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1.
The metabolism of sphingomyelins and ceramides with defined labeled fatty acids was compared after injection in vivo or incubation with cultured cells. The liver was the major site of uptake of sphingomyelins and ceramides with 18:2 or 16:0 fatty acids, but with both sphingolipids a higher recovery of radioactivity was found with 16:0 species. The distribution of radioactivity among liver lipids showed that 1.5 h after injection of 18:2 sphingomyelin, only 21% of the label was found as sphingomyelin, and this value was 37% in the case of 16:0 sphingomyelin. There was a very marked difference in the metabolism of 18:2 and 16:0 ceramides. After injection of 18:2 ceramide only 14% of the radioactivity was recovered as sphingomyelin, and this value was more than 50% with 16:0 ceramide. [14C]18:2 ceramide was converted also to glucoceramide and hydrolyzed more extensively than 16:0 ceramide. These observations were extended to sphingomyelins and ceramides with other fatty acids, using Hep-G2 cells in culture. Significantly more radioactivity was recovered as labeled sphingomyelin after incubation with 16:0, 18:0, 20:0 and 24:0 sphingomyelins than with 18:1 and 18:2 sphingomyelins, while more labeled phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylethanolamine were found with the unsaturated sphingomyelins. In analogy to the findings in vivo, in the Hep-G2 cells more 16:0, 18:0 and 24:0 ceramides were converted to sphingomyelin than 18:1 or 18:2 ceramides. These differences were also seen with cultured macrophages, in which a more marked reutilization for sphingomyelin formation was found with the saturated ceramide series. The sphingomyelin liposomes were tested also for their capacity to mobilize cholesterol, and a rise in plasma unesterified cholesterol occurred after injection of 18:2 sphingomyelin. Marked enhancement of cholesterol efflux from cholesterol ester-loaded macrophages was also seen with 18:1 and 18:2, 20:0 sphingomyelin in the presence of delipidated high-density lipoprotein. The present results demonstrate that the metabolic fate of sphingolipids is related to their fatty acid composition. While ceramides with saturated fatty acids are predominantly reutilized for sphingomyelin formation, those with unsaturated fatty acids undergo probably more rapid hydrolysis with liberation of fatty acids and channeling into glycerolipids.  相似文献   

2.
It is known that ceramides can influence the lateral organization in biological membranes. In particular ceramides have been shown to alter the composition of cholesterol and sphingolipid enriched nanoscopic domains, by displacing cholesterol, and forming gel phase domains with sphingomyelin. Here we have investigated how the bilayer content of ceramides and their chain length influence sterol partitioning into the membranes. The effect of ceramides with saturated chains ranging from 4 to 24 carbons in length was investigated. In addition, unsaturated 18:1- and 24:1-ceramides were also examined. The sterol partitioning into bilayer membranes was studied by measuring the distribution of cholestatrienol, a fluorescent cholesterol analogue, between methyl-β-cyclodextrin and large unilamellar vesicle with defined lipid composition. Up to 15 mol% ceramide was added to bilayers composed of DOPC:PSM:cholesterol (3:1:1), and the effect on sterol partitioning was measured. Both at 23 and 37 °C addition of ceramide affected the sterol partitioning in a chain length dependent manner, so that the ceramides with intermediate chain lengths were the most effective in reducing sterol partitioning into the membranes. At 23 °C the 18:1-ceramide was not as effective at inhibiting sterol partitioning into the vesicles as its saturated equivalent, but at 37 °C the additional double bond had no effect. The longer 24:1-ceramide behaved as 24:0-ceramide at both temperatures. In conclusion, this work shows how the distribution of sterols within sphingomyelin-containing membranes is affected by the acyl chain composition in ceramides. The overall membrane partitioning measured in this study reflects the differential partitioning of sterol into ordered domains where ceramides compete with the sterol for association with sphingomyelin.  相似文献   

3.
Mitochondrial sphingolipids play a diverse role in normal cardiac function and diseases, yet a precise quantification of cardiac mitochondrial sphingolipids has never been performed. Therefore, rat heart interfibrillary mitochondria (IFM) and subsarcolemmal mitochondria (SSM) were isolated, lipids extracted, and sphingolipids quantified by LC-tandem mass spectrometry. Results showed that sphingomyelin (∼10,000 pmol/mg protein) was the predominant sphingolipid regardless of mitochondrial subpopulation, and measurable amounts of ceramide (∼70 pmol/mg protein) sphingosine, and sphinganine were also found in IFM and SSM. Both mitochondrial populations contained similar quantities of sphingolipids except for ceramide which was much higher in SSM. Analysis of sphingolipid isoforms revealed ten different sphingomyelins and six ceramides that differed from 16- to 24-carbon units in their acyl side chains. Sub-fractionation experiments further showed that sphingolipids are a constituent part of the inner mitochondrial membrane. Furthermore, inner membrane ceramide levels were 32% lower versus whole mitochondria (45 pmol/mg protein). Three ceramide isotypes (C20-, C22-, and C24-ceramide) accounted for the lower amounts. The concentrations of the ceramides present in the inner membranes of SSM and IFM differed greatly. Overall, mitochondrial sphingolipid content reflected levels seen in cardiac tissue, but the specific ceramide distribution distinguished IFM and SSM from each other.  相似文献   

4.
In yeast, the long-chain sphingoid base phosphate phosphohydrolase Lcb3p is required for efficient ceramide synthesis from exogenous sphingoid bases. Similarly, in this study, we found that incorporation of exogenous sphingosine into ceramide in mammalian cells was regulated by the homologue of Lcb3p, sphingosine-1-phosphate phosphohydrolase 1 (SPP-1), an endoplasmic reticulum resident protein. Sphingosine incorporation into endogenous long-chain ceramides was increased by SPP-1 overexpression, whereas recycling of C(6)-ceramide into long-chain ceramides was not altered. The increase in ceramide was inhibited by fumonisin B(1), an inhibitor of ceramide synthase, but not by ISP-1, an inhibitor of serine palmitoyltransferase, the rate-limiting step in the de novo biosynthesis of ceramide. Mass spectrometry analysis revealed that SPP-1 expression increased the incorporation of sphingosine into all ceramide acyl chain species, particularly enhancing C16:0, C18:0, and C20:0 long-chain ceramides. The increased recycling of sphingosine into ceramide was accompanied by increased hexosylceramides and, to a lesser extent, sphingomyelins. Sphingosine kinase 2, but not sphingosine kinase 1, acted in concert with SPP-1 to regulate recycling of sphingosine into ceramide. Collectively, our results suggest that an evolutionarily conserved cycle of phosphorylation-dephosphorylation regulates recycling and salvage of sphingosine to ceramide and more complex sphingolipids.  相似文献   

5.
We harvested canalicular-enriched plasma membranes of hepatocytes and collected fistula bile from male rats and isolated the sphingomyelins. Following sphingomyelinase hydrolysis, we identified the sphingomyelin molecular species on the basis of their benzoylated ceramide derivatives employing high performance liquid chromatography. Sphingomyelin constitutes ≤3% of total biliary phospholipids (which are mostly sn-1 16:0 long-chain phosphatidylcholines) and approximately 30% of canalicular-enriched membranes. In both cases, the principal molecular species were composed of 16:0, 18:0, 20:0, 22:0, 23:0, 24:0, 24:1 and 24:2 fatty acid classes. However, the 16:0 fatty acid species was enriched in biliary sphingomyelin to a significantly greater degree than in sphingomyelins of canalicular-enriched plasma membranes (46% vs. 25% of total). We argue a physical-chemical case for laterally separated domains of very long chain sphingomyelins on the exoplasmic leaflet of the canalicular membrane. We bolster our hypothesis by the likelihood that the least hydrophobic, e.g., 16:0 sphingomyelin molecular species, are miscible with biliary phosphatidylcholines, and are secreted into bile. Laterally separated domains of very long chain sphingomyelins on the exoplasmic leaflet of the canalicular membrane could provide a means of sequestering cholesterol molecules prior to secretion into bile. Received: 19 March 1998/Revised: 8 October 1998  相似文献   

6.
Ceramides, the simplest kind of two-chained sphingolipids, contain a single hydroxyl group in position 1 of the sphingoid base. Sphingomyelins further contain a phosphocholine group at the OH of position 1 of ceramide. Ceramides and sphingomyelins show a variety of species depending on the fatty acyl chain length, hydroxylation, and unsaturation. Because of the relatively high transition temperature of sphingomyelin compared to lecithin and, particularly, of ceramides with 16:0–18:0 saturated chains, a widespread idea on their functional importance refers to formation of rather solid domains enriched in sphingomyelin and ceramide. Frequently, and especially in the cell biology field, these are generally (and erroneously) assumed to occur irrespective on the type of N-acyl chain in these lipids. This is because most studies indicating such condensed ordered domains employed sphingolipids with acyl chains with 16 carbons while scarce attention has been focused on the influence of the N-acyl chain on their surface properties. However, abundant evidence has shown that variations of the N-acyl chain length in ceramides and sphingomyelins markedly affect their phase state, interfacial elasticity, surface topography, electrostatics and miscibility and that, even the usually conceived “condensed” sphingolipids and many of their mixtures, may exhibit liquid-like expanded states. This review is a summarized overview of our work and of related others on some facts regarding membranes composed of single molecular species of ceramide and sphingomyelin. A second part is dedicated to discuss the miscibility properties between species of sphingolipids that differ in N-acyl and oligosaccharide chains.  相似文献   

7.
Biosynthesis of sphingomyelin from ceramides was investigated in lung subcellular fractions by incubating a lyophilized mixture of albumin and subcellular fraction (0.1-0.2 mg of protein) coated with [acyl-14C]-ceramide and phosphatidyl[methyl-3H]choline in Tris-buffer. The lamellar-body-rich fraction exhibited the highest specific activity for sphingomyelin biosynthesis measured by 14C incorporation into sphingomyelins or by [3H]phosphocholine transfer from phosphatidylcholines. Plasma membranes formed the next most active fraction, followed by the 'smooth' and, then, the 'rough' endoplasmic reticulum. Sphingomyelin biosynthesis by lamellar bodies was optimum at pH 7.4 and was inhibited by sphingomyelins formed. Slight inhibitory effects were also observed with Mn2+, Ca2+ and lysophosphatidylcholine. Phosphocholine transfer from CDPcholine was not observed under the reaction conditions employed. Ceramide conversion and phosphocholine transfer increased with ceramide concentration to reach a maximum at about 0.06 mM. The highest conversion rate was observed when 18:1 ceramide was used as an acceptor. When 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoylphosphatidylcholine was the phosphocholine donor, the overall biosynthesis of sphingomyelin was much higher than when using dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine. These results suggest the possible involvement of the studied reaction in the control of the degree of saturation of the surfactant phosphatidylcholine.  相似文献   

8.
Ceramide produced at the endoplasmic reticulum is transported to the Golgi apparatus for conversion to sphingomyelin. The main pathway of endoplasmic reticulum-to-Golgi transport of ceramide is mediated by CERT, a cytosolic 68-kDa protein, in a nonvesicular manner. CERT contains a domain that catalyzes the intermembrane transfer of natural C(16)-ceramide. In this study, we examined the ligand specificity of CERT in detail by using a cell-free assay system for intermembrane transfer of lipids. CERT did not mediate the transfer of sphingosine or sphingomyelin at all. The activity of CERT to transfer saturated and unsaturated diacylglycerols, which structurally resemble ceramide, was 5-10% of the activity toward C(16)-ceramide. Among four stereoisomers of C(16)-ceramide, CERT specifically recognized the natural d-erythro isomer. CERT efficiently transferred ceramides having C(14), C(16), C(18), and C(20) chains, but not longer acyl chains, and also mediated efficient transfer of C(16)-dihydroceramide and C(16)-phyto-ceramide. Binding assays showed that CERT also recognizes short chain fluorescent analogs of ceramide with a stoichiometry of 1:1. Moreover, (1R,3R)-N-(3-hydroxy-1-hydroxymethyl-3-phenylpropyl)dodecamide, which inhibited the CERT-dependent pathway of ceramide trafficking in intact cells, was found to be an antagonist of the CERT protein. These results indicate that CERT can mediate transfer of various types of ceramides that naturally exist and their close relatives.  相似文献   

9.
Ceramide stimulates a cytosolic protein phosphatase.   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11  
A sphingomyelin cycle has been identified whereby the action of certain extracellular agents results in reversible sphingomyelin hydrolysis and the concomitant generation of ceramide. Moreover, a cell-permeable ceramide, C2-ceramide (N-acetylsphingosine), is a potent modulator of cell proliferation and differentiation. We report herein that C2-ceramide, C6-ceramide, and natural ceramides activate a cytosolic serine/threonine protein phosphatase in a dose-dependent manner. Initial activation is observed at concentrations of ceramide as low as 0.1 microM with peak response occurring at 5-10 microM. However, other closely related sphingolipids, sphingosine and sphingomyelin, were largely inactive. Ceramide-stimulated phosphatase was inhibited by okadaic acid, an inhibitor of protein phosphatases, with an IC50 of 0.1-1 nM, depending on the concentration of ceramide. Ceramide-stimulated phosphatase was insensitive to Mg2+ and Mn2+ cations. Using sequential anion exchange chromatography, ceramide-stimulated phosphatase activity could be resolved from ceramide-nonresponsive phosphatases. The activity of partially purified enzyme was stimulated 3.5-fold by ceramide. The identification of a phosphatase as a molecular target for the action of ceramide defines a novel intracellular signaling pathway with potential roles in the regulation of cell proliferation and differentiation.  相似文献   

10.
Ceramide is a key intermediate in the pathway of sphingolipid biosynthesis and is an important intracellular messenger. We recently generated a ceramide synthase 2 (CerS2) null mouse that cannot synthesize very long acyl chain (C22-C24) ceramides. This mouse displays severe and progressive hepatopathy. Significant changes were observed in the sphingolipid profile of CerS2 null mouse liver, including elevated C16-ceramide and sphinganine levels in liver and in isolated mitochondrial fractions. Because ceramide may be involved in reactive oxygen species (ROS) formation, we examined whether ROS generation was affected in CerS2 null mice. Levels of a number of anti-oxidant enzymes were elevated, as were lipid peroxidation, protein nitrosylation, and ROS. ROS were generated from mitochondria due to impaired complex IV activity. C16-ceramide, sphingosine, and sphinganine directly inhibited complex IV activity in isolated mitochondria and in mitoplasts, whereas other ceramide species, sphingomyelin, and diacylglycerol were without effect. A fluorescent analog of sphinganine accumulated in mitochondria. Heart mitochondria did not display a substantial alteration in the sphingolipid profile or in complex IV activity. We suggest that C16-ceramide and/or sphinganine induce ROS formation through the modulation of mitochondrial complex IV activity, resulting in chronic oxidative stress. These results are of relevance for understanding modulation of ROS signaling by sphingolipids.  相似文献   

11.
In this study, we describe an ordered formation of long- and very long-chain ceramide species in relation to the progression of B-cell receptor (BcR) triggering induced apoptosis. An early and caspase-independent increase in long-chain ceramide species, in which C(16)- ceramide predominated, was observed 6 h after BcR triggering. In contrast, very long-chain ceramide species were generated later, 12-24 h after BcR triggering. The formation of these very long-chain ceramide species, in which C(24)-ceramide predominated, required the activation of effector caspases. BcR-induced formation of long-chain ceramide species resulted in proteasomal activation and degradation of XIAP and subsequent activation of effector caspases, demonstrating an important cell-biological mechanism through which long-chain ceramides may be involved in the progression of BcR triggering induced apoptosis and subsequent formation of very long-chain ceramide species. BcR-induced activation of the proteasome was blocked with ISP-1/myriocin, a potent and selective inhibitor of serine palmitoyl transferase that catalyzes the first and rate-limiting step in the de novo formation of ceramide. Both ISP-1 and clasto-lactacystin beta-lactone, an irreversible inhibitor of the proteasome, prevented BcR cross-linking-induced XIAP degradation. Also, a mutant XIAP lacking the ubiquitin-ligating ring finger motif was completely resistant to proteasome-mediated degradation, and Ramos cells overexpressing XIAP became highly resistant to BcR cross-linking-induced activation of caspases. The formation of C(16)-ceramide in response to BcR cross-linking was found unaltered in XIAP overexpressing Ramos cells, whereas C(24)-ceramide formation was completely abolished. These results demonstrate how de novo generated long-chain ceramide species may be involved in the activation of downstream effector caspases and subsequent formation of very long-chain ceramide species. As such, these results provide novel and important insights into the significance of specific ceramide species in defined stages of apoptosis.  相似文献   

12.
Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is a serious comorbidity in nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). Since plasma ceramides are increased in NAFLD and sphingomyelin, a ceramide metabolite, is an independent risk factor for CVD, the role of ceramides in dyslipidemia was assessed using LDLR-/- mice, a diet-induced model of NAFLD and atherosclerosis. Mice were fed a standard or Western diet (WD), with or without myriocin, an inhibitor of ceramide synthesis. Hepatic and plasma ceramides were profiled and lipid and lipoprotein kinetics were quantified. Hepatic and intestinal expression of genes and proteins involved in insulin, lipid and lipoprotein metabolism were also determined. WD caused hepatic oxidative stress, inflammation, apoptosis, increased hepatic long-chain ceramides associated with apoptosis (C16 and C18) and decreased very-long-chain ceramide C24 involved in insulin signaling. The plasma ratio of ApoB/ApoA1 (proteins of VLDL/LDL and HDL) was increased 2-fold due to increased ApoB production. Myriocin reduced hepatic and plasma ceramides and sphingomyelin, and decreased atherosclerosis, hepatic steatosis, fibrosis, and apoptosis without any effect on oxidative stress. These changes were associated with decreased lipogenesis, ApoB production and increased HDL turnover. Thus, modulation of ceramide synthesis may lead to the development of novel strategies for the treatment of both NAFLD and its associated atherosclerosis.  相似文献   

13.
A rather widespread idea on the functional importance of sphingolipids in cell membranes refers to the occurrence of ordered domains enriched in sphingomyelin and ceramide that are largely assumed to exist irrespective of the type of N-acyl chain in the sphingolipid. Ceramides and sphingomyelins are the simplest kind of two-chained sphingolipids and show a variety of species, depending on the fatty acyl chain length, hydroxylation, and unsaturation. Abundant evidences have shown that variations of the N-acyl chain length in ceramides and sphingomyelins markedly affect their phase state, interfacial elasticity, surface topography, electrostatics, and miscibility, and that even the usually conceived “condensed” sphingolipids and many of their mixtures may exhibit liquid-like expanded states. Their lateral miscibility properties are subtlety regulated by those chemical differences. Even between ceramides with different acyl chain length, their partial miscibility is responsible for a rich two-dimensional structural variety that impacts on the membrane properties at the mesoscale level. In this review, we will discuss the miscibility properties of ceramide, sphingomyelin, and glycosphingolipids that differ in their N-acyl or oligosaccharide chains. This work is a second part that accompanies a previous overview of the properties of membranes formed by pure ceramides or sphingomyelins, which is also included in this Special Issue.  相似文献   

14.
Sphingolipids are multifunctional lipids and a major constituent of the cell membranes of eukaryotes. Although the fatty acid (FA) moiety of sphingolipids is usually a saturated or monounsaturated FA, polyunsaturated FA (PUFA)-containing species also exist in mammalian tissues. In the present study, we showed that C24:2 PUFA-containing ceramide is one of the seven major ceramide species in a wide range of tissues. C24:2 ceramide levels were especially high in spleen and small intestine; in the former, it was the fourth most abundant ceramide species. However, both the synthetic pathway and the physiological function of C24:2 ceramide had yet to be identified. Tracer analysis using deuterium-labeled linoleic acid (C18:2) revealed that C24:2 ceramide is produced via elongation of linoleic acid. We also found that the FA elongase ELOVL1 and the ceramide synthase CERS2 were involved in C24:2 ceramide production. Sphingolipids are known to form lipid microdomains in membranes; however, in a detergent-resistant membrane (DRM) assay, we observed a lower proportion of C24:2 sphingomyelin in the DRM fraction than of saturated sphingomyelins, suggesting that C24:2 sphingolipids may act to negatively regulate lipid microdomain formation. Our findings expand our knowledge of sphingolipid diversity, and provide insight into how different sphingolipid molecular species play different functions in biological membranes.  相似文献   

15.

Background

The development of plasma biomarkers could facilitate early detection, risk assessment and therapeutic monitoring in Alzheimer''s disease (AD). Alterations in ceramides and sphingomyelins have been postulated to play a role in amyloidogensis and inflammatory stress related neuronal apoptosis; however few studies have conducted a comprehensive analysis of the sphingolipidome in AD plasma using analytical platforms with accuracy, sensitivity and reproducibility.

Methods and Findings

We prospectively analyzed plasma from 26 AD patients (mean MMSE 21) and 26 cognitively normal controls in a non-targeted approach using multi-dimensional mass spectrometry-based shotgun lipidomics [1], [2] to determine the levels of over 800 molecular species of lipids. These data were then correlated with diagnosis, apolipoprotein E4 genotype and cognitive performance. Plasma levels of species of sphingolipids were significantly altered in AD. Of the 33 sphingomyelin species tested, 8 molecular species, particularly those containing long aliphatic chains such as 22 and 24 carbon atoms, were significantly lower (p<0.05) in AD compared to controls. Levels of 2 ceramide species (N16:0 and N21:0) were significantly higher in AD (p<0.05) with a similar, but weaker, trend for 5 other species. Ratios of ceramide to sphingomyelin species containing identical fatty acyl chains differed significantly between AD patients and controls. MMSE scores were correlated with altered mass levels of both N20:2 SM and OH-N25:0 ceramides (p<0.004) though lipid abnormalities were observed in mild and moderate AD. Within AD subjects, there were also genotype specific differences.

Conclusions

In this prospective study, we used a sensitive multimodality platform to identify and characterize an essentially uniform but opposite pattern of disruption in sphingomyelin and ceramide mass levels in AD plasma. Given the role of brain sphingolipids in neuronal function, our findings provide new insights into the AD sphingolipidome and the potential use of metabolomic signatures as peripheral biomarkers.  相似文献   

16.
We previously performed a systematic analysis of free ceramide (Cers) species, the constituent ceramide species of sphingomyelins and neutral glycosphingolipids (NGSLs) using matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry with high-energy collision-induced dissociation. As a result, distinct species differences were found among Cers, sphingomyelins and NGSLs in the kidneys. Using this method, we investigated various sphingolipid species from human colon cancer Caco-2 cells as well as the influence of environmental oxygen on these species in detail. Unexpectedly, even in normoxia, all Cers species were composed of dihydrosphingosine (d18:0) and non-hydroxy fatty acid (NFA), and 34 % of sphingomyelins were composed of dihydrosphingomyelins with NFA. In contrast, major constituent ceramide species of NGSLs were composed of the usual long-chain base of sphingosine (d18:1) and hydroxy fatty acid (HFA). When the cells were cultured under hypoxic condition for 3 days, all the Cers and nearly 80 % of the sphingomyelins were dihydrosphingolipids composed of d18:0-NFAs, but a significant proportion of d18:1-HFAs still remained in the NGSLs. When the cells were transferred from conditions of hypoxia to normoxia again (reoxygenation), Cer species composed of d18:1-NFAs, which were not found in Cers under the original normoxic conditions, appeared. Such Cers were probably synthesized as precursors for the constituent ceramides of sphingomyelins and NGSLs.  相似文献   

17.
Ceramides are essential lipids for skin permeability barrier function, and a wide variety of ceramide species exist in the stratum corneum (SC). Although ceramides with long-chain bases (LCBs) of various lengths have been identified in the human SC, a quantitative analysis that distinguishes ceramide species with different LCB chain lengths has not been yet published. Therefore, the whole picture of human SC ceramides remains unclear. Here, we conducted LC/MS/MS analyses to detect individual ceramide species differing in both the LCB and FA chain lengths and quantified 1,327 unbound ceramides and 254 protein-bound ceramides: the largest number of ceramide species reported to date. Ceramides containing an LCB whose chain length was C16–26 were present in the human SC. Of these, C18 (28.6%) was the most abundant, followed by C20 (24.8%) and C22 (12.8%). Each ceramide class had a characteristic distribution of LCB chain lengths and was divided into five groups according to this distribution. There was almost no difference in FA composition between the ceramide species containing LCBs of different chain lengths. Furthermore, we demonstrated that one of the serine palmitoyltransferase (SPT) complexes, SPTLC1/SPTLC3/SPTSSB, was able to produce C16–24 LCBs. The expression levels of all subunits constituting the SPT complexes increased during keratinocyte differentiation, resulting in the observed chain-length diversity of LCBs in the human SC. This study provides a molecular basis for elucidating human SC ceramide diversity and the pathogenesis of skin disorders.  相似文献   

18.
A lipid factor previously isolated from leukocytes and found to stimulate basophilic erythroblast formation in an in vitro system of incubated rabbit bone marrow cells has been analyzed by thin-layer chromatography, gas-liquid chromatography, and gas-liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry. The biologically active components are sphingosine ceramides of tetracosanoic and dehydrotetracosanoic acids. Tests of a series of related ceramides show a high degree of structural specificity for the C(24)-V-acyl compounds with significant but markedly lower activity of the C(22) analog. Commercially available sphingomyelin shows activity comparable to that of the tetracosanoic acid ceramide. Sphingosine and tetracosanic acid supplied in equimolar amounts have negligible activity. The results, in the context of other findings, suggest a possible supportive role of plasma ceramides and sphingomyelins in red cell maturation.  相似文献   

19.
Folic acid-fortified foods and multi-vitamin supplements containing folic acid (FA) are widely used around the world, but the exact mechanisms/metabolic effects of FA are not precisely identified. We have demonstrated that Ceramide Synthase 6 (CerS6) and C16:0-ceramide mediate response to folate stress in cultured cells. Here we investigated the dietary FA effects on mouse liver metabolome, with a specific focus on sphingolipids, CerS6 and C16:0-ceramide.Wild-type and CerS6−/− mice were fed FA-deficient, control, or FA over-supplemented diets for 4 weeks. After dietary treatment, liver concentrations of ceramides, sphingomyelins and hexosylceramides were measured by LC-MS/MS and complemented by untargeted metabolomic characterization of mouse livers.Our study shows that alterations in dietary FA elicit multiple sphingolipid responses mediated by CerS6 in mouse livers. Folic acid-deficient diet elevated C14:0-, C18:0- and C20:0- but not C16:0-ceramide in WT male and female mice. Additionally, FA over-supplementation increased multiple sphingomyelin species, including total sphingomyelins, in both sexes. Of note, concentrations of C14:0- and C16:0-ceramides and hexosylceramides were significantly higher in female livers than in male. The latter were increased by FD diet, with no difference between sexes in total pools of these sphingolipid classes. Untargeted liver metabolomic analysis concurred with the targeted measurements and showed broad effects of dietary FA and CerS6 status on multiple lipid classes including sex-specific effects on phosphatidylethanolamines and diacylglycerols.Our study demonstrates that both dietary FA and CerS6 status exhibit pleiotropic and sex-dependent effects on liver metabolism, including hepatic sphingolipids, diacylglycerols, long chain fatty acids, and phospholipids.  相似文献   

20.
The mixing behavior of dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) with either N-palmitoyl-sphingosine (C16:0-ceramide) or N-nervonoyl-sphingosine (C24:1-ceramide) was examined using monomolecular films. While DMPC forms highly elastic liquid-expanded monolayers, both neat C16:0-ceramide and C24:1-ceramide yield stable solid condensed monomolecular films with small areas and low interfacial elasticity. Compression isotherms of mixed C16:0-ceramide/DMPC films exhibit an apparent condensation upon increasing X(cer16:0) at all surface pressures. The average area isobars, coupled with the lack of a liquid-expanded to condensed phase transition as X(cer16:0) is increased, are indicative of immiscibility of the lipids at all surface pressures. In contrast, isobars for C24:1-ceramide/DMPC mixtures show surface pressure-dependent apparent condensation or expansion and surface pressure-area isotherms show a composition and surface pressure-dependent phase transition. This suggests miscibility, albeit non-ideal, of C24:1-ceramide and DMPC in both liquid and condensed surface phases. The above could be verified by fluorescence microscopy of the monolayers and measurements of surface potential, which revealed distinctly different domain morphologies and surface potential values for the DMPC/C16:0- and DMPC/C24:1-ceramide monolayers. Taken together, whereas C16:0-ceramide and DMPC form immiscible pseudo-compounds, C24:1-ceramide and DMPC are partially miscible in both the liquid-expanded and condensed phases, and a composition and lateral pressure-dependent two-phase region is evident between the liquid-expanded and condensed regimes. Our results provide novel understanding of the regulation of membrane properties by ceramides and raise the possibility that ceramides with different acyl groups could serve very different functions in cells, relating to their different physicochemical properties.  相似文献   

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