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1.
Sphingomyelin is an important lipid component of cell membranes and lipoproteins which can be hydrolyzed by sphingomyelinases into ceramide and phosphorylcholine. The type A and B forms of Niemann-Pick disease (NPD) are lipid storage disorders due to the deficient activity of the enzyme acid sphingomyelinase, and the resultant accumulation of sphingomyelin in cells and tissues. In this paper we report a new, enzyme-based method to quantify the levels of sphingomyelin in tissues and plasma of normal individuals and NPD patients. The method utilizes sphingomyelinase from Bacillus cereus to completely hydrolyze the sphingomyelin into ceramide. Quantification of the sphingomyelin-derived ceramide is accomplished using Escherichia coli diacylglycerol (DAG) kinase and [gamma-(32)P]ATP. The resulting [(32)P]ceramide is quantified using a phosphor-imager system following TLC separation. This procedure allowed quantification of sphingomyelin over a broad range from 10 pmol to 1 nmol. To validate this assay we quantified sphingomyelin in plasma and tissues obtained from normal and NPD mice and humans. The sphingomyelin content in adult homozygous (-/-) or heterozygous (+/-) NPD mouse plasma was significantly elevated compared to that of normal mice (up to twofold). Moreover, the accumulated sphingomyelin in the tissues of NPD mice was 4 to 40 times higher than that in normal mice depending on the tissue analyzed. The sphingomyelin levels in plasma from several type B NPD patients also were significantly elevated compared to normal individuals of the same age. Based on these results we propose that this new, enzyme-based procedure can provide sensitive and reproducible sphingomyelin quantification in tissues and fluids from normal individuals and NPD patients. It could be a useful tool for the diagnosis of NPD and the evaluation of NPD treatment protocols, as well as for the study of ceramide-mediated apoptosis since the method provides the simultaneous determination of sphingomyelin and ceramide in the same lipid extract.  相似文献   

2.
A new ceramide analog, 1, containing two fluorescent dyes, NBD in the N-acyl part and KFL5 in the alkyl part, was synthesized. The fluorescence from both NBD and KFL5 was detected in living cells in a time-dependent manner. A multi-wavelength fluorescence detector was used to detect ceramide metabolites including sphingosine, sphingosine-1-phosphate, glucosylceramide, and sphingomyelin, which are connected to the fluorescent dyes, simultaneously in a single TLC plate.  相似文献   

3.
Involvement of sphingomyelinases in TNF signaling pathways   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Sphingomyelin (N-acylsphingosin-1-phosphorylcholine) is a phospholipid preferentially found in the plasma membrane of mammalian cells. Signaling through the sphingomyelin pathway is associated with generation of ceramide, which acts as a second messenger in activating a variety of cellular functions. Ceramide belongs to the group of sphingosine-based lipid second messenger molecules that are critically involved in the regulation of signal transduction of diverse cell surface membrane receptors. The emerging picture suggests that coupling of ceramide to specific signaling cascades is both stimulus- and cell type-specific and depends on the subcellular topology of its production. Following membrane receptor triggering, neutral and acid isoforms of sphingomyelinases are rapidly activated generating ceramide through sphingomyelin hydrolysis. Here the molecular mechanisms of TNF-induced activation of sphingomyelinases and the functional consequences of ceramide generation will be discussed.  相似文献   

4.
Sphingomyelin is an important lipid component of cell membranes and lipoproteins that can be hydrolyzed by sphingomyelinases into ceramide and phosphorylcholine. The Type A and B forms of Niemann-Pick disease (NPD) are lipid storage disorders due to the deficient activity of the enzyme acid sphingomyelinase and the resultant accumulation of sphingomyelin in cells, tissues, and fluids. In this paper we report a new, enzymatic method to quantify the levels of sphingomyelin in plasma, urine, or tissues from NPD patients and mice. In this assay, bacterial sphingomyelinase is first used to hydrolyze sphingomyelin to phosphorylcholine and ceramide. Alkaline phosphatase then generates choline from the phosphorylcholine, and the newly formed choline is then used to generate hydrogen peroxide in a reaction catalyzed by choline oxidase. Finally, with peroxidase as a catalyst, hydrogen peroxide reacts with the Amplex Red reagent to generate a highly fluorescent product, resorufin. These enzymatic reactions are carried out simultaneously in a single 100-microl reaction mixture for 20 min. Use of a 96-well microtiter plate permits automated and sensitive quantification using a plate reader and fluorescence detector. This procedure allowed quantification of sphingomyelin over a broad range from 0.02 to 10 nmol, similar in sensitivity to a recently described radioactive method using diacylglycerol kinase and 50 times more sensitive than a colorimetric, aminoantipyrine/phenol-based assay. To validate this new assay method, we quantified sphingomyelin in plasma, urine, and tissues from normal individuals and from NPD mice and patients. The sphingomyelin content in adult homozygous or heterozygous NPD mouse plasma and urine was significantly elevated compared to that of normal mice. Moreover, the accumulated sphingomyelin in the tissues of NPD mice was 4 to 15 times higher than that in normal mice depending on the tissue analyzed. The sphingomyelin levels in plasma from several Type B NPD patients also was significantly elevated compared to normal individuals of the same age. Based on these results, we propose that this new, fluorescence-based procedure can provide simple, fast, sensitive, and reproducible sphingomyelin quantification in tissues and fluids from normal individuals and NPD patients. It could also be a useful tool for the study of other sphingomyelin-related diseases and in a variety of research settings where sphingomyelin quantification is required.  相似文献   

5.
Tissue injury in inflammation involves the release of several cytokines that activate sphingomyelinases and generate ceramide. In the lung, the impaired metabolism of surfactant phosphatidylcholine (PC) accompanies this acute and chronic injury. These effects are long-lived and extend beyond the time frame over which tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha and interleukin-1beta are elevated. In this paper, we demonstrate that in H441 lung cells these two processes, cytokine-induced metabolism of sphingomyelin and the inhibition of PC metabolism, are directly interrelated. First, metabolites of sphingomyelin hydrolysis themselves inhibit key enzymes necessary for restoring homeostasis between sphingomyelin and its metabolites. Ceramide stimulates sphingomyelinases as effectively as TNF-alpha, thereby amplifying the sphingomyelinase activation, and TNF-alpha, ceramide, and sphingosine all inhibit PC:ceramide phosphocholine transferase (sphingomyelin synthase), the enzyme that restores homeostasis between sphingomyelin and ceramide pools. Second, ceramide inhibits PC synthesis, probably because of its effects on CTP:phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase, the rate-limiting enzymatic step in de novo PC synthesis. The data presented here suggest that TNF-alpha may be an inhibitor of phospholipid metabolism in inflammatory tissue injury. These actions may be amplified because of the ability of metabolites of sphingomyelin to inhibit the pathways that should restore the normal ceramide-sphingomyelin homeostasis.  相似文献   

6.
Sphingomyelinases C are enzymes that catalyze the hydrolysis of sphingomyelin in biological membranes to ceramide and phosphorylcholine. Various pathogenic bacteria produce secreted neutral sphingomyelinases C that act as membrane-damaging virulence factors. Mammalian neutral sphingomyelinases C, which display sequence homology to the bacterial enzymes, are involved in sphingolipid metabolism and signaling. This article describes the first structure to be determined for a member of the neutral sphingomyelinase C family, SmcL, from the intracellular bacterial pathogen Listeria ivanovii. The structure has been refined to 1.9-A resolution with phases derived by single isomorphous replacement with anomalous scattering techniques from a single iridium derivative. SmcL adopts a DNase I-like fold, and is the first member of this protein superfamily to have its structure determined that acts as a phospholipase. The structure reveals several unique features that adapt the protein to its phospholipid substrate. These include large hydrophobic beta-hairpin and hydrophobic loops surrounding the active site that may bind and penetrate the lipid bilayer to position sphingomyelin in a catalytically competent position. The structure also provides insight into the proposed general base/acid catalytic mechanism, in which His-325 and His-185 play key roles.  相似文献   

7.
Sphingomyelin, labelled with a fluorescent probe, pyrene, in the fatty acyl residue was associated with fetal calf serum; approx. 80% of the sphingomyelin was found in the low- and high-density lipoproteins. This was added to the growth medium of cultured human skin fibroblasts from normal individuals and a patient with Niemann-Pick disease type A, devoid of acid sphingomyelinase activity. The fluorescent sphingomyelin was taken up by both cell types, but only the former degraded it to produce fluorescent ceramide. Differences between normal and Niemann-Pick cells in sphingomyelin content or ceramide production were observed after several hours uptake. A more pronounced difference was noted when cells were incubated for 1 day with fluorescent sphingomyelin and then for two to three days in medium devoid of this compound. Under these conditions, the fluorescence intensity of the Niemann-Pick cells remained practically constant while that of their normal counterparts was almost completely eliminated from the cells. Comparison of fluorescence intensities of these two cell types could be made directly on aqueous suspensions of whole cells or, alternatively, on their lipid extracts. For evaluation of the degradation of fluorescent sphingomyelin to ceramide within the cells, several procedures were developed for the rapid isolation of the latter compound from the total lipid extract. The results suggest that when associated with the constituents of the fetal calf serum, sphingomyelin is taken up by the cells and transported into the lysosomal compartment where it is degraded to ceramide. Use of the fluorescent derivative of sphingomyelin provided a simple and rapid procedure for following the uptake by and degradation within the cultured cells. It also permitted the establishment of differences in the rates of degradation of the fluorescent sphingomyelin by cells with a normal metabolism and others lacking sphingomyelinase (i.e., Niemann-Pick disease type A cells).  相似文献   

8.
Ceramide is a novel lipid mediator involved in regulating cell growth, cell differentiation and cell death. Many studies have focused on characterizing the stimulus-induced production of ceramide and identifying putative downstream molecular targets. However, little remains known about the localization of the regulated production of ceramide through sphingomyelin metabolism in the plasma membrane. Additionally, it is unclear whether a localized increase in ceramide concentration is necessary to facilitate downstream signalling events initiated by this lipid. Recent studies have suggested that detergent-insoluble plasma membrane domains may be highly localized sites for initiating signal transduction cascades by both tyrosine kinase and sphingolipid signalling pathways. These domains are typically enriched in both sphingolipids and cholesterol and have been proposed to form highly ordered lipid rafts floating in a sea of glycerophospholipids. Alternatively, upon integration of the cholesterol binding protein caveolin, these domains may also form small cave-like structures called caveolae. Emerging evidence suggests that the enhanced sphingomyelin content of these lipid domains make them potential substrate pools for sphingomyelinases to produce a high local concentration of ceramide. The subsequent formation of ceramide microdomains in the plasma membrane may be a critical factor in regulating downstream signalling through this lipid messenger.  相似文献   

9.
Uropathogenic Escherichia coli attach to epithelial cells through P fimbriae that bind Galα1-4Galβ-oligosaccharide sequences in cell surface glycosphingolipids. The binding of P-fimbriated E. coli to uroepithelial cells causes the release of ceramide, activation of the ceramide signalling pathway and a cytokine response in the epithelial cells. The present study examined the molecular source of ceramide in human kidney A498 cells exposed to P-fimbriated E. coli . Agonists such as TNF-α and IL-1β released ceramide from sphingomyelin by the activation of endogenous sphingomyelinases and hydrolysis of sphingomyelin, and triggered an IL-6 response. P-fimbriated E. coli caused a slight increase in endogenous sphingomyelinase activity, but there was no associated sphingomyelin hydrolysis. Instead, the concentration of galactose-containing glycolipids decreased. We propose that P-fimbriated E. coli differ from other activators of the ceramide pathway, in that release of ceramide is from receptor glycolipids and not from sphingomyelin. Receptor breakdown may be an efficient host defence strategy, as it reduces the concentration of cell surface receptors, releases soluble receptor analogues and activates an inflammatory response.  相似文献   

10.
Acid and neutral sphingomyelinases: roles and mechanisms of regulation.   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Ceramide, an emerging bioactive lipid and second messenger, is mainly generated by hydrolysis of sphingomyelin through the action of sphingomyelinases. At least two sphingomyelinases, neutral and acid sphingomyelinases, are activated in response to many extracellular stimuli. Despite extensive studies, the precise cellular function of each of these sphingomyelinases in sphingomyelin turnover and in the regulation of ceramide-mediated responses is not well understood. Therefore, it is essential to elucidate the factors and mechanisms that control the activation of acid and neutral sphingomyelinases to understand their the roles in cell regulation. This review will focus on the molecular mechanisms that regulate these enzymes in vivo and in vitro, especially the roles of oxidants (glutathione, peroxide, nitric oxide), proteins (saposin, caveolin 1, caspases), and lipids (diacylglycerol, arachidonic acid, and ceramide).  相似文献   

11.
The ubiquitous sphingophospholipid sphingomyelin (SM) can be hydrolysed in human cells to ceramide by different sphingomyelinases (SMases). These enzymes exert a dual role, enabling not only the turnover of membrane SM and the degradation of exogenous (lipoprotein) SM, but also the signal-induced generation of the lipid second messenger ceramide. This review focuses on the function(s) of the different SMases in living cells. While both lysosomal and non-lysosomal pathways that ensure SM hydrolysis in intact cells can be distinguished, the precise contribution of each of these SM-cleaving enzymes to the production of ceramide as a signalling molecule remains to be clarified.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
In this article, we review the role of sphingomyelinases and ceramide in the Fas-mediated apoptosis signal transduction cascade. Several stimuli, including ligation of Fas, have been shown to enhance either neutral and/or acidic sphingomyelinase activity and increase ceramide content in intact cells or cell membrane preparations. Ceramide seems to have different functions, including induction of apoptosis, growth arrest, and/or differentiation, depending on cell type or location of sphingomyelin hydrolysis within the cell. Several putative targets for ceramide activity, including a kinase and a phosphatase, have also been identified. While ceramide and acidic sphingomyelinase activity appear to be involved in apoptotic signalling for Fas and other members of the tumour necrosis factor receptor family, it is clear that other signals and mechanisms are necessary for Fas-mediated apoptosis.  相似文献   

14.
A colored derivative of sphingomyelin was synthesized and used as substrate for several sphingomyelinases. The compound is N-omega-trinitrophenyl-aminolaurylsphingosylphosphorylcholine. The rate of hydrolysis of this substrate was compared to that of bovine brain sphingomyelin, labelled with tritium in the choline moiety. The following enzyme preparations were used: homogenate-less debris of brain, assayed at pH 5.0 or 7.4; a solubilized preparation derived from rat brain lysosomes, assayed at pH 5.0 and a purified enzyme of Staphylococcus aureus. With all preparations, the rates of hydrolysis of the yellow derivative were very similar to those of the brain sphingomyelin. Extracts of skin fibroblasts of normal and Niemann-Pick patients as well as amniotic cells were also used. Again, the rates of hydrolysis of the yellow derivative practically equalled those using brain sphingomyelin.  相似文献   

15.
Free-standing giant unilamellar vesicles were used to visualize the complex lateral heterogeneity, induced by ceramide in the membrane bilayer at micron scale using C12-NBD-PC probe partitioning under the fluorescence microscope. Ceramide gel domains exist as leaf-like structures in glycerophospholipid/ceramide mixtures. Cholesterol readily increases ceramide miscibility with glycerophospholipids but cholesterol-ceramide interactions are not involved in the organization of the liquid-ordered phase as exemplified by sphingomyelin/cholesterol mixtures. Sphingomyelin stabilizes the gel phase and thus decreases ceramide miscibility in the presence of cholesterol. Gel/liquid-ordered/liquid-disordered phase coexistence was visualized in quaternary phosphatidylcholine/sphingomyelin/ceramide/cholesterol mixtures as occurrence of dark leaf-like and circular domains within a bright liquid phase. Sphingomyelin initiates specific ceramide-sphingomyelin interactions to form a highly ordered gel phase appearing at temperatures higher than pure ceramide gel phase in phosphatidylcholine/ceramide mixtures. Less sphingomyelin is engaged in formation of liquid-ordered phase leading to a shift in its formation to lower temperatures. Sphingomyelinase activity on substrate vesicles destroys micron Lo domains but induces the formation of a gel-like phase. The activation of phospholipase A2 by ceramide on heterogeneous membranes was visualized. Changes in the phase state of the membrane bilayer initiates such morphological processes as membrane fragmentation, budding in and budding out was demonstrated.  相似文献   

16.
Human placental sphingomyelinase activity was eluted as a single symmetrical peak from Sephadex G-200 with a molecular weight of 290000; however, the enzyme behaved heterogeneously on ion exchange chromatography. A specific species of sphingomyelinase was purified approx. 10 000-fold to a constant specific activity of 274 000 nanomol of sphingomyelin hydrolyzed per mg protein per h. When the purified enzyme was examined on sodium dodecyl sulfate disc gel electrophoresis, two distinct protein bands in approximately equal proportions with molecular weights of 36 800 and 28 300 were found. The specificity of the enzyme is directed towards both the hydrophilic phosphocholine and the hydrophobic ceramide moieties of sphingomyelin. Possible interrelationships between the heterogenous forms of placental sphingomyelinases are discussed.  相似文献   

17.
Sphingolipid ceramide N-deacylase is an enzyme capable of hydrolyzing the N-acyl linkages of ceramides of various sphingolipids. Recently, it was found that the enzyme catalyzes the reverse hydrolysis reaction in which free fatty acids are condensed to lyso-sphingolipids to produce sphingolipids. This paper describes a simple method for the synthesis of fluorescence-labeled sphingolipids utilizing the condensation reaction of the enzyme. N-TFAc-aminododecanoic acids were efficiently condensed by the enzyme to the lyso-forms of GM1 and sphingomyelin in glycine buffer (pH 10). The reaction products, N-TFAc-amino-GM1 and sphingomyelin, were obtained with overall yields of 60%. The purified products were identified to be omega-amino-GM1 and omega-amino-sphingomyelin, respectively, by TLC and FAB-MS or ESI-LC/MS analysis after removal of the N-TFAc by mild alkaline treatment. NBD-labeled GM1 and sphingomyelin were prepared from omega-amino-GM1 and omega-amino-sphingomyelin by coupling with 4-fluoro-NBD. These fluorescence-labeled substrates, C12-NBD-GM1 and C12-NBD-sphingomyelin, were hydrolyzed by endoglycoceramidase and sphingomyelinase, respectively, to produce NBD-dodecanoylsphingosines, but were resistant to hydrolysis by sphingolipid ceramide N-deacylase. C12-NBD-sphingomyelin was found to be a better substrate than the commercially available C6-NBD-sphingomyelin for the assay of sphingomyelinase from various sources. We also describe a new method to detect GM1-binding proteins using fluorescence-labeled GM1.  相似文献   

18.
19.
Sphingomyelin synthase (phosphatidylcholine:ceramide phosphocholinetransferase) activity in the membranes of Chinese hamster ovary cells was found to be detectable with a fluorescent ceramide analog, containing a short acyl chain, as a substrate. We developed a method for the functional reconstitution of sphingomyelin synthase in detergent-treated membranes. Treatment of membranes with 1.5% octyl glucoside in the absence of exogenous phosphatidylcholine resulted in almost complete loss of sphingomyelin synthase activity, even after removal of the detergent by dialysis. In contrast, membranes treated with the detergent in the presence of exogenous phosphatidylcholine showed partial activity and, after dialysis of this mixture, enzyme activity was restored to almost the same level as the activity in dialyzed intact membranes. The effects of various lipids on enzyme activity in this reconstitution system suggested that L-alpha-phosphatidylcholine was the environmental lipid essential for the functional reconstitution of the enzyme. Furthermore, diacylglycerol was suggested to serve as an inhibitory regulator of sphingomyelin synthesis.  相似文献   

20.
Ceramide-induced alterations in the lateral organization of membrane proteins can be involved in several biological contexts, ranging from apoptosis to viral infections. In order to investigate such alterations in a simple model, we used a combined approach of atomic force microscopy, scanning fluorescence correlation spectroscopy and confocal fluorescence imaging to study the partitioning of different membrane components in sphingomyelin/dioleoyl-phosphatidylcholine/cholesterol/ceramide supported bilayers. Such model membranes exhibit coexistence of liquid-disordered, liquid-ordered (raft-like) and ceramide-rich lipid phases. Our results show that components with poor affinity toward the liquid-ordered phase, such as several fluorescent lipid analogues or the synaptic protein Synaptobrevin 2, are excluded from ceramide-rich domains. Conversely, we show for the first time that the raft-associated protein placental alkaline phosphatase (GPI-PLAP) and the ganglioside GM1 are enriched in such domains, while exhibiting a strong decrease in lateral diffusion. Analogue modulation of the local concentration and dynamics of membrane proteins/receptors by ceramide can be of crucial importance for the biological functions of cell membranes.  相似文献   

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