surrounding the putative cleavage site at Lys76↓ in order to disrupt a proteinase recognition sequence, did not affect LAL activity. Furthermore, forcing cleavage at Lys76↓ by introducing the optimal furin cleavage site RRRR↓EL between residues 76 and 77, did not affect LAL activity. These data, in addition to bioinformatics analyses, indicate that LAL is not a proprotein. Thus, it is possible that the previously reported cleavage at Lys76↓ could have resulted from exposure to proteolytic enzymes during the multistep purification procedure.
Hydrolysis of cholesteryl esters and triglycerides in the lysosome is performed by lysosomal acid lipase (LAL). In this study we have investigated how 23 previously identified missense mutations in the LAL gene (LIPA) (OMIM# 613497) affect the structure of the protein and thereby disrupt LAL activity. Moreover, we have performed transfection studies to study intracellular transport of the 23 mutants. Our main finding was that most pathogenic mutations result in defective enzyme activity by affecting the normal folding of LAL. Whereas, most of the mutations leading to reduced stability of the cap domain did not alter intracellular transport, nearly all mutations that affect the stability of the core domain gave rise to a protein that was not efficiently transported from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) to the Golgi apparatus. As a consequence, ER stress was generated that is assumed to result in ER-associated degradation of the mutant proteins. The two LAL mutants Q85K and S289C were selected to study whether secretion-defective mutants could be rescued from ER-associated degradation by the use of chemical chaperones. Of the five chemical chaperones tested, only the proteasomal inhibitor MG132 markedly increased the amount of mutant LAL secreted. However, essentially no increased enzymatic activity was observed in the media. These data indicate that the use of chemical chaperones to promote the exit of folding-defective LAL mutants from the ER, may not have a great therapeutic potential as long as these mutants appear to remain enzymatically inactive.
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