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1.
In a previous study, we reported that the Saccharomyces cerevisiae gene YPC1 encodes an alkaline ceramidase with a dual activity, catalyzing both hydrolysis and synthesis of yeast ceramide (Mao, C., Xu, R., Bielawska, A., and Obeid, L. M. (2000) J. Biol. Chem. 275, 6876-6884). In this study, we have identified a YPC1 homologue in S. cerevisiae that also encodes an alkaline ceramidase. We show that these two ceramidases have different substrate specificity, such that YPC1p preferentially hydrolyzes phytoceramide, whereas the new ceramidase YDC1p hydrolyzes dihydroceramide preferentially and phytoceramide only slightly. Neither enzyme hydrolyzes unsaturated mammalian-type ceramide. In contrast to YPC1p, YDC1p had only minor in vitro reverse activity of catalyzing dihydroceramide formation from a free fatty acid and dihydrosphingosine and no activity with phytosphingosine. Overexpression of YDC1p had no reverse activity in non-stressed yeast cells, but like YPC1p suppressed the inhibition of growth by fumonisin B1 albeit more modestly. Deletion of YDC1 and YPC1 or both did not apparently affect growth, suggesting neither gene is essential. However, the Deltaydc1 deletion mutant but not the Deltaypc1 deletion mutant was sensitive to heat stress, indicating a role for dihydroceramide but not phytoceramide in heat stress responses, and suggesting that the two enzymes have distinct physiological functions.  相似文献   

2.
Ceramidases are enzymes involved in regulating cellular levels of ceramides, sphingoid bases, and their phosphates. Based on sequence homology to the yeast alkaline ceramidases YPC1p (Mao, C., Xu, R., Bielawska, A., and Obeid, L. M. (2000) J. Biol. Chem. 275, 6876--6884) and YDC1p (Mao, C., Xu, R., Bielawska, A., Szulc, Z. M., and Obeid, L. M. (2000) J. Biol Chem. 275, 31369--31378), we report the identification and cloning of a cDNA encoding for a novel human alkaline ceramidase (aPHC) that hydrolyzes phytoceramide selectively. Northern blot analysis showed that aPHC was ubiquitously expressed, with the highest expression in placenta. Green fluorescent protein tagging showed that it was localized in both the Golgi apparatus and endoplasmic reticulum. Overexpression of aPHC in mammalian cells elevated in vitro ceramidase activity toward N-4-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1,3-diazole-C(12)-phytoceramide. Its expression in a yeast mutant strain devoid of any ceramidase activity restored the ceramidase activity and caused an increase in the hydrolysis of phytoceramide in yeast cells, thus leading to the decreased biosynthesis of sphingolipids. These data collectively suggest that, similar to the yeast phytoceramidase YPC1p, aPHC has phytoceramidase activity both in vitro and in cells; hence, it is a functional homolog of the yeast phytoceramidase YPC1p. However, in contrast to YPC1p, aPHC exhibited no reverse activity of ceramidase either in vitro or in cells. Biochemical characterization showed that aPHC had a pH optimum of 9.5, was activated by Ca(2+), but was inhibited by Zn(2+) and sphingosine. Substrate specificity showed that aPHC hydrolyzed phytoceramide preferentially. Together, these data demonstrate that aPHC is a novel human alkaline phytoceramidase, the first mammalian alkaline ceramidase to be identified as being specific for the hydrolysis of phytoceramide.  相似文献   

3.
SUMMARY: Sphingolipids are a structurally diverse group of molecules based on long-chain sphingoid bases that are found in animal, fungal and plant cells. In contrast to the situation in animals and yeast, much less is known about the spectrum of sphingolipid species in plants and the roles they play in mediating cellular processes. Here, we report the cloning and characterization of a plant ceramidase from rice (Oryza sativa spp. Japonica cv. Nipponbare). Sequence analysis suggests that the rice ceramidase (OsCDase) is similar to mammalian neutral ceramidases. We demonstrate that OsCDase is a bona fide ceramidase by heterologous expression in the yeast double knockout mutant Deltaypc1Deltaydc1 that lacks the yeast ceramidases YPC1p and YDC1p. Biochemical characterization of OsCDase showed that it exhibited classical Michaelis-Menten kinetics, with optimum activity between pH 5.7 and 6.0. OsCDase activity was enhanced in the presence of Ca(2+), Mg(2+), Mn(2+) and Zn(2+), but inhibited in the presence of Fe(2+). OsCDase appears to use ceramide instead of phytoceramide as a substrate. Subcellular localization showed that OsCDase is localized to the endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi, suggesting that these organelles are sites of ceramide metabolism in plants.  相似文献   

4.
Ceramidases are a group of enzymes that catalyze the hydrolysis of ceramide, dihydroceramide, and phytoceramide into sphingosine (SPH), dihydrosphingosine (DHS), and phytosphingosine (PHS), respectively, along with a free fatty acid. Ceramidases are classified into the acid, neutral, and alkaline ceramidase subtypes according to the pH optima for their catalytic activity. YPC1 and YDC1 were the first alkaline ceramidase genes to be identified and cloned from the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae two decades ago. Subsequently, alkaline ceramidase genes were identified from other species, including one Drosophila melanogaster ACER gene (Dacer), one Arabidopsis thaliana ACER gene (AtACER), three Mus musculus ACER genes (Acer1, Acer2, and Acer3), and three Homo sapiens ACER genes (ACER1, ACER2, and ACER3). The protein products of these genes constitute a large protein family, termed the alkaline ceramidase (ACER) family. All the biochemically characterized members of the ACER family are integral membrane proteins with seven transmembrane segments in the Golgi complex or endoplasmic reticulum, and they each have unique substrate specificity. An increasing number of studies suggest that the ACER family has diverse roles in regulating sphingolipid metabolism and biological processes. Here we discuss the discovery of the ACER family, the biochemical properties, structures, and catalytic mechanisms of its members, and its role in regulating sphingolipid metabolism and biological processes in yeast, insects, plants, and mammals.  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.
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   

7.
Ceramide channels formed in the outer membrane of mitochondria have been proposed to be the pathways by which proapoptotic proteins are released from mitochondria during the early stages of apoptosis. We report that sphingosine also forms channels in membranes, but these differ greatly from the large oligomeric barrel-stave channels formed by ceramide. Sphingosine channels have short open lifetimes and have diameters less than 2 nm, whereas ceramide channels have long open lifetimes, enlarge in size reaching diameters in excess of 10 nm. Unlike ceramide, sphingosine forms channels in erythrocyte plasma membranes that vary in size with concentration, but with a maximum possible channel diameter of 2 nm. In isolated mitochondria, a large proportion of the added sphingosine was rapidly metabolized to ceramide in the absence of externally added fatty acids or fatty-acyl-CoAs. The ceramide synthase inhibitor, fumonisin B1 failed to prevent sphingosine metabolism to ceramide and actually increased it. However, partial inhibition of conversion to ceramide was achieved in the presence of ceramidase inhibitors, indicating that reverse ceramidase activity is at least partially responsible for sphingosine metabolism to ceramide. A small amount of cytochrome c release was detected. It correlated with the level of ceramide converted from sphingosine. Thus, sphingosine channels, unlike ceramide channels, are not large enough to allow the passage of proapoptotic proteins from the intermembrane space of mitochondria to the cytoplasm.  相似文献   

8.
We have previously purified a membrane-bound ceramidase from rat brain and recently cloned the human homologue. We also observed that the same enzyme is able to catalyze the reverse reaction of ceramide synthesis. To obtain insight into the biochemistry of this enzyme, we characterized in this study this reverse activity. Using sphingosine and palmitic acid as substrates, the enzyme exhibited Michaelis-Menten kinetics; however, the enzyme did not utilize palmitoyl-CoA as substrate. Also, the activity was not inhibited in vitro and in cells by fumonisin B1, an inhibitor of the CoA-dependent ceramide synthase. The enzyme showed a narrow pH optimum in the neutral range, and there was very low activity in the alkaline range. Substrate specificity studies were performed, and the enzyme showed the highest activity with d-erythro-sphingosine (Km of 0.16 mol %, and Vmax of 0.3 micromol/min/mg), but d-erythro-dihydrosphingosine and the three unnatural stereoisomers of sphingosine were poor substrates. The specificity for the fatty acid was also studied, and the highest activity was observed for myristic acid with a Km of 1.7 mol % and a Vmax of 0.63 micromol/min/mg. Kinetic studies were performed to investigate the mechanism of the reaction, and Lineweaver-Burk plots indicated a sequential mechanism. Two competitive inhibitors of the two substrates were identified, l-erythro-sphingosine and myristaldehyde, and inhibition studies indicated that the reaction followed a random sequential mechanism. The effect of lipids were also tested. Most of these lipids showed moderate inhibition, whereas the effects of phosphatidic acid and cardiolipin were more potent with total inhibition at around 2.5-5 mol %. Paradoxically, cardiolipin stimulated ceramidase activity. These results define the biochemical characteristics of this reverse activity. The results are discussed in view of a possible regulation of this enzyme by the intracellular pH or by an interaction with cardiolipin and/or phosphatidic acid.  相似文献   

9.
Ceramidases catalyze the conversion of ceramide to sphingosine. They are acylaminohydrolases that catalyze the deacylation of the amide-linked saturated fatty acid from ceramide to generate sphingosine. They also catalyze the reverse reaction of ceramide biosynthesis using sphingosine and fatty acid. In mammals, different proteins catalyze these reactions while individually exhibiting optimal activity over a narrow pH range and have been accordingly called acid, neutral, and alkaline ceramidases. Several genes encode for variants of alkaline ceramidase in mammals. Brainwashing (Bwa) is the only putative alkaline ceramidase homologue present in Drosophila. In this study we have demonstrated that BWA does not exhibit ceramidase activity and that bwa null mutants display no loss of ceramidase activity. Instead, the neutral ceramidase gene CDase encodes the protein that is responsible for all measurable ceramidase activity in Drosophila. Our studies show strong genetic interaction of Bwa with CDase and the Drosophila ceramide kinase gene (DCERK). We show that, although BWA is unlikely to be a ceramidase, it is a regulator of sphingolipid flux in Drosophila. Bwa exhibits strong genetic interaction with other genes coding for ceramide-metabolizing enzymes. This interaction might partly explain its original identification as a ceramidase.  相似文献   

10.
Sphinganine and 4-hydroxysphinganine (phytosphingosine) are the predominant free long-chain bases in lipid extracts of plant tissues. While the synthesis of sphinganine in plants has been investigated, the metabolic origin of 4-hydroxysphinganine is not known. Three different approaches utilizing fumonisin B(1), an inhibitor of sphinganine acylation, alone or in combination with beta-chloroalanine, an inhibitor of sphinganine synthesis, were used to establish that free 4-hydroxysphinganine is produced in excised corn shoots by the direct hydroxylation of sphinganine and not from the breakdown of complex sphingolipids. Sphinganine hydroxylase activity was characterized in microsomes isolated from corn. The enzyme was found to utilize D-erythro-sphinganine (with half-maximal activity observed at a substrate concentration of approximately 60 microM) and either NADPH (K(m)=33 microM) or NADH (K(m)=58 microM) as substrates. Ceramide hydroxylation was also demonstrated in corn microsomes, and the lack of competition between ceramide and sphinganine suggests the presence of distinct enzymes responsible for hydroxylating these two substrates. Using marker assays, sphinganine hydroxylase activity was localized to the endoplasmic reticulum. Sphinganine hydroxylase activity in microsomes isolated from corn shoots treated with fumonisin B(1) increased more than 3-fold compared to controls. The results of this study shed light on sphingolipid long-chain base synthesis and modification in plant tissues and suggest a possible contribution of sphinganine hydroxylase in manifesting the effects of fumonisin in plants.  相似文献   

11.
Sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P) is a bioactive sphingolipid metabolite that regulates diverse biological processes by binding to a family of G protein-coupled receptors or as an intracellular second messenger. Mammalian S1P phosphatase (SPP-1), which degrades S1P to terminate its actions, was recently cloned based on homology to a lipid phosphohydrolase that regulates the levels of phosphorylated sphingoid bases in yeast. Confocal microscopy surprisingly revealed that epitope-tagged SPP-1 is intracellular and colocalized with the ER marker calnexin. Moreover, SPP-1 activity and protein appeared to be mainly enriched in the intracellular membranes with lower expression in the plasma membrane. Treatment of SPP-1 transfectants with S1P markedly increased ceramide levels, predominantly in the intracellular membranes, diminished survival, and enhanced apoptosis. Remarkably, dihydro-S1P, although a good substrate for SPP-1 in situ, did not cause significant ceramide accumulation or increase apoptosis. Ceramide accumulation induced by S1P was completely blocked by fumonisin B1, an inhibitor of ceramide synthase, but only partially reduced by myriocin, an inhibitor of serine palmitoyltransferase, the first committed step in de novo synthesis of ceramide. Furthermore, S1P, but not dihydro-S1P, stimulated incorporation of [3H]palmitate, a substrate for both serine palmitoyltransferase and ceramide synthase, into C16-ceramide. Collectively, our results suggest that SPP-1 functions in an unprecedented manner to regulate sphingolipid biosynthesis and is poised to influence cell fate.  相似文献   

12.
ABSTRACT: BACKGROUND: The lipid signaling molecule, ceramide, is a key component of the vertebrate stress response, however, there is limited information concerning its role in invertebrate species. In order to identify genes involved in ceramide metabolism in bivalve molluscs, Pacific oyster genomic resources were examined for genes associated with ceramide metabolism and signaling. RESULTS: Several genes were identified including full-length sequences characterized for serine palmitoyltransferase-1, 3-ketodihydrosphingosine reductase, acid ceramidase, and ceramide glucosyltransferase. Genes involved in ceramide synthesis and metabolism are conserved across taxa in both form and function. Expression analysis as assessed by quantitative PCR indicated all genes were expressed at high levels in gill tissue. The role of the ceramide pathway genes in the invertebrate stress response was also explored by measuring expression levels in adult oysters exposed to Vibrio vulnificus. Two genes demonstrated increased expression during the bacterial challenge: a gene involved in hydrolytic breakdown of ceramide (acid ceramidase) and a gene involved in de novo generation of ceramide (3-ketodihydrosphingosine reductase), suggesting a possible role of ceramide in the invertebrate stress and immune responses. CONCLUSIONS: In silico and laboratory results support that Pacific oysters have the basic components of the ceramide metabolism pathway. These results also indicate that ceramide may have analogous functions in vertebrates and invertebrates. The gene expression pattern of acid ceramidase and 3-kethodihydrosphingosine reductase in response to bacterial exposure especially supports that ceramide and sphingolipid metabolism may be involved in the oyster's stress and/or immune responses.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
Recent observations support the importance of ceramide synthesis de novo in the induction of apoptosis. However, the downstream targets of de novo-synthesized ceramide are unknown. Here we show that palmitate incorporated into ceramide and induced apoptotic DNA fragmentation in astrocytes. These effects of palmitate were exacerbated when fatty acid breakdown was uncoupled and were not evident in neurons, which show a very low capacity to take up and metabolize palmitate. Palmitate-induced apoptosis of astrocytes was prevented by L-cycloserine and fumonisin B1, two inhibitors of ceramide synthesis de novo, and by PD098059, an inhibitor of the extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) cascade. Accordingly, palmitate activated ERK by a process that was dependent on ceramide synthesis de novo and Raf-1, but independent of kinase suppressor of Ras. Other potential targets of ceramide in the control of cell fate, namely, c-Jun amino-terminal kinase, p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase, and protein kinase B, were not significantly affected in astrocytes exposed to palmitate. Results show that the Raf-1/ERK cascade is the selective downstream target of de novo-synthesized ceramide in the induction of apoptosis in astrocytes and also highlight the importance of ceramide synthesis de novo in apoptosis of astrocytes, which might have pathophysiological relevance.  相似文献   

15.
16.
Human keratinocytes (KC), when cultured under conditions to remain undifferentiated or to terminally differentiate, changed their cellular distribution of CD1d. As studied by confocal microscopy, undifferentiated KC had a pool of cytoplasmic CD1d, whereas after terminal differentiation, this molecule localized in the cell membrane, which recapitulates CD1d expression in vivo. A comparison of undifferentiated and differentiated cultured KC did not reveal any differences in the association with beta(2)-microglobulin, invariant chain of class II MHC, or patterns of glycosylation, suggesting that these biochemical properties are not regulating the cellular distribution of CD1d. Time-course studies of CD1d gene expression indicated that KC slowly increased gene expression with CaCl(2)-induced terminal differentiation. Increased CD1d gene expression was dependent on ceramide synthesis, because fumonisin B1, a ceramide synthetase inhibitor, blocked the increase in CD1d gene expression during terminal differentiation. Similarly, exogenous ceramide or the ceramidase inhibitor, B13, induced CD1d gene expression by undifferentiated, but not terminally differentiated, KC. A protein kinase C-zeta (PKC-zeta) inhibitor (a pseudosubstrate oligopeptide), but not a PKC-alphabeta inhibitor, significantly decreased CD1d gene expression by undifferentiated or ceramide-stimulated cultured, undifferentiated KC. As expected, downstream signaling events of PKC-zeta (JNK phosphorylation and NF-kappaBeta accumulation in the nucleus) were also attenuated. The calcineurin phosphatase inhibitor cyclosporine A, which blocks KC terminal differentiation, also blocked CD1d gene expression by cultured KC. In conclusion, this novel function of cellular ceramides extends the importance of this class of biologically active lipids beyond that of terminal differentiation and barrier function in normal human skin.  相似文献   

17.
Lag1 (longevity assurance gene 1) homologues, a family of transmembrane proteins found in all eukaryotes, have been shown to be necessary for (dihydro)ceramide synthesis. All Lag1 homologues contain a highly conserved stretch of 52 amino acids known as the Lag1p motif. However, the functional significance of the conserved Lag1p motif for (dihydro)ceramide synthesis is currently unknown. In this work, we have investigated the function of the motif by introducing eight point mutations in the Lag1p motif of the mouse LASS1 (longevity assurance homologue 1 of yeast Lag1). The (dihydro)ceramide synthase activity of the mutants was tested using microsomes in HeLa cells and in vitro. Six of the mutations resulted in loss of activity in cells and in vitro. In addition, our results showed that C18:0 fatty acid CoA (but not cis-C18:1 fatty acid CoAs) are substrates for LASS1 and that LASS1 in HeLa cells is sensitive to fumonisin B1, an in vitro inhibitor of (dihydro)ceramide synthase. Moreover, we mutated the Lag1p motif of another Lag homologue, human LASS5. The amino acid substitutions in the human LASS5 were the same as in mouse LASS1, and had the same effect on the in vitro activity of LASS5, suggesting the Lag1p motif appears to be essential for the enzyme activity of all Lag1 homologues.  相似文献   

18.
19.
Huang ST  Yang RC  Chen MY  Pang JH 《Life sciences》2004,75(3):339-351
Phyllanthus urinaria (P. urinaria), a widely used herb medicine, was tested for the anticancer effect on human myeloid leukemia cells in this study. The water extract of P. urinaria induced the apoptosis of HL-60 cells as demonstrated by morphological change, DNA fragmentation and increased caspase-3 activity. However, normal human peripheral mononuclear cells remained viable under the same treatment. The P. urinaria-induced apoptosis of HL-60 cells was associated with the increased Bax gene expression and decreased Bcl-2 gene expression. In addition, the gene expressions of Fas receptor and Fas ligand, but not p53, were also induced in HL-60 cells dose- and time-dependently. The inhibitor of ceramide synthase, fumonisin B1, completely suppressed the apoptosis induced by P. urinaria and this inhibitory effect of fumonisin B1 could be eliminated by the addition of ceramide. It indicated that the activity of ceramide synthase is critical for the P. urinaria-induced apoptosis in HL-60 cells. The P. urinaria-induced apoptosis in HL-60 cells is mediated through a ceramide-related pathway.  相似文献   

20.
Dacarbazine (DTIC) is the treatment of choice for metastatic melanoma, but its response in patients remains very poor. Ceramide has been shown to be a death effector and to play an important role in regulating cancer cell growth upon chemotherapy. Among ceramidases, the enzymes that catabolize ceramide, acid ceramidase (aCDase) has been implicated in cancer progression. Here we show that DTIC elicits a time- and dose-dependent decrease of aCDase activity and an increase of intracellular ceramide levels in human A375 melanoma cells. The loss of enzyme activity occurred as a consequence of reactive oxygen species-dependent activation of cathepsin B-mediated degradation of aCDase. These events preceded autophagic features and loss of cell viability. Down-regulation of acid but not neutral or alkaline ceramidase 2 resulted in elevated levels of ceramide and sensitization to the toxic effects of DTIC. Conversely, inducible overexpression of acid but not neutral ceramidase reduced ceramide levels and conferred resistance to DTIC. In conclusion, we report that increased levels of ceramide, due to enhanced degradation of aCDase, are in part responsible for the cell death effects of DTIC. These results suggest that down-regulation of aCDase alone or in combination with DTIC may represent a useful tool in the treatment of metastatic melanoma.  相似文献   

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