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Peroxisomal integral membrane proteins in control and Zellweger fibroblasts.

Peroxisomal integral membrane proteins in control and Zellweger fibroblasts. An entire organelle, the peroxisome, appears to be missing in Zellweger syndrome, causing profound neurological problems and neonatal death. One hypothesis for the molecular cause of this defect is a failure in the assembly of the peroxisomal membrane. An alternative is that the peroxisomal membrane is assembled, but the post-translational import of the matrix proteins is defective. We have investigated these possibilities by analytical cell fractionation, immunoblotting, and immunoelectron microscopy of fibroblasts. We identified four integral membrane proteins that can serve as markers for the human peroxisomal membrane. In Zellweger fibroblasts, peroxisomal membranes were found but they were abnormal; they had an equilibrium density of 1.10 g/cm3 instead of the normal density of 1.17 g/cm3, their diameters were generally 2-4 times greater than normal, and they lacked most content. The existence of these peroxisomal ghosts in Zellweger syndrome fibroblasts supports the hypothesis that the defect in this disease is in the protein import machinery. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png The Journal of biological chemistry Pubmed

Peroxisomal integral membrane proteins in control and Zellweger fibroblasts.

The Journal of biological chemistry , Volume 263 (21): -10492 – Aug 19, 1988

Peroxisomal integral membrane proteins in control and Zellweger fibroblasts.


Abstract

An entire organelle, the peroxisome, appears to be missing in Zellweger syndrome, causing profound neurological problems and neonatal death. One hypothesis for the molecular cause of this defect is a failure in the assembly of the peroxisomal membrane. An alternative is that the peroxisomal membrane is assembled, but the post-translational import of the matrix proteins is defective. We have investigated these possibilities by analytical cell fractionation, immunoblotting, and immunoelectron microscopy of fibroblasts. We identified four integral membrane proteins that can serve as markers for the human peroxisomal membrane. In Zellweger fibroblasts, peroxisomal membranes were found but they were abnormal; they had an equilibrium density of 1.10 g/cm3 instead of the normal density of 1.17 g/cm3, their diameters were generally 2-4 times greater than normal, and they lacked most content. The existence of these peroxisomal ghosts in Zellweger syndrome fibroblasts supports the hypothesis that the defect in this disease is in the protein import machinery.

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ISSN
0021-9258
pmid
3292528

Abstract

An entire organelle, the peroxisome, appears to be missing in Zellweger syndrome, causing profound neurological problems and neonatal death. One hypothesis for the molecular cause of this defect is a failure in the assembly of the peroxisomal membrane. An alternative is that the peroxisomal membrane is assembled, but the post-translational import of the matrix proteins is defective. We have investigated these possibilities by analytical cell fractionation, immunoblotting, and immunoelectron microscopy of fibroblasts. We identified four integral membrane proteins that can serve as markers for the human peroxisomal membrane. In Zellweger fibroblasts, peroxisomal membranes were found but they were abnormal; they had an equilibrium density of 1.10 g/cm3 instead of the normal density of 1.17 g/cm3, their diameters were generally 2-4 times greater than normal, and they lacked most content. The existence of these peroxisomal ghosts in Zellweger syndrome fibroblasts supports the hypothesis that the defect in this disease is in the protein import machinery.

Journal

The Journal of biological chemistryPubmed

Published: Aug 19, 1988

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