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1.
Glycosphingolipids and cell death   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Sphingolipids have been implicated in various cellular processes including growth, cell-cell or ligand-receptor interactions, and differentiation. In addition to their importance as reservoirs of metabolites with important signaling properties, sphingolipids also help provide structural order to plasma membrane lipids and proteins within the bilayer. Glycosylated sphingolipids, and sphingomyelin in particular, are involved in the formation of lipid rafts. Although it is well accepted that ceramide, the backbone of all sphingolipids, plays a critical role in apoptosis, less is known about the biological functions of glycosphingolipids. This review summarizes current knowledge of the involvement of glycosphingolipids in cell death and in other pathological processes and diseases.  相似文献   

2.
Sphingolipid metabolites have become recognized for their participation in cell functions and signaling events that control a wide array of cellular activities. Two main sphingolipids, ceramide and sphingosine-1-phosphate, are involved in signaling pathways that regulate cell proliferation, apoptosis, motility, differentiation, angiogenesis, stress responses, protein synthesis, carbohydrate metabolism, and intracellular trafficking. Ceramide and S1P often exert opposing effects on cell survival, ceramide being pro-apoptotic and S1P generally promoting cell survival. Therefore, the conversion of one of these metabolites to the other by sphingolipid enzymes provides a vast network of regulation and provides a useful therapeutic target. Here we provide a survey of the current knowledge of the roles of sphingolipid metabolites in cancer and in lipid storage disease. We review our attempts to interfere with this network of regulation and so provide new treatments for a range of diseases. We synthesized novel analogs of sphingolipids which inhibit the hydrolysis of ceramide or its conversion to more complex sphingolipids. These analogs caused elevation of ceramide levels, leading to apoptosis of a variety of cancer cells. Administration of a synthetic analog to tumor-bearing mice resulted in reduction and even disappearance of the tumors. Therapies for sphingolipid storage diseases, such as Niemann-Pick and Gaucher diseases were achieved by two different strategies: inhibition of the biosynthesis of the substrate (substrate reduction therapy) and protection of the mutated enzyme (chaperone therapy). Sphingolipid metabolism was monitored by the use of novel fluorescent sphingolipid analogs. The results described in this review indicate that our synthetic analogs could be developed both as anticancer drugs and for the treatment of sphingolipid storage diseases.  相似文献   

3.
Sphingolipids have been implicated in various cellular processes including growth, cell-cell or ligand-receptor interactions, and differentiation. In addition to their importance as reservoirs of metabolites with important signaling properties, sphingolipids also help provide structural order to plasma membrane lipids and proteins within the bilayer. Glycosylated sphingolipids, and sphingomyelin in particular, are involved in the formation of lipid rafts. Although it is well accepted that ceramide, the backbone of all sphingolipids, plays a critical role in apoptosis, less is known about the biological functions of glycosphingolipids. This review summarizes current knowledge of the involvement of glycosphingolipids in cell death and in other pathological processes and diseases. Published in 2004. This revised version was published online in August 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

4.
Sphingomyelin metabolites in vascular cell signaling and atherogenesis   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
The atherosclerotic lesion most probably develops through a number of cellular events which implicate all vascular cell types and include synthesis of extracellular proteins, cell proliferation, differentiation and death. Sphingolipids and sphingolipid metabolizing enzymes may play important roles in atherogenesis, not only because of lipoprotein alterations but also by mediating a number of cellular events which are believed to be crucial in the development of the vascular lesions such as proliferation or cell death. Exogenous sphingolipids may mediate various biological effects such as apoptosis, mitogenesis or differentiation depending on the cell type. Moreover, several molecules present in the atherogenic lesion, such as oxidized LDL, growth factors or cytokines, which activate intracellular signaling pathways leading to vascular cell modifications, can stimulate sphingomyelin hydrolysis and generation of ceramide (and other metabolites as sphingosine-1-phosphate). Here we review the potential implication of the sphingomyelin/ceramide cycle in vascular cell signaling related to atherosclerosis, and more generally the role of sphingolipids in the events observed during the atherosclerotic process as cell differentiation, migration, adhesion, retraction, proliferation and death.  相似文献   

5.
Ceramide is formed by the activity of sphingomyelinases, by degradation of complex sphingolipids, reverse ceramidase activity or de novo synthesized. The formation of ceramide within biological membranes results in the formation of large ceramide-enriched membrane domains. These domains serve the spatial and temporal organization of receptors and signaling molecules. The acid sphingomyelinase-ceramide system plays an important role in the infection of mammalian host cells with bacterial pathogens such as Neisseria gonorrhoeae, Escherichia coli, Staphylococcus aureus, Listeria monocytogenes, Salmonella typhimurium and Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Ceramide and ceramide-enriched membrane platforms are also involved in the induction of apoptosis in infected cells, such as in epithelial and endothelial cells after infection with Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Staphylococcus aureus, respectively. Finally, ceramide-enriched membrane platforms are critical regulators of the release of pro-inflammatory cytokines upon infection. The diverse functions of ceramide in bacterial infections suggest that ceramide and ceramide-enriched membrane domains are key players in host responses to many pathogens and thus are potential novel targets to treat infections.  相似文献   

6.
Sphingolipids are bioactive lipids found in cell membranes that exert a critical role in signal transduction. In recent years, it has become apparent that sphingolipids participate in growth, senescence, differentiation and apoptosis. The anabolism and catabolism of sphingolipids occur in discrete subcellular locations and consist of a strictly regulated and interconnected network, with ceramide as the central hub. Altered sphingolipid metabolism is linked to several human diseases. Hence, an advanced knowledge of how and where sphingolipids are metabolized is of paramount importance in order to understand the role of sphingolipids in cellular functions. In this review, we provide an overview of sphingolipid metabolism. We focus on the distinct pathways of ceramide synthesis, highlighting the mitochondrial ceramide generation, transport of ceramide to mitochondria and its role in the regulation of mitochondrial-mediated apoptosis, mitophagy and implications to disease. We will discuss unanswered questions and exciting future directions. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Lipids of Mitochondria edited by Guenther Daum.  相似文献   

7.
Simple sphingolipids such as ceramide and sphingomyelin (SM) as well as more complex glycosphingolipids play very important roles in cell function under physiological conditions and during disease development and progression. Sphingolipids are particularly abundant in the nervous system. Due to their amphiphilic nature they localize to cellular membranes and many of their roles in health and disease result from membrane reorganization and from lipid interaction with proteins within cellular membranes. In this review we discuss some of the functions of sphingolipids in processes that entail cellular membranes and their role in neurodegenerative diseases, with an emphasis on SM, ceramide and gangliosides.  相似文献   

8.
A key but poorly studied domain of sphingolipid functions encompasses endocytosis, exocytosis, cellular trafficking, and cell movement. Recently, the ezrin, radixin and moesin (ERM) family of proteins emerged as novel potent targets regulated by sphingolipids. ERMs are structural proteins linking the actin cytoskeleton to the plasma membrane, also forming a scaffold for signaling pathways that are used for cell proliferation, migration and invasion, and cell division. Opposing functions of the bioactive sphingolipid ceramide and sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P), contribute to ERM regulation. S1P robustly activates whereas ceramide potently deactivates ERM via phosphorylation/dephosphorylation, respectively. This recent dimension of cytoskeletal regulation by sphingolipids opens up new avenues to target cell dynamics, and provides further understanding of some of the unexplained biological effects mediated by sphingolipids. In addition, these studies are providing novel inroads into defining basic mechanisms of regulation and action of bioactive sphingolipids. This review describes the current understanding of sphingolipid regulation of the cytoskeleton, it also describes the biologies in which ERM proteins have been involved, and finally how these two large fields have started to converge. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled New Frontiers in Sphingolipid Biology.  相似文献   

9.
Sphingolipids such as ceramide are important mediators of apoptosis and growth arrest triggered by ligands such as tumor necrosis factor and Fas-L binding to their receptors. When LM (expressing p53) and LME6 (lacking p53) cells were exposed to the genotoxin N-methyl-N-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine (MNNG), both cell lines underwent cytolysis in a very similar manner, suggesting the presence of a p53-independent apoptotic response to this genotoxic stress. To determine whether sphingolipids such as ceramide might serve as mediators in this system, the responses of these cells to exogenous sphingolipids as well as their changes in endogenous sphingolipid levels after DNA damage were examined. Treatment with exogenous C2-ceramide and sphingosine led to cell death in both LM and LME6, and treatment of the LME6 cells with MNNG resulted in a transient increase in intracellular ceramide of approximately 50% over a period of 3 h. Finally, treatment with the de novo inhibitor of ceramide synthesis ISP-1 protected LME6 cells from MNNG-triggered cell death. This MNNG-triggered induction of ceramide was not observed in the p53-expressing LM cells, suggesting that it may be down-regulated by p53. Although ceramide-mediated cell death can proceed in the absence of p53, exogenously added C2-ceramide increased the cellular p53 level in LM cells, suggesting that the two pathways do interact.  相似文献   

10.
Simple sphingolipids such as ceramide, sphingosine and sphingosine 1-phosphate are key regulators of diverse cellular functions. Their roles in the nervous system are supported by extensive evidence derived primarily from studies in cultured cells. More recently animal studies and studies with human samples have revealed the importance of ceramide and its metabolites in the development and progression of neurodegenerative disorders. The roles of sphingolipids in neurons and glial cells are complex, cell dependent, and many times contradictory. In this review I will summarize the effects elicited by ceramide and ceramide metabolites in cells of the nervous system, in particular those effects related to cell survival and death, emphasizing the molecular mechanisms involved. I also discuss recent evidence for the implication of sphingolipids in the development and progression of certain dementias.  相似文献   

11.
Sphingolipids are highly bioactive lipids. Sphingolipid metabolism produces key membrane components (e.g. sphingomyelin) and a variety of signaling lipids with different biological functions (e.g. ceramide, sphingosine-1-phosphate). The coordinated activity of tens of different enzymes maintains proper levels and localization of these lipids with key roles in cellular processes. In this review, we highlight the signaling roles of sphingolipids in cell death and survival. We discuss recent findings on the role of specific sphingolipids during these processes, enabled by the use of lipidomics to study compositional and spatial regulation of these lipids and synthetic sphingolipid probes to study subcellular localization and interaction partners of sphingolipids to understand the function of these lipids.  相似文献   

12.
Simple sphingolipids such as ceramide, sphingosine and sphingosine 1-phosphate are key regulators of diverse cellular functions. Their roles in the nervous system are supported by extensive evidence derived primarily from studies in cultured cells. More recently animal studies and studies with human samples have revealed the importance of ceramide and its metabolites in the development and progression of neurodegenerative disorders. The roles of sphingolipids in neurons and glial cells are complex, cell dependent, and many times contradictory. In this review I will summarize the effects elicited by ceramide and ceramide metabolites in cells of the nervous system, in particular those effects related to cell survival and death, emphasizing the molecular mechanisms involved. I also discuss recent evidence for the implication of sphingolipids in the development and progression of certain dementias.  相似文献   

13.
Many ceramides     
Intensive research over the past 2 decades has implicated ceramide in the regulation of several cell responses. However, emerging evidence points to dramatic complexities in ceramide metabolism and structure that defy the prevailing unifying hypothesis on ceramide function that is based on the understanding of ceramide as a single entity. Here, we develop the concept that "ceramide" constitutes a family of closely related molecules, subject to metabolism by >28 enzymes and with >200 structurally distinct mammalian ceramides distinguished by specific structural modifications. These ceramides are synthesized in a combinatorial fashion with distinct enzymes responsible for the specific modifications. These multiple pathways of ceramide generation led to the hypothesis that individual ceramide molecular species are regulated by specific biochemical pathways in distinct subcellular compartments and execute distinct functions. In this minireview, we describe the "many ceramides" paradigm, along with the rationale, supporting evidence, and implications for our understanding of bioactive sphingolipids and approaches for unraveling these pathways.  相似文献   

14.
Sphingolipids are important components of eukaryotic cells, many of which function as bioactive signaling molecules. Of these, ceramide is a central metabolite and plays key roles in a variety of cellular responses, including regulation of cell growth, viability, differentiation, and senescence. Ceramide is composed of the long-chain sphingoid base, sphingosine, in N-linkage to a variety of acyl groups. Sphingosine serves as the product of sphingolipid catabolism, and it is mostly salvaged through reacylation, resulting in the generation of ceramide or its derivatives. This recycling of sphingosine is termed the “salvage pathway”, and recent evidence points to important roles for this pathway in ceramide metabolism and function. A number of enzymes are involved in the salvage pathway, and these include sphingomyelinases, cerebrosidases, ceramidases, and ceramide synthases. Recent studies suggest that the salvage pathway is not only subject to regulation, but it also modulates the formation of ceramide and subsequent ceramide-dependent cellular signals. This review focuses on the salvage pathway in ceramide metabolism, its regulation, its experimental analysis, and emerging biological functions.  相似文献   

15.
Ceramide is a well-characterized sphingolipid metabolite and second messenger that participates in numerous biological processes. In addition to serving as a precursor to complex sphingolipids, ceramide is a potent signaling molecule capable of regulating vital cellular functions. Perhaps its major role in signal transduction is to induce cell cycle arrest, and promote apoptosis. In contrast, little is known about the metabolic or signaling pathways that are regulated by the phosphorylated form of ceramide. It was first demonstrated that ceramide-1-phosphate (C1P) had mitogenic properties, and more recently it has been described as potent inhibitor of apoptosis and inducer of cell survival. C1P and ceramide are antagonistic molecules that can be interconverted in cells by kinase and phosphatase activities. An appropriate balance between the levels of these two metabolites seems to be crucial for cell and tissue homeostasis. Switching this balance towards accumulation of one or the other may result in metabolic dysfunction, or disease. Therefore, the activity of the enzymes that are involved in C1P and ceramide metabolism must be efficiently coordinated to ensure normal cell functioning.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Ceramide is a well-characterized sphingolipid metabolite and second messenger that participates in numerous biological processes. In addition to serving as a precursor to complex sphingolipids, ceramide is a potent signaling molecule capable of regulating vital cellular functions. Perhaps its major role in signal transduction is to induce cell cycle arrest, and promote apoptosis. In contrast, little is known about the metabolic or signaling pathways that are regulated by the phosphorylated form of ceramide. It was first demonstrated that ceramide-1-phosphate (C1P) had mitogenic properties, and more recently it has been described as potent inhibitor of apoptosis and inducer of cell survival. C1P and ceramide are antagonistic molecules that can be interconverted in cells by kinase and phosphatase activities. An appropriate balance between the levels of these two metabolites seems to be crucial for cell and tissue homeostasis. Switching this balance towards accumulation of one or the other may result in metabolic dysfunction, or disease. Therefore, the activity of the enzymes that are involved in C1P and ceramide metabolism must be efficiently coordinated to ensure normal cell functioning.  相似文献   

18.
Sphingolipids are major lipid constituents of the eukaryotic plasma membrane. Without certain sphingolipids, cells and/or embryos cannot survive, indicating that sphingolipids possess important physiological functions that are not substituted for by other lipids. One such role may be signaling. Recent studies have revealed that some sphingolipid metabolites, such as long-chain bases (LCBs; sphingosine (Sph) in mammals), long-chain base 1-phosphates (LCBPs; sphingosine 1-phosphate (S1P) in mammals), ceramide (Cer), and ceramide 1-phosphate (C1P), act as signaling molecules. The addition of phosphate groups to LCB/Sph and Cer generates LCBP/S1P and C1P, respectively. These phospholipids exhibit completely different functions than those of their precursors. In this review, we describe recent advances in understanding the functions of LCBP/S1P and C1P in mammals and in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Since LCB/Sph, LCBP/S1P, Cer, and C1P are mutually convertible, regulation of not only the total amount of the each lipid but also of the overall balance in cellular levels is important. Therefore, we describe in detail their metabolic pathways, as well as the genes involved in each reaction.  相似文献   

19.
Membrane lipids as signaling molecules   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Membrane lipids play important roles in signaling reactions. They are involved in most if not all cellular signaling cascades and in a wide variety of tissue and cell types. The purpose of this review is to highlight major pathways of signaling originating in membrane lipids. Details of lipid metabolism, and its relation to protein function, will thus advance understanding of the role of lipids in health and disease. RECENT FINDINGS: Major classes of lipids including glycerophospholipids, their metabolites (eicosanoids, endocannabinoids), and sphingolipids have recently generated interest in the field of signal transduction. These lipids are tightly regulated and have an impact on various physiological functions. Importantly, aberrant lipid metabolism often leads to onset of pathology, and thus the precise balance of signaling lipids and their effectors can serve as biomarkers. SUMMARY: Membrane lipids form precursors for second messengers and functional assembly matrices on membrane domains during cellular stimulation. Many of these modifications are rapid reactions at lipid headgroups. Metabolism of the fatty acyl portion of membrane lipids leads to the generation of a bewildering complexity of lipid mediators with extended effects in space and time.  相似文献   

20.
Programmed cell death is an important physiological response to many forms of cellular stress. The signaling cascades that result in programmed cell death are as elaborate as those that promote cell survival, and it is clear that coordination of both protein- and lipid-mediated signals is crucial for proper cell execution. Sphingolipids are a large class of lipids whose diverse members share the common feature of a long-chain sphingoid base, e.g., sphingosine. Many sphingolipids have been shown to play essential roles in both death signaling and survival. Ceramide, an N-acylsphingosine, has been implicated in cell death following a myriad of cellular stresses. Sphingosine itself can induce cell death but via pathways both similar and dissimilar to those of ceramide. Sphingosine-1-phosphate, on the other hand, is an anti-apoptotic molecule that mediates a host of cellular effects antagonistic to those of its pro-apoptotic sphingolipid siblings. Extraordinarily, these lipid mediators are metabolically juxtaposed, suggesting that the regulation of their metabolism is of the utmost importance in determining cell fate. In this review, we briefly examine the role of ceramide, sphingosine, and sphingosine-1-phosphate in programmed cell death and highlight the potential roles that these lipids play in the pathway to apoptosis.  相似文献   

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