Affiliation:
1. Department of Internal Medicine and the Hamon Center for Therapeutic Oncology Research, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, Texas 75390
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Infantile Batten disease is a severe neurodegenerative storage disorder caused by mutations in the human
PPT1
(palmitoyl protein thioesterase 1) gene, which encodes a lysosomal hydrolase that removes fatty acids from lipid-modified proteins.
PPT1
has orthologs in many species, including lower organisms and plants, but not in
Saccharomyces cerevisiae.
The fission yeast
Schizosaccharomyces pombe
contains a previously uncharacterized open reading frame (SPBC530.12c) that encodes the
S. pombe
Ppt1p ortholog fused in frame to a second enzyme that is highly similar to a previously cloned mouse dolichol pyrophosphatase (Dolpp1p). In the present study, we characterized this interesting gene (designated here as
pdf1
, for palmitoyl protein thioesterase-dolichol pyrophosphate phosphatase fusion 1) through deletion of the open reading frame and complementation by plasmids bearing mutations in various regions of the
pdf1
sequence. Strains bearing a deletion of the entire
pdf1
open reading frame are nonviable and are rescued by a
pdf1
expression plasmid. Inactivating mutations in the Dolpp1p domain do not rescue the lethality, whereas mutations in the Ppt1p domain result in cells that are viable but abnormally sensitive to sodium orthovanadate and elevated extracellular pH. The latter phenotypes have been previously associated with class C and class D vacuolar protein sorting (
vps
) mutants and vacuolar membrane H
+
-ATPase (
vma
) mutants in
S. cerevisiae
. Importantly, the Ppt1p-deficient phenotype is complemented by the human
PPT1
gene. These results indicate that the function of
PPT1
has been widely conserved throughout evolution and that
S. pombe
may serve as a genetically tractable model for the study of human infantile Batten disease.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,General Medicine,Microbiology
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