Tissue accumulation of sulfatide and GM3 ganglioside in a patient with variant Farber disease.
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Abstract
We analyzed the lipids in the tissues of a patient with an atypical form of Farber disease who developed several clinical symptoms not seen in patients with typical Farber disease (acid ceramidase deficiency). Lipids were extracted from formalin-fixed brain, liver and kidney and purified by ion exchange and silica gel column chromatographies and further by high-performance liquid chromatography on a silica gel column. We performed structural and quantitative analyses of three lipids named lipids X, Y and Z. Lipid X accumulated in the liver but not in the brain. Accumulation of lipids Y and Z was observed in liver and kidney. The content of lipid Y in the patients liver was more than ten times that in a control. The structures of lipids X, Y and Z were confirmed by means of 1H-nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, fast atom bombardment mass spectrometry, infrared absorption spectroscopy, and component analysis involving gas liquid chromatography and gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. The structures of lipids X, Y and Z were identified as those of ceramide, sulfatide and GM3 ganglioside, respectively. These results suggest two possibilities. One is that the accumulation of glycolipids such as sulfatide and GM3 ganglioside is a secondary event produced by the accumulation of ceramide due to ceramidase deficiency. The other is that the accumulation of glycolipids other than ceramide is due to a deficiency of sphingolipid activator proteins which may affect the degradation of sulfatide and GM3 ganglioside as well as ceramide.