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About Niemann-Pick type C diseaseNiemann-Pick type C disease (NP-C) is a very serious, life-threatening neurological condition belonging to a clinically heterogeneous group of lipid storage disorders.1 NP-C is characterized by a unique defect in cellular lipid trafficking that leads to lysosomal lipid accumulation that varies between tissues.2 In peripheral tissues such as skin, the accumulation of unesterified cholesterol predominates.3 In the liver and spleen several lipids accumulate including unesterified cholesterol, glycosphingolipids, phospholipids and sphingomyelin.2 Glycosphingolipid accumulation primarily occurs in the central nervous system (CNS), including the brain.3 Cholesterol trafficking in peripheral cells is shown in Figure 1. In normal cells, low density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol enters cells via endocytosis at the LDL receptor and is digested within the late-stage endosomes and lysosomes (Figure 1).2,4 Unesterified cholesterol is then transported to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and Golgi apparatus for recycling within the cell.1 However in NP-C, the LDL-cholesterol becomes trapped within perinuclear lysosomes and lysosome-like storage organelles (LSOs), resulting in considerably reduced transport of unesterified cholesterol (Figure 1).2,5 Consequently, lipids accumulate to toxic levels, damaging cells and tissues.2
Most NP-C patients have severely impaired cellular lipid trafficking (‘classic' biochemical phenotype), while others have relatively mild impairment but still exhibit clinical symptoms (variant biochemical phenotype).2 References
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