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1.
Role of plasma membrane coenzyme Q on the regulation of apoptosis.   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Serum withdrawal is a model to study the mechanisms involved in the induction of apoptosis caused by mild oxidative stress. Apoptosis induced by growth factors removal was prevented by the external addition of antioxidants such as ascorbate, alpha-tocopherol and coenzyme Q (CoQ). CoQ is a lipophilic antioxidant which prevents oxidative stress and participates in the regeneration of alpha-tocopherol and ascorbate in the plasma membrane. We have found an inverse relationship between CoQ content in plasma membrane and lipid peroxidation rates in leukaemic cells. CoQ10 addition to serum-free culture media prevented both lipid peroxidation and cell death. Also, CoQ10 addition decreased ceramide release after serum withdrawal by inhibition of magnesium-dependent plasma membrane neutral-sphingomyelinase. Moreover, CoQ10 addition partially blocked activation of CPP32/caspase-3. These results suggest CoQ of the plasma membrane as a regulator of initiation phase of oxidative stress-mediated serum withdrawal-induced apoptosis.  相似文献   

2.
Sodium nitroprusside (SNP), a NO donor, has been recognized as an inducer of apoptosis in various cell lines. Here, we demonstrated the intracellular formation of ceramide, a lipid signal mediator, in SNP-induced apoptosis in human leukemia HL-60 cells and investigated the mechanisms of ceramide generation. The levels of intracellular ceramide increased to, at most, 160% of the control level in a time- and dose-dependent manner when the cells were treated with 1 mM SNP. SNP also decreased the sphingomyelin level to approximately 70% of the control level and increased magnesium-dependent neutral sphingomyelinase (N-SMase) activity to 160% of the control activity 2 h after treatment. Neither acid SMase nor magnesium-independent N-SMase was affected by SNP. Caspases are thought to be key enzymes in apoptotic cell death. Acetyl-Asp-Glu-Val-Asp-aldehyde, a synthetic tetrapeptide inhibitor of caspases, inhibited magnesiumdependent N-SMase, ceramide generation, and apoptosis. Moreover, recombinant purified caspase-3 increased magnesium-dependent N-SMase in a cell-free system. These results suggest that the findings that SNP increased ceramide generation and magnesium-dependent N-SMase activity via caspase-3 are interesting to future study to determine the relation between caspases and sphingolipid metabolites in NO-mediated signaling.  相似文献   

3.
Recently, we showed that neutral sphingomyelinase (N-SMase) is concentrated at the endothelial cell surface in caveolae and is activated to produce ceramide in an acute and transient manner by increase in flow rate and pressure in rat lung vasculature (Czarny M, Liu J, Oh P, and Schnitzer JE, J Biol Chem 278: 4424-4430, 2003). Here, we report further on our investigations of this new acute mechanotransduction pathway. We employed three experimental models to explore the role of N-SMase and ceramides in mechanosignaling: 1) a cell-free, in vitro model using isolated luminal plasma membranes of rat lung endothelium; 2) a fluid shear stress model using monolayers of intact bovine aorta endothelial cell in culture; and 3) an in situ model using controlled perfusion of the rat lung vasculature. Scyphostatin, which specifically inhibited N-SMase but not acid SMase activity, prevented mechanoactivation of N-SMase as well as downstream tyrosine and mitogen-activated protein kinases. Cell-permeable ceramide analogs (N-acetylsphingosine, C2-ceramide, and N-hexanoylsphingosine, C6-ceramide) but not the inactive dihydroderivatives D2-ceramide and D6-ceramide (N-acetylsphinganine and N-hexanoylsphinganine, respectively) mimic rapid mechano-induced tyrosine phosphorylation of cell surface proteins as well as mechanoactivation of Src-like kinases and the extracellular regulated kinase pathway. The responses common to ceramide and mechanical stress were inhibited by genistein, herbamycin A, and PP2, but not PP3, which suggests an obligate role of Src-like kinases in ceramide-mediated mechanotransduction. Ceramides also induced serine/threonine phosphorylation to activate the Akt/endothelial nitric oxide synthase pathway. Thus N-SMase at the plasma membrane in caveolae may be an upstream initiating mechanosensor, which acutely triggers mechanotransduction by generation of the lipid second messenger ceramide.  相似文献   

4.
Mogami K  Kishi H  Kobayashi S 《FEBS letters》2005,579(2):393-397
Neutral sphingomyelinase (N-SMase) elevated nitric oxide (NO) production without affecting intracellular Ca(2+) concentration ([Ca(2+)](i)) in endothelial cells in situ on aortic valves, and induced prominent endothelium-dependent relaxation of coronary arteries, which was blocked by N(omega)-monomethyl-L-arginine, a NO synthase (NOS) inhibitor. N-SMase induced translocation of endothelial NOS (eNOS) from plasma membrane caveolae to intracellular region, eNOS phosphorylation on serine 1179, and an increase of ceramide level in endothelial cells. Membrane-permeable ceramide (C(8)-ceramide) mimicked the responses to N-SMase. We propose the involvement of N-SMase and ceramide in Ca(2+)-independent eNOS activation and NO production in endothelial cells in situ, linking to endothelium-dependent vasorelaxation.  相似文献   

5.
We investigated through which mechanisms ceramide increased oxidative damage to induce leukemia HL-60 cell apoptosis. When 5 microm N-acetylsphingosine (C(2)-ceramide) or 20 microm H(2)O(2) alone induced little increase of reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation as judged by the 2'-7'-dichlorofluorescin diacetate method, 20 microm H(2)O(2) enhanced oxidative damage as judged by ROS accumulation, and thiobarbituric acid-reactive substance production after pretreatment with 5 microm C(2)-ceramide at least for 12 h. The treatment with a catalase inhibitor, 3-amino-1h-1,2,4-triazole, increased oxidative damage and apoptosis induced by H(2)O(2), and in contrast, purified catalase inhibited the enhancement of oxidative damage by H(2)O(2) in ceramide-pretreated cells, suggesting that the oxidative effect of ceramide is involved in catalase regulation. Indeed, C(2)-ceramide inhibited the activity of immunoprecipitated catalase and decreased the levels of catalase protein in a time-dependent manner. Moreover, acetyl-Asp-Met-Gln-Asp-aldehyde, which dominantly inhibited caspase-3 and blocked the increase of oxidative damage and apoptosis due to C(2)-ceramide-induced catalase depletion at protein and activity levels. In vitro, active and purified caspase-3, but not caspase-6, -8, and -9, inhibited catalase activity and induced the proteolysis of catalase protein whereas these in vitro effects of caspase-3 were blocked by acetyl-Asp-Met-Gln-Asp-aldehyde. Taken together, it is suggested that H(2)O(2) enhances apoptosis in ceramide-pretreated cells, because ceramide increases oxidative damage by inhibition of ROS scavenging ability through caspase-3-dependent proteolysis of catalase.  相似文献   

6.
Serum provides cultured cells with survival factors required to maintain growth. Its withdrawal induces the development of programmed cell death. HL-60 cells were sensitive to serum removal, and an increase of lipid peroxidation and apoptosis was observed. Long-term treatment with ethidium bromide induced the mitochondria-deficient °HL-60 cell line. These cells were surprisingly more resistant to serum removal, displaying fewer apoptotic cells and lower lipid peroxidation. HL-60 cells contained less ubiquinone at the plasma membrane than °HL-60 cells. Both cell types increased plasma membrane ubiquinone in response to serum removal, although this increase was much higher in ° cells. Addition of ubiquinone to both cell cultures in the absence of serum improved cell survival with decreasing lipid peroxidation and apoptosis. Ceramide was accumulated after serum removal in HL-60 but not in °HL-60 cells, and exogenous ubiquinone reduced this accumulation. These results demonstrate a relationship between ubiquinone levels in the plasma membrane and the induction of serum withdrawal induced apoptosis, and ceramide accumulation. Thus, ubiquinone, which is a central component of the plasma membrane electron transport system, can represent a first level of protection against oxidative damage caused by serum withdrawal.  相似文献   

7.
8.
Ceramide induces neuronal apoptosis through the caspase-9/caspase-3 pathway   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
C(2)-ceramide, a cell-permeable analog of ceramide, caused cell death in cultured rat cortical neuronal cells. C(2)-ceramide-induced neuronal loss was accompanied by upregulation of caspase-3 activity, measured by cleavage of its fluorogenic substrate Ac-DEVD-AMC. Similar results were obtained when cortical neuronal cultures were treated with sphingomyelinase, an enzyme responsible for ceramide formation in the cell. Morphological evaluation of C(2)-ceramide-treated cortical neurons showed nuclear condensation and fragmentation as visualized by Hoechst 33258 staining. Co-administration of the selective caspase-3 inhibitor z-DEVD-fmk or caspase-9 inhibitor z-LEHD-fmk significantly reduced C(2)-ceramide-induced cell death, while co-application of the caspase-8, inhibitor z-IETD-fmk, was without effect. Immunoblot analysis of protein extracts from C(2)-ceramide-treated cortical neuronal cultures revealed upregulation of active caspase-9 and caspase-3 protein levels, whereas presence of active caspase-8 immunoreactivity was undetectable in this system. Administration of C(2)-ceramide to SH-SY5Y human neuroblastoma cells also caused apoptotic cell death. Moreover, ceramide-induced cell death was significantly decreased in caspase-9 dominant-negative SH-SY5Y cells, while both caspase-8 dominant-negative cultures and mock-transfected cells showed equally high levels of cell death following C(2)-ceramide treatment. Taken together, these data suggest that neuronal death induced by ceramide may be linked to the caspase-9/caspase-3 regulated intrinsic pathway of cellular apoptosis.  相似文献   

9.
Sphingomyelinase (SMase)-mediated release of ceramide in the plasma membrane of T-lymphocytes induced by different stimuli such as ligation of Fas/CD95, irradiation, stress, inflammation or anticancer drugs primarily involves mitochondrial apoptosis signaling, but under specific conditions non-apoptotic Fas-signaling was also reported. Here we investigated, using a quantitative simulation model with exogenous C2-ceramide (and SMase), the dependence of activation and fate of T-cells on the strength and duration of ceramide accumulation. A murine, influenza virus hemagglutinin-specific T-helper cell (IP12-7) alone or together with interacting antigen presenting B-cells (APC) was used. C2-ceramide induced apoptosis of TH cells above a 'threshold' stimulus (>25 microM in 'strength' or >30 min in duration), while below the threshold C2-ceramide was non-apoptotic, as confirmed by early and late apoptotic markers (PS-translocation, mitochondrial depolarization, caspase-3 activation, DNA-fragmentation). The modest ceramide stimuli strongly suppressed the calcium response and inhibited several downstream signal events (e.g. ERK1/2-, JNK-phosphorylation, CD69 expression or IL-2 production) in TH cells during both anti-CD3 induced and APC-triggered activation. Ceramide moderately affected the Ca2+ -release from internal stores upon antigen-specific engagement of TCR in immunological synapses, while the influx phase was remarkably reduced in both amplitude and rate, suggesting that the major target(s) of ceramide-effects are membrane-proximal. Ceramide inhibited Kv1.3 potassium channels, store operated Ca2+ -entry (SOC) and depolarized the plasma membrane to which contribution of spontaneously formed ceramide channels is possible. The impaired function of these transporters may be coupled to the quantitative, membrane raft-remodeling effect of ceramide and responsible, in a concerted action, for the suppressed activation. Our results suggest that non-apoptotic Fas stimuli, received from previously activated, FasL+ interacting lymphocytes in the lymph nodes, may negatively regulate subsequent antigen-specific T-cell activation and thus modulate the antigen-specific T-cell response.  相似文献   

10.
Ceramide and other sphingolipids are now recognized as novel intracellular signal mediators. One of the important and regulated steps in the metabolism of sphingolipids is the hydrolysis of sphingomyelin into ceramide by sphingomyelinases. Whereas some studies suggest a role for acid sphingomyelinase in cell regulation, several lines of investigation suggest that neutral sphingomyelinase (N-SMase) plays a critical role in stress responses including apoptosis. Recently the advanced purification of neutral membrane-bound magnesium-dependent sphingomyelinase from rat brain was reported on. The specific activity of the purified N-SMase was increased by approximately 3000-fold over the rat brain homogenate, and it is specifically activated by phosphatidylserine. In cells, N-SMase may be coupled to either the redox state and/or glutathione metabolism. The significance of N-SMase and ceramide in stress responses is discussed.  相似文献   

11.
Etoposide (VP-16) a topoisomerase II inhibitor induces apoptosis of tumor cells. The present study was designed to elucidate the mechanisms of etoposide-induced apoptosis in C6 glioma cells. Etoposide induced increased formation of ceramide from sphingomyelin and release of mitochondrial cytochrome c followed by activation of caspase-9 and caspase-3, but not caspase-1. In addition, exposure of cells to etoposide resulted in decreased expression of Bcl-2 with reciprocal increase in Bax protein. z-VAD.FMK, a broad spectrum caspase inhibitor, failed to suppress the etoposide-induced ceramide formation and change of the Bax/Bcl-2 ratio, although it did inhibit etoposide-induced death of C6 cells. Reduced glutathione or N-acetylcysteine, which could reduce ceramide formation by inhibiting sphingomyelinase activity, prevented C6 cells from etoposide-induced apoptosis through blockage of caspase-3 activation and change of the Bax/Bcl-2 ratio. In contrast, the increase in ceramide level by an inhibitor of ceramide glucosyltransferase-1, D-threo-1-phenyl-2-decanoylamino-3-morpholino-1-propanol caused elevation of the Bax/Bcl-2 ratio and potentiation of caspase-3 activation, thereby resulting in enhancement of etoposide-induced apoptosis. Furthermore, cell-permeable exogenous ceramides (C2- and C6-ceramide) induced downregulation of Bcl-2, leading to an increase in the Bax/Bcl-2 ratio and subsequent activation of caspases-9 and -3. Taken together, these results suggest that ceramide may function as a mediator of etoposide-induced apoptosis of C6 glioma cells, which induces increase in the Bax/Bcl-2 ratio followed by release of cytochrome c leading to caspases-9 and -3 activation.  相似文献   

12.
The plasma membrane of eukaryotic cells is the limit to interact with the environment. This position implies receiving stress signals that affects its components such as phospholipids. Inserted inside these components is coenzyme Q that is a redox compound acting as antioxidant. Coenzyme Q is reduced by diverse dehydrogenase enzymes mainly NADH-cytochrome b5 reductase and NAD(P)H:quinone reductase 1. Reduced coenzyme Q can prevent lipid peroxidation chain reaction by itself or by reducing other antioxidants such as α-tocopherol and ascorbate. The group formed by antioxidants and the enzymes able to reduce coenzyme Q constitutes a plasma membrane redox system that is regulated by conditions that induce oxidative stress. Growth factor removal, ethidium bromide-induced ρ° cells, and vitamin E deficiency are some of the conditions where both coenzyme Q and its reductases are increased in the plasma membrane. This antioxidant system in the plasma membrane has been observed to participate in the healthy aging induced by calorie restriction. Furthermore, coenzyme Q regulates the release of ceramide from sphingomyelin, which is concentrated in the plasma membrane. This results from the non-competitive inhibition of the neutral sphingomyelinase by coenzyme Q particularly by its reduced form. Coenzyme Q in the plasma membrane is then the center of a complex antioxidant system preventing the accumulation of oxidative damage and regulating the externally initiated ceramide signaling pathway.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Neuronal death is one of the most prominent consequences of alcohol exposure during development. Ethanol-induced neuronal death appears to involve apoptosis. The objective of the present study was to characterize the effect of ethanol on neuronal cell viability and to determine the mechanism by which ethanol enhances apoptosis in neural cells. For these studies the rat pheochromocytoma (PC12) cells were used. PC12 cells were incubated for 24 h in the presence or absence of 100 mM ethanol. Apoptosis was induced by serum withdrawal. Ethanol in the presence of serum-containing media did not alter cell viability, while incubation of PC12 cells in serum-free media resulted in a significant increase in cell death that was further significantly increased by 35% in cells exposed to ethanol. The temporal response of the PC12 cells to serum withdrawal was studied over a period of 22 h. At least 18 h of ethanol exposure was necessary to observe a significant increase in death for cells incubated in serum-free media. An increase in the caspase-3 activity in PC12 cells deprived of serum was observed that was further increased by ethanol exposure. This increase of caspase-3 activity was correlated with an enhancement of caspase-9 activity. Ethanol exposure increased the amount of cytosolic cytochrome c in PC12 cells incubated in serum-free media but did not alter the level of cytochrome c in cells incubated in serum. Finally, a 26% increase was observed in the number of cells with depolarized mitochondria due to ethanol treatment. The present study implicates an increase in the mitochondrial outer membrane permeability as a potential mechanism of enhancement of apoptosis in serum-deprived PC12 cells by ethanol.  相似文献   

15.
In this study, the release of mitochondrial proapoptotic intermembrane space proteins induced by exogenous C2-ceramide in human colon carcinoma (HT-29) cell line was investigated. HT-29 cells were treated with 12.5, 25 and 50 μmol/L C2-ceramide in vitro. Flow cytometer was used to detect the mitochondrial membrane potential (△Ψm). Subcellular fractions were extracted by Mitochondrial/Cytosol Fractionation Kit after C2-ceramide treatment for 24 h. SDS-PAGE was used to determine the level of cytochrome c (Cyt c), high temperature requirement A2 (HtrA2) and second mitochondrial-derived activator of caspases (Smac) released from mitochondria, the expression of X-linked inhibitor of apoptosis protein (XIAP) and caspase-3 for 24 h. The results showed that △Ψm began to decrease from 6 h after 25 and 50 μmol/L C2-ceramide treatment (P<0.05) and cyclosporin A (CsA) could inhibit the collapse of △Ψm through regulating mitochondrial membrane permeability transition pore. There was no effect of C2-ceramide on the expression of Cyt c, HtrA2 and Smac in the total levels. 12.5, 25 and 50 μmol/L C2-ceramide could induce Cyt c, HtrA2 and Smac to release from mitochondria to cytosol and down-regulate the expression of XIAP (P<0.05). Also there was expression of cleaved caspase-3 with C2-ceramide treatment. After the treatment with caspase inhibitor, C2-ceramide still induced the release of Cyt c and HtrA2, but Smac did not. Therefore, C2-ceramide could induce apoptosis of HT-29 cells through the mitochondria pathway. The release of Cyt c, HtrA2 and Smac from mitochondria did not occur via the same mechanism, the release of Cyt c and HtrA2 was caspase-independent and the release of Smac was caspase-dependent.  相似文献   

16.
Neutral sphingomyelinase: past, present and future   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Sphingomyelin and its metabolic products are now known to have second messenger functions in a variety of cellular signaling pathways. At the epicenter of the sphingomyelin--cell signaling pathway is a family of phospholipases called sphingomyelinases. These enzymes cleave sphingomyelin to produce ceramide and phosphocholine. Ceramide in turn serves as a lipid second messenger that induces a variety of cell regulatory phenomenon such as programmed cell death (apoptosis), cell differentiation, cell proliferation, and sterol homeostasis. Neutral sphingomyelinase (N-SMase) is a Mg2+ sensitive enzyme that can be activated by a host of physiologically relevant and structurally diverse molecules like tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), oxidized human low density lipoproteins (Ox-LDL), and several growth factors. Large amounts of ceramide accumulate in human fatty streaks and plaques along with Ox-LDL, growth factors, and proinflammatory cytokines in human atherosclerosis. A further role of ceramide and N-SMase in atherosclerosis was uncovered by the finding that Ox-LDL and TNF-alpha stimulated N-SMase activity. In turn, ceramide and/or a homolog serves as an important stress signaling molecule in signal transduction, which leads to apoptosis. Interestingly, an antibody against N-SMase can abrogate Ox-LDL and TNF-alpha induced apoptosis, and therefore may be useful for additional studies of apoptosis in experimental animals. Overexpression of recombinant human N-SMase in human aortic smooth muscle cells markedly stimulate apoptosis, presumably via the multioligomerization of the 'death domain'. Since plaque stability is an integral aspect of atherosclerosis management, activation of N-SMase and subsequent apoptosis may be vital events in the onset of plaque rupture, stroke and heart failure. In contrast to these observations in human hepatocytes, TNF-alpha mediated N-SMase activation did not induce apoptosis. Rather it stimulated the maturation of sterol regulatory element (SRE) binding protein (SREBP-1). Moreover, a cell permeable ceramide was found to reconstitute the phenomenon above in a sterol-independent fashion. These findings provide alternate avenues for therapy of patients with hypercholesterolemia and atherosclerosis. The findings reported here suggests that N-SMase plays important cell regulatory roles and provide an exciting opportunity to further these findings to understand the pathophysiology of human disease states.  相似文献   

17.
Ceramides are known to play a major regulatory role in apoptosis by inducing cytochrome c release from mitochondria. We have previously reported that C(2)- and C(16)-ceramide, but not dihydroceramide, form large channels in planar membranes (Siskind, L. J., and Colombini, M. (2001) J. Biol. Chem. 275, 38640-38644). Here we show that ceramides do not trigger a cytochrome c secretion or release mechanism, but simply raise the permeability of the mitochondrial outer membrane, via ceramide channel formation, to include small proteins. Exogenously added reduced cytochrome c was able to freely permeate the mitochondrial outer membrane with entry to and exit from the intermembrane space facilitated by ceramides in a dose- and time-dependent manner. The permeability pathways were eliminated upon removal of C(2)-ceramide by bovine serum albumin, thus ruling out a detergent-like effect of C(2)-ceramide on membranes. Ceramide channels were not specific to cytochrome c, as ceramides induced release of adenylate kinase, but not fumerase from isolated mitochondria, showing some specificity of these channels for the outer mitochondrial membrane. SDS-PAGE results show that ceramides allow release of intermembrane space proteins with a molecular weight cut-off of about 60,000. These results indicate that the ceramide-induced membrane permeability increases in isolated mitochondria are via ceramide channel formation and not a release mechanism, as the channels that allow cytochrome c to freely permeate are reversible, and are not specific to cytochrome c.  相似文献   

18.
Ceramide, the basic structural unit of sphingolipids, controls the balance between cell growth and death by inducing apoptosis. We have previously shown that accumulation of ceramide, triggered by hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2)) or by short-chain ceramide analogs, induces apoptosis of lung epithelial cells. Here we elucidate the link between caspase-3 activation, at the execution phase, and ceramide accumulation, at the commitment phase of apoptosis in A549 human lung adenocarcinoma cells. The induction of ceramide accumulation by various triggers of ceramide generation, such as H(2)O(2), C(6)-ceramide, or UDP-glucose-ceramide glucosyltransferase inhibitor dl-threo-1-phenyl-2-decanoylamino-3-morpholino-1-propanol, triggered the activation of caspase-3. This ceramide elevation also induced the cleavage of the death substrate poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase and was followed by apoptotic cell death. Ceramide-mediated apoptosis was blocked by a general caspase inhibitor, Boc-d-fluoromethylketone, and by overexpression of the antiapoptotic protein Bcl-2. Notably, overexpression of Bcl-2 reduced the basal cellular levels of ceramide and prevented the induction of ceramide generation by C(6)-ceramide, which implies ceramide generation as a possible target for the antiapoptotic effects of Bcl-2.  相似文献   

19.
Sphingomyelin hydrolysis during apoptosis   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
Sphingolipid breakdown products are now being recognized as important players in apoptosis. Ceramide, which is considered to serve as second messenger, is mainly generated by hydrolysis of the membrane sphingophospholipid sphingomyelin (SM) through the action of a sphingomyelinase (SMase). However, little is known about the localization and regulation of this phenomenon. Here, we summarize the current knowledge on the function of SM hydrolysis in apoptosis signaling. In particular, the present review focuses on the role of neutral sphingomyelinase (N-SMase) in the generation of the proapoptotic ceramide. This enzyme is regulated by several mechanisms, including the tumor necrosis factor (TNF) receptor-associated protein FAN (for factor associated with N-SMase activation) and oxidative stress. These observations place SMase activation and SM hydrolysis as early events in the apoptosis signaling cascade.  相似文献   

20.
Activation of sphingomyelinase (SMase) by extracellular stimuli is the major pathway for cellular production of ceramide, a bioactive lipid mediator acting through sphingomyelin (SM) hydrolysis. Previously, we reported the existence of six forms of neutral pH–optimum and Mg2+-dependent SMase (N-SMase) in the membrane fractions of bovine brain. Here, we focus on N-SMase ε from salt-extracted membranes. After extensive purification by 12,780-fold with a yield of 1.3%, this enzyme was eventually characterized as N-SMase2. The major single band of 60-kDa molecular mass in the active fractions of the final purification step was identified as heat shock protein 60 (Hsp60) by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometric analysis. Proximity ligation assay and immunoprecipitation study showed that Hsp60 interacted with N-SMase2, prompting us to examine the effect of Hsp60 on N-SMase2 and ceramide production. Interestingly, Hsp60 siRNA treatment significantly increased the protein level of N-SMase2 in N-SMase2-overexpressed HEK293 cells. Furthermore, transfection of Hsp60 siRNA into PC12 cells effectively increased both N-SMase activity and ceramide production and increased dopamine re-uptake with paralleled increase. Taken together, these results show that Hsp60 may serve as a negative regulator in N-SMase2-induced dopamine re-uptake by decreasing the protein level of N-SMase2.  相似文献   

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