Prosaposin, also known as PSAP, is a
protein which in humans is encoded by the ''PSAP''
gene.
This highly conserved
glycoprotein
Glycoproteins are proteins which contain oligosaccharide chains covalently attached to amino acid side-chains. The carbohydrate is attached to the protein in a cotranslational or posttranslational modification. This process is known as glycos ...
is a precursor for 4 cleavage products: saposins A, B, C, and D. Saposin is an acronym for Sphingolipid Activator PrO
''SeINs.
Each domain of the precursor protein is approximately 80 amino acid residues long with nearly identical placement of cysteine residues and glycosylation sites. Saposins A-D localize primarily to the
lysosomal compartment where they facilitate the catabolism of
glycosphingolipids with short
oligosaccharide groups. The precursor protein exists both as a secretory protein and as an integral membrane protein and has
neurotrophic
Neurotrophic factors (NTFs) are a family of biomolecules – nearly all of which are peptides or small proteins – that support the growth, survival, and differentiation of both developing and mature neurons. Most NTFs exert their trop ...
activities.
Saposins A–D are required for the hydrolysis of certain sphingolipids by specific lysosomal hydrolases.
Family members
* Saposin A was identified as an N-terminal domain in the prosaposin cDNA prior to its isolation. It is known to stimulate the enzymatic hydrolysis of 4-methylumbelliferyl-β-glucoside,
glucocerebroside, and
galactocerebroside
A galactosylceramide, or galactocerebroside is a type of cerebroside consisting of a ceramide with a galactose residue at the 1-hydroxyl moiety.
The galactose is cleaved by galactosylceramidase.
Galactosylceramide is a marker for oligodendrocyt ...
.
* Saposin B was the first to be discovered and was found to be required as a heat-stable factor for hydrolysis of
sulfatides by
arylsulfatase A. It is known by many different names, such as, sphingolipid activator protein-1 (SAP-1), sulfatide activator protein, GM
1 ganglioside activator, dispersin, and nonspecific.
It has been observed that this particular saposin activates many enzymes through interaction with the substrates not the enzymes themselves.
* Saposin C was the second saposin to be discovered and stimulates the hydrolysis of glycocerebroside by glycosylceramidase and galactocerebroside by galactosylceramidase.
* Saposin D is not well known to due lack of investigation at this point in time. It was predicted from the cDNA sequence of prosaposin, like saposin A. Enzymatic stimulation is very specific for this particular glycoprotein and it not understood completely.
*
GM2A (GM2 ganglioside activator) has been viewed as a member of the SAP family and has been called SAP-3 (sphingolipid activator protein 3)
Structure
Every saposin contains about 80 amino acid residues and has six equally placed cysteines, two prolines, and a glycosylation site (two in saposin A, one each in saposins B, C, and D).
Since saposins characteristics of extreme heat-stability, abundance of disulfide linkages, and resistance to most proteases, they are assumed to be extremely compact and rigidly disulfide-linked molecules. Each saposin has an α-helical structure that is seen as being important for stimulation because this structure is maximal at a pH of 4.5; which is optimal for many lysosomal hydrolases.
This helical structure is seen in all (especially with the first region), but saposin has been predicted to have β-sheet configuration due to it first 24 amino acids of the N-end.
Function
They probably act by isolating the lipid substrate from the membrane surroundings, thus making it more accessible to the soluble
degradative enzymes. which contains four ''Saposin-B domains'', yielding the active saposins after proteolytic cleavage, and two ''Saposin-A domains'' that are removed in the activation reaction. The Saposin-B domains also occur in other proteins, many of them active in the lysis of membranes.
Clinical significance
Mutations in this gene have been associated with
Gaucher disease,
Tay–Sachs disease, and
metachromatic leukodystrophy.
See also
*
Saposin protein domain
References
Further reading
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External links
* {{MeshName, Saposins
Precursor proteins