Neurobiology of Disease (Aug 2004)

Treatment with miglustat reverses the lipid-trafficking defect in Niemann–Pick disease type C

  • Robin H Lachmann,
  • Danielle te Vruchte,
  • Emyr Lloyd-Evans,
  • Gabriele Reinkensmeier,
  • Daniel J Sillence,
  • Luisa Fernandez-Guillen,
  • Raymond A Dwek,
  • Terry D Butters,
  • Timothy M Cox,
  • Frances M Platt

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 3
pp. 654 – 658

Abstract

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Niemann–Pick disease type C (NP-C) is a hereditary neurovisceral lipid storage disorder. Although traditionally considered a primary cholesterol storage disorder, a variety of glycolipids accumulate in NP-C cells, which resemble those from glycosphingolipidosis patients. Substrate reduction therapy (SRT) with miglustat, an inhibitor of glycosphingolipid biosynthesis, is a novel therapy for the glycosphingolipidoses. We report the use of SRT in a patient with NP-C. We show that depletion of glycosphingolipids by miglustat treatment reduces pathological lipid storage, improves endosomal uptake and normalises lipid trafficking in peripheral blood B lymphocytes. The demonstration that treatment with miglustat, which has no direct effect on cholesterol metabolism, corrects the abnormal lipid trafficking seen in B lymphocytes in NP-C indicates that glycosphingolipid accumulation is the primary pathogenetic event in NP-C. These observations support the use of SRT in patients with this devastating neurodegenerative disease.

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