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1.
Fumonisin B1, a fungal mycotoxin that grows on corn and other agricultural products, alters sphingolipid metabolism by inhibiting ceramide synthase. The precise mechanism of fumonisin B1 toxicity has not been completely elucidated; however, a central feature in the cytotoxicity is alteration of sphingolipid metabolism through interruption of de novo ceramide synthesis. An affinity column consisting of fumonisin B1 covalently bound to an HPLC column matrix was used to isolate a rat liver protein that consistently bound to the column. The protein was identified as argininosuccinate synthetase by protein sequencing. The enzyme-catalyzed formation of argininosuccinic acid from citrulline and aspartate by recombinant human and rat liver argininosuccinate synthetase was inhibited by fumonisin B1. Fumonisin B1 showed mixed inhibition against citrulline, aspartate, and ATP to the enzyme. Fumonisin B1 had a Ki' of approximately 6 mM with the recombinant human argininosuccinate synthase and a Ki' of 35 mM with a crude preparation of enzyme prepared from rat liver. Neither tricarballylic acid nor hydrolyzed fumonisin B1 inhibited recombinant human argininosuccinate synthetase. This is the first demonstration of fumonisin B1 inhibition of argininosuccinate synthethase, a urea cycle enzyme, which adds to the list of enzymes that are inhibited in vitro by fumonisin B1 (ceramide synthase, protein serine/threonine phosphatase). The extent of the inhibition of argininosuccinate synthetase in cells, and the possible role of this enzyme inhibition in the cellular toxicity of FB1, remains to be established.  相似文献   

2.
Fumonisin B(1) is a mycotoxin produced by Fusarium verticillioides, frequently associated with corn. It produces species-specific and organ-specific toxicity, including equine leukoencephalomalacia, porcine pulmonary edema, and hepatic or renal damage in most animal species. Fumonisin B(1) perturbs sphingolipid metabolism by inhibiting ceramide synthase. Our previous studies indicated that fumonisin B(1) caused localized activation of cytokines in liver produced by macrophages and other cell types that modulate fumonisin B(1) induced hepatic apoptosis in mice. The role of tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFalpha) in fumonisin B(1) mediated hepatocyte apoptosis has been established; not much is known about the downstream events leading to apoptosis. In the current study, fumonisin B(1) induced apoptosis in primary culture of liver cells. In consistence with previous reports, fumonisin B(1) caused accumulation of sphingoid bases and led to increase in TNFalpha expression. Phosphorylated and total c-Jun NH(2)-terminal kinase (JNK) activities were increased after 24 h fumonisin B(1) treatment. JNK inhibitor (SP600125) and anti-TNFalpha reduced the apoptosis induced by fumonisin B(1). The role of JNK signaling in fumonisin B(1) induced apoptosis is downstream of TNFalpha production, as fumonisin B(1)-mediated activation of JNK was reduced by the presence of anti-TNFalpha in the medium, whereas the presence of JNK inhibitor did not change the fumonisin B(1) induced TNFalpha expression. Results of this study imply that generation of fumonisin B(1) induced TNFalpha results in modulation of mitogen activated protein kinases, particularly of JNK, and provides a possible mechanism for apoptosis in murine hepatocytes.  相似文献   

3.
The first discovered naturally occurring inhibitor of de novo sphingolipid biosynthesis was fumonisin B1. There are now 11 identified fungal inhibitors of ceramide synthase or 'fumonisin B1-like' compounds. With the exception of the australifungins, all other fungal ceramide synthase inhibitors are structurally sphingoid-like. There are several recently discovered fungal inhibitors of another enzyme in the de novo sphingolipid biosynthesis pathway: serine palmitoyltransferase (SPT). One of the SPT inhibitors is named ISP-I. While ceramide synthase inhibitors are toxic to animals, plants and fungi, the SPT inhibitors are not known to cause animal or plant disease, but are potent inhibitors of fungal growth. Very little is known about their toxicity in animals. There are at least 24 fungal SPT inhibitors produced by a variety of fungi. Given that the fungal inhibitors of sphingolipid biosynthesis are chemically and biologically diverse, two bioassays have been developed to screen for fumonisin-like or ISP-I-like activity in naturally contaminated products or fungal culture materials. These bioassays are based on the changes in free sphingoid base concentration that occur when the ceramide synthase or SPT are inhibited. The bioassays have the advantage that they are functionally rather than chemically specific and thus will detect ceramide synthase and SPT inhibitors regardless of their chemical structure.  相似文献   

4.
Prevention of fumonisin B1-induced neural tube defects by folic acid   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
BACKGROUND: The mycotoxin fumonisin B1 (FB1) inhibits sphingolipid synthesis, blocks folate transport, and has been associated with increased incidences of cancer and neural tube defects. Results from reproductive studies in animal models in vivo and in vitro have demonstrated toxicity in some cases, but no specific terata after fumonisin exposure. No information is available about folic acid's potential to protect against this toxicity. METHODS: Neurulating mouse embryos were exposed to fumonisin or folinic acid in whole embryo culture and assessed for effects on growth and development. RESULTS: Fumonisin exposure inhibited sphingolipid synthesis, reduced growth, and caused cranial neural tube defects in a dose dependent manner. Supplemental folinic acid ameliorated the effects on growth and development, but not inhibition of sphingolipid synthesis. CONCLUSION: Fumonisin has the potential to inhibit embryonic sphingolipid synthesis and to produce embryotoxicity and neural tube defects. Folic acid can reverse some of these effects, supporting results showing that fumonisin disrupts folate receptor function.  相似文献   

5.
Lag1p and Lac1p are two homologous transmembrane proteins of the endoplasmic reticulum in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Homologous genes have been found in a wide variety of eukaryotes. In yeast, both genes, LAC1 and LAG1, are required for efficient endoplasmic reticulum-to-Golgi transport of glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored proteins. In this study, we show that lag1 Delta lac1 Delta cells have reduced sphingolipid levels due to a block of the fumonisin B1-sensitive and acyl-CoA-dependent ceramide synthase reaction. The sphingolipid synthesis defect in lag1 Delta lac1 Delta cells can be partially corrected by overexpression of YPC1 or YDC1, encoding ceramidases that have been reported to have acyl-CoA-independent ceramide synthesis activity. Quadruple mutant cells (lag1 Delta lac1 Delta ypc1 Delta ydc1 Delta) do not make any sphingolipids, but are still viable probably because they produce novel lipids. Moreover, lag1 Delta lac1 Delta cells are resistant to aureobasidin A, an inhibitor of the inositolphosphorylceramide synthase, suggesting that aureobasidin A may be toxic because it leads to increased ceramide levels. Based on these data, LAG1 and LAC1 are the first genes to be identified that are required for the fumonisin B1-sensitive and acyl-CoA-dependent ceramide synthase reaction.  相似文献   

6.
He Q  Bhandari N  Sharma RP 《Life sciences》2002,71(17):2015-2023
Fumonisin B(1) (FB(1)), produced by Fusarium verticillioides, is a common contaminant in foods and feeds. Increase in tissue free sphingoid bases resulting from the inhibition of ceramide synthase is a biomarker of fumonisin exposure. Tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFalpha) is induced in liver in response to FB(1) treatment. This study determined whether fumonisin B(1) caused increases in free sphingoid bases and altered the expression of TNFalpha in heart and lung, organs that are not targets of FB(1) toxicity, of male and female mice treated with 5-daily subcutaneous injection of 2.25 mg/kg FB(1). A significant increase in free sphingoid bases was observed in both heart and lung of FB(1)-exposed mice. The magnitude of increases in free sphingoid bases in both organs of female mice was much higher than that in males. The expression of TNFalpha was increased by FB(1) treatment in the lung of male mice and in the heart of female mice, whereas the expression of interferon gamma was unaltered. Results suggest that both sphingolipid accumulation and TNFalpha induction are observed in the tissues of mice that are not associated with FB(1) toxicity.  相似文献   

7.
Fumonisins, fungal toxins produced by Fusarium moniliforme, contaminate maize based foods and feeds throughout the world. They cause liver and kidney toxicity in animals in addition to leukoencephalomalacia in horses and pulmonary edema in pigs. Fumonisin B(1) is carcinogenic in rats and mice. Ecological studies have linked consumption of fumonisin contaminated maize with oesophageal cancer in human populations in South Africa and China. This review discusses the potential health risks for people exposed to the fumonisins, and describes how mechanistic studies of toxicity in animal models have allowed the development of putative biomarkers of fumonisin exposure at the individual level. The requirements for an applicable biomarker include sample availability as well as a high specificity and sensitivity for the exposure of interest. Most environmental toxic insults involve complex exposures both to other toxins and to infections; these confounding factors need to be considered in assessing both the validity of the biomarker and the exposure-disease associations. Fumonisins can be detected in the urine of animals in feeding studies but the sensitivity of the current methodology means only highly exposed people could be monitored. Mechanistic studies indicate that ceramide synthase, an enzyme involved in sphingolipid synthesis, is one cellular target for fumonisin toxicity and carcinogenicity, and this disruption to sphingolipid metabolism increases the ratio of two sphingoid precursors, sphinganine and sphingosine. The altered ratio has been observed in tissues, serum and urine for a number of animal models suggesting it as a good candidate marker of fumonisin exposure. Despite development of analytical methods to measure this biomarker there have been no studies to date correlating it to fumonisin intake in people. Given the toxic effects of fumonisins in animals and the widespread human exposure, which has been calculated to reach 440 micrograms kg(-1) body weight day(-1) in a population consuming high quantities (460 g day(-1)) of contaminated maize, then the development of biomarkers and their application in epidemiological studies should be a priority for research on these toxins.  相似文献   

8.
The sphingolipid ceramide has been widely implicated in the regulation of programmed cell death or apoptosis. The accumulation of ceramide has been demonstrated in a wide variety of experimental models of apoptosis and in response to a myriad of stimuli and cellular stresses. However, the detailed mechanisms of its generation and regulatory role during apoptosis are poorly understood. We sought to determine the regulation and roles of ceramide production in a model of ultraviolet light-C (UV-C)-induced programmed cell death. We found that UV-C irradiation induces the accumulation of multiple sphingolipid species including ceramide, dihydroceramide, sphingomyelin, and hexosylceramide. Late ceramide generation was also found to be regulated by Bcl-xL, Bak, and caspases. Surprisingly, inhibition of de novo synthesis using myriocin or fumonisin B1 resulted in decreased overall cellular ceramide levels basally and in response to UV-C, but only fumonisin B1 inhibited cell death, suggesting the presence of a ceramide synthase (CerS)-dependent, sphingosine-derived pool of ceramide in regulating programmed cell death. We found that this pool did not regulate the mitochondrial pathway, but it did partially regulate activation of caspase-7 and, more importantly, was necessary for late plasma membrane permeabilization. Attempting to identify the CerS responsible for this effect, we found that combined knockdown of CerS5 and CerS6 was able to decrease long-chain ceramide accumulation and plasma membrane permeabilization. These data identify a novel role for CerS and the sphingosine salvage pathway in regulating membrane permeability in the execution phase of programmed cell death.  相似文献   

9.
We have shown previously that nitric-oxide (NO) can induce apoptosis of vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) and that the NO-induced apoptosis is accompanied by an increase in arachidonic acid release via cytoplasmic Ca(2+)-dependent phospholipase A(2) (cPLA(2)). We have evidence that during NO-induced apoptosis there is an increase in ceramide synthesis. The use of inhibitors of ceramide synthesis, namely, fumonisin B1 and desipramine, which block ceramide synthase and sphingomyelinase, respectively revealed that the ceramide was produced via the sphingomyelinase pathway. Inhibition of acid sphingomyelinase by desipramine was shown to inhibit NO-induced apoptosis while fumonisin B1 failed to inhibit this process. C(2)-ceramide could induce apoptosis in cultured VSMCs. Apoptosis in smooth muscle cells was accompanied by the increased activity of DNA fragmentation factor-40 and the secretion of cathepsin D from the cells. In this study, ceramide appears to function as a mediator of apoptosis.  相似文献   

10.
The longevity assurance gene (LAG1) and its homolog (LAC1) are required for acyl-CoA-dependent synthesis of ceramides containing very long acyl chain (e.g. C26) fatty acids in yeast, and a homolog of LAG1, ASC1, confers resistance in plants to fumonisin B(1), an inhibitor of ceramide synthesis. To understand further the mechanism of regulation of ceramide synthesis, we now characterize a mammalian homolog of LAG1, upstream of growth and differentiation factor-1 (uog1). cDNA clones of uog1 were obtained from expression sequence-tagged clones and sub-cloned into a mammalian expression vector. Transient transfection of human embryonic kidney 293T cells with uog1 followed by metabolic labeling with [4,5-(3)H]sphinganine or L-3-[(3)H]serine demonstrated that uog1 conferred fumonisin B(1) resistance with respect to the ability of the cells to continue to produce ceramide. Surprisingly, this ceramide was channeled into neutral glycosphingolipids but not into gangliosides. Electrospray tandem mass spectrometry confirmed the elevation in sphingolipids and revealed that the ceramides and neutral glycosphingolipids of uog1-transfected cells contain primarily stearic acid (C18), that this enrichment was further increased by FB(1), and that the amount of stearic acid in sphingomyelin was also increased. UOG1 was localized to the endoplasmic reticulum, demonstrating that the fatty acid selectivity and the fumonisin B(1) resistance are not due to a subcellular localization different from that found previously for ceramide synthase activity. Furthermore, in vitro assays of uog1-transfected cells demonstrated elevated ceramide synthase activity when stearoyl-CoA but not palmitoyl-CoA was used as substrate. We propose a role for UOG1 in regulating C18-ceramide (N-stearoyl-sphinganine) synthesis, and we note that not only is this the first case of ceramide formation in mammalian cells with such a high degree of fatty acid specificity, but also that the N-stearoyl-sphinganine produced by UOG1 most significantly impacts neutral glycosphingolipid synthesis.  相似文献   

11.
The nature of the signaling pathway(s) which initiate drug-triggered apoptosis remains largely unknown and is of fundamental importance in understanding cell death induced by chemotherapeutic agents. Here we show that in the leukemic cell lines U937 and HL-60, daunorubicin, at concentrations which trigger apoptosis, stimulated two distinct cycles of sphingomyelin hydrolysis (approximately 20% decrease at 1 microM) within 4-10 min and 60-75 min with concomitant ceramide generation. We demonstrate that the increase in ceramide levels, which precedes apoptosis, is mediated by a neutral sphingomyelinase and not by ceramide synthase. Indeed, potent ceramide synthase inhibitors such as fumonisin B1 did not affect daunorubicin-triggered sphingomyelin hydrolysis, ceramide generation or apoptosis. In conclusion, we provide evidence that daunorubicin-triggered apoptosis is mediated by a signaling pathway which is initiated by an early sphingomyelin-derived ceramide production.  相似文献   

12.
Fcgamma receptors are important mediators of the binding of IgG to and induction of phagocytosis in neutrophils. COS-1 cells provide a potentially useful model for studying these receptors because transfection with the FcgammaRIIA renders these cells phagocytic. During FcgammaRIIA-mediated phagocytosis in COS-1 cells, endogenous ceramide levels increased 52% by 20 min (p < 0.01). Phospholipase D activity increased by 62% (p < 0.01). Correspondingly, the phagocytic index increased by 3.7-fold by 20 min. Two inhibitors of ceramide formation were used to assess the consequences of reduced ceramide generation. l-Cycloserine, an inhibitor that blocks serine palmitoyltransferase activity, lowered both sphingosine and ceramide levels. Under these conditions, the phagocytic index increased 100% in the presence of 2 mm l-cycloserine. The formation of ceramide resulting from the N-acylation of dihydrosphingosine or sphingosine by ceramide synthase is inhibited by the fungal toxin fumonisin B(1). When cells were treated with 5-50 microm fumonisin B(1), the cellular level of ceramide decreased in a concentration-dependent manner, while simultaneously the phagocytic index increased by 52%. Concomitantly, three indirect measures of FcgammaRIIA activity were altered with the fall in ceramide levels. Syk phosphorylation, phospholipase D activity, and mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase phosphorylation were increased at 30 min. When Syk phosphorylation was blocked with piceatannol and cells were similarly challenged, phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase activation was blocked, but no changes in either ceramide accumulation or MAP kinase activation were observed. Ceramide formation and MAP kinase activation are therefore not dependent on Syk kinase activity in this system. These results indicate that COS-1 cells provide a useful model for the recapitulation of sphingolipid signaling in the study of phagocytosis. Ceramide formed by de novo synthesis may represent an important mechanism in the regulation of phagocytosis.  相似文献   

13.
Fumonisin B1 induces cytotoxicity in sensitive cells by inhibiting ceramide synthase due to its structural similarity to the long-chain backbones of sphingolipids. The resulting accumulation of sphingoid bases has been established as a mechanism for fumonisin B1 cytotoxicity. We found that despite the accumulation of sphinganine, human embryonic kidney (HEK-293) cells are resistant to fumonisin B1 toxicity; 25 microM fumonisin B1 exposure for 48 h did not increase apoptosis in these cells, while it did so in sensitive porcine kidney epithelial (LLC-PK1) cells. In this study, DL-threo-dihydrosphingosine, the sphingosine kinase inhibitor (SKI), considerably increased the sensitivity of HEK-293 cells to fumonisin B1. Treatment of these cells with 25 microM fumonisin B1 and 2.5 microM SKI increased apoptosis. Sphingoid bases, sphinganine or sphingosine, added to cell cultures induced apoptosis by themselves and their effects were potentiated by SKI or fumonisin B1. Addition of physiological amounts of sphingosine-1-phosphate prevented the toxic effects induced by SKI inhibition and fumonisin B1. Results indicated that HEK-293 cells are resistant to fumonisin B1 due to rapid formation of sphingosine-1-phosphate that imparts survival properties. Taken together, these findings suggest that sphingoid base metabolism by sphingosine kinase may be a critical event in rendering the HEK-293 cells relatively resistant to fumonisin B1-induced apoptosis.  相似文献   

14.
Ceramide is a key bioactive mediator that inhibits surfactant phosphatidylcholine (PtdCho) synthesis in lung epithelia. Ceramide availability is governed by sphingomyelin (SM) hydrolysis, but less is known regarding its de novo synthesis. In this study, we observed that ceramide synthesis within murine lung epithelia was associated with high-level ceramide synthase (dihydroceramide synthase) activity. Longevity assurance homolog 5 (LASS5) was the predominant ceramide synthase isoform detected in lung epithelia, whereas relatively lower level expression was detected for the other five mammalian homologs. Pulmonary LASS5 was developmentally regulated, but its expression was spatially and gender nonspecific. Exogenously expressed LASS5 in lung epithelia was membrane-associated, triggering increased ceramide synthesis, whereas knockdown studies using fumonisin B1 or LASS5 small, interfering RNA reduced ceramide synthase activity by 78% or 45%, respectively. Overexpression of LASS5 also reduced PtdCho synthesis, but maximal inhibition was achieved when LASS5 was coexpressed with a plasmid encoding a neutral sphingomyelinase involved in SM hydrolysis. These results demonstrate that LASS5 is the major ceramide synthase gene product involved in sphingolipid production that may also regulate PtdCho metabolism in pulmonary epithelia.  相似文献   

15.
Fumonisin B1 is a mycotoxin produced by Fusarium verticillioides, frequently associated with corn. It produces species‐specific and organ‐specific toxicity, including equine leukoencephalomalacia, porcine pulmonary edema, and hepatic or renal damage in most animal species. Fumonisin B1 perturbs sphingolipid metabolism by inhibiting ceramide synthase. Our previous studies indicated that fumonisin B1 caused localized activation of cytokines in liver produced by macrophages and other cell types that modulate fumonisin B1 induced hepatic apoptosis in mice. The role of tumor necrosis factor α (TNFα) in fumonisin B1 mediated hepatocyte apoptosis has been established; not much is known about the downstream events leading to apoptosis. In the current study, fumonisin B1 induced apoptosis in primary culture of liver cells. In consistence with previous reports, fumonisin B1 caused accumulation of sphingoid bases and led to increase in TNFα expression. Phosphorylated and total c‐Jun NH2‐terminal kinase (JNK) activities were increased after 24 h fumonisin B1 treatment. JNK inhibitor (SP600125) and anti‐TNFα reduced the apoptosis induced by fumonisin B1. The role of JNK signaling in fumonisin B1 induced apoptosis is downstream of TNFα production, as fumonisin B1‐mediated activation of JNK was reduced by the presence of anti‐TNFα in the medium, whereas the presence of JNK inhibitor did not change the fumonisin B1 induced TNFα expression. Results of this study imply that generation of fumonisin B1 induced TNFα results in modulation of mitogen activated protein kinases, particularly of JNK, and provides a possible mechanism for apoptosis in murine hepatocytes. © 2005 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Biochem Mol Toxicol 19:359‐367, 2005; Published online in Wiley InterScience ( www.interscience.wiley.com ). DOI 10.1002/jbt.20102  相似文献   

16.
Culture materials and grains contaminated with certain isolates of Fusarium moniliforme cause equine leucoencephalomalacia, porcine pulmonary edema syndrome, and liver cancer in rats. The causative agents are thought to be a family of compounds called fumonisins, which bear considerable structural similarity to the long-chain (sphingoid) base backbones of sphingolipids. Incubation of rat hepatocytes with fumonisins inhibited incorporation of [14C]serine into the sphingosine moiety of cellular sphingolipids with an IC50 of 0.1 microM for fumonisin B1. In contrast, fumonisin B1 increased the amount of the biosynthetic intermediate sphinganine, which suggests that fumonisins inhibit the conversion of [14C]sphinganine to N-acyl-[14C]sphinganines, a step that is thought to precede introduction of the 4,5-trans double bond of sphingosine (Merrill, A.H., Jr. and Wang, E. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 3764-3769). In agreement with this mechanism, fumonisin B1 inhibited the activity of sphingosine N-acyltransferase (ceramide synthase) in rat liver microsomes with 50% inhibition at approximately 0.1 microM and reduced the conversion of [3H]sphingosine to [3H]ceramide by intact hepatocytes. As far as we are aware, this is the first discovery of a naturally occurring inhibitor of this step of sphingolipid metabolism. These findings suggest that disruption of the de novo pathway of sphingolipid biosynthesis may be a critical event in the diseases that have been associated with consumption of fumonisins.  相似文献   

17.
Prosaposin is the precursor of four lysosomal saposins that promote the degradation of glycosphingolipids (GSLs) by acidic hydrolases. GSLs contain a hydrophobic ceramide moiety, which acts as a membrane anchor, and a hydrophilic oligosaccharide chain that faces the lumen of the Golgi apparatus and extracellular spaces. By using fumonisin B1, PDMP and D609, we tested the hypothesis that sphingolipids mediate the transport of prosaposin to the lysosomes. Fumonisin B1 interferes with the synthesis of ceramide, PDMP blocks the formation of glucosylceramide and D609 blocks the formation of sphingomyelin. Fumonisin B1 produced a 59;-85% decrease in the density of gold particles in the lysosomes of CHO and NRK cells immunolabeled with anti-prosaposin antibody, and a 55% reduction in the lysosomes of CHO cells stably transfected with an expression vector containing a human prosaposin cDNA. To examine whether the mannose 6-phosphate receptor pathway was affected by this treatment, NRK and CHO cells treated or not with fumonisin B1 were labeled with anti-cathepsin A antibody. The results showed no significant differences in labeling of the lysosomes, suggesting that the effect of fumonisin B1 was specific. When fumonisin B1 and D609 were added to the media of transfected CHO cells, a decrease in immunofluorescence with anti-prosaposin antibody was observed by confocal microscopy. PDMP did not cause any reduction in immunoreactivity, indicating that sphingolmyelin appears to be involved in this process. In conclusion, our data support the hypothesis that sphingolipids, possibly sphingomyelin, are involved in the transport of prosaposin to the lysosomes.  相似文献   

18.
The sphingolipid ceramide is involved in the cellular stress response. Here we demonstrate that ceramide controls macroautophagy, a major lysosomal catabolic pathway. Exogenous C(2)-ceramide stimulates macroautophagy (proteolysis and accumulation of autophagic vacuoles) in the human colon cancer HT-29 cells by increasing the endogenous pool of long chain ceramides as demonstrated by the use of the ceramide synthase inhibitor fumonisin B(1). Ceramide reverted the interleukin 13-dependent inhibition of macroautophagy by interfering with the activation of protein kinase B. In addition, C(2)-ceramide stimulated the expression of the autophagy gene product beclin 1. Ceramide is also the mediator of the tamoxifen-dependent accumulation of autophagic vacuoles in the human breast cancer MCF-7 cells. Monodansylcadaverine staining and electron microscopy showed that this accumulation was abrogated by myriocin, an inhibitor of de novo synthesis ceramide. The tamoxifen-dependent accumulation of vacuoles was mimicked by 1-phenyl-2-decanoylamino-3-morpholino-1-propanol, an inhibitor of glucosylceramide synthase. 1-Phenyl-2-decanoylamino-3-morpholino-1-propanol, tamoxifen, and C(2)-ceramide stimulated the expression of beclin 1, whereas myriocin antagonized the tamoxifen-dependent up-regulation. Tamoxifen and C(2)-ceramide interfere with the activation of protein kinase B, whereas myriocin relieved the inhibitory effect of tamoxifen. In conclusion, the control of macroautophagy by ceramide provides a novel function for this lipid mediator in a cell process with major biological outcomes.  相似文献   

19.
The sphingolipid ceramide induces macroautophagy (here called autophagy) and cell death with autophagic features in cancer cells. Here we show that overexpression of sphingosine kinase 1 (SK1), an enzyme responsible for the production of sphingosine 1-phosphate (S1P), in MCF-7 cells stimulates autophagy by increasing the formation of LC3-positive autophagosomes and the rate of proteolysis sensitive to the autophagy inhibitor 3-methyladenine. Autophagy was blocked in the presence of dimethylsphingosine, an inhibitor of SK activity, and in cells expressing a catalytically inactive form of SK1. In SK1(wt)-overexpressing cells, however, autophagy was not sensitive to fumonisin B1, an inhibitor of ceramide synthase. In contrast to ceramide-induced autophagy, SK1(S1P)-induced autophagy is characterized by (i) the inhibition of mammalian target of rapamycin signaling independently of the Akt/protein kinase B signaling arm and (ii) the lack of robust accumulation of the autophagy protein Beclin 1. In addition, nutrient starvation induced both the stimulation of autophagy and SK activity. Knocking down the expression of the autophagy protein Atg7 or that of SK1 by siRNA abolished starvation-induced autophagy and increased cell death with apoptotic hallmarks. In conclusion, these results show that SK1(S1P)-induced autophagy protects cells from death with apoptotic features during nutrient starvation.  相似文献   

20.
Fumonisin B1 is a mycotoxin produced by Fusarium moniliforme, a common fungus in corn. It is known to cause a variety of diseases, including hepatic and renal degeneration in many species of laboratory and domestic animals. The known biochemical events in fumonisin B1 toxicity involve inhibition of ceramide synthase leading to disruption of sphingolipid metabolism. The effect of fumonisin B1 on ceramide and more complex sphingolipids in mice is not known. Groups of five male BALB/c mice each were injected with fumonisin B1 subcutaneously at doses of 0, 0.25, 0.75, 2.25, and 6.75 mg/kg body weight daily for 5 days. This protocol has been shown to produce a dose-dependent increase in apoptosis in liver and kidney of these animals. In the present study, liver, kidney, and brain were sampled and analyzed for free sphingoid bases and complex sphingolipids one day after the last treatment. A dose-related accumulation of free sphinganine and sphingosine was observed in liver and kidney, but not brain. The maximal increase in free sphinganine in kidney was 10-fold greater than in liver. Total phospholipids increased only in liver, whereas ceramide levels were not consistently altered in liver, kidney, or brain. In liver and kidney, fumonisin B1 treatment increased the sphinganine-containing complex sphingolipids, but no effect was observed on sphingosine-containing complex sphingolipids. No changes in complex sphingolipids were observed in brain. In liver, there was a close correlation between the extent of free sphinganine accumulation, and apoptosis and hepatopathy. This correlation was also evident in kidney but to a lessor extent. Nonetheless, the apoptosis and nephropathy occurred with little or no change in the levels of ceramide or more complex sphingolipids. © 1998 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Biochem Toxicol 12: 281–289, 1998  相似文献   

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