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1.
Lysosomal phospholipase A2 (LPLA2) is characterized by increased activity toward zwitterionic phospholipid liposomes containing negatively charged lipids under acidic conditions. The effect of anionic lipids on LPLA2 activity was investigated. Mouse LPLA2 activity was assayed as C2-ceramide transacylation. Sulfatide incorporated into liposomes enhanced LPLA2 activity under acidic conditions and was weakened by NaCl or increased pH. Amiodarone, a cationic amphiphilic drug, reduced LPLA2 activity. LPLA2 exhibited esterase activity when p-nitro-phenylbutyrate (pNPB) was used as a substrate. Unlike the phospholipase A2 activity, the esterase activity was detected over wide pH range and not inhibited by NaCl or amiodarone. Presteady-state kinetics using pNPB were consistent with the formation of an acyl-enzyme intermediate. C2-ceramide was an acceptor for the acyl group of the acyl-enzyme but was not available as the acyl group acceptor when dispersed in liposomes containing amiodarone. Cosedimentation of LPLA2 with liposomes was enhanced in the presence of sulfatide and was reduced by raising NaCl, amiodarone, or pH in the reaction mixture. LPLA2 adsorption to negatively charged lipid membrane surfaces through an electrostatic attraction, therefore, enhances LPLA2 enzyme activity toward insoluble substrates. Thus, anionic lipids present within lipid membranes enhance the rate of phospholipid hydrolysis by LPLA2 at lipid-water interfaces.—Abe, A., and J. A. Shayman. The role of negatively charged lipids in lysosomal phospholipase A2 function.  相似文献   

2.
3.
Side-chain oxysterols produced from cholesterol either enzymatically or non-enzymatically show various bioactivities. Lecithin-cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT) esterifies the C3-hydroxyl group of these sterols as well as cholesterol. Lysosomal phospholipase A2 (LPLA2) is related to LCAT but does not catalyze esterification of cholesterol. First, esterification of side-chain oxysterols by LPLA2 was investigated using recombinant mouse LPLA2 and dioleoyl-PC/sulfatide/oxysterol liposomes under acidic conditions. TLC and LC-MS/MS showed that the C3 and C27-hydroxyl groups of 27-hydroxycholesterol could be individually esterified by LPLA2 to form a monoester with the C27-hydroxyl preference. Cholesterol did not inhibit this reaction. Also, LPLA2 esterified other side-chain oxysterols. Their esterifications by mouse serum containing LCAT supported the idea that their esterifications by LPLA2 occur at the C3-hydroxyl group. N-acetylsphingosine (NAS) acting as an acyl acceptor in LPLA2 transacylation inhibited the side-chain oxysterol esterification by LPLA2. This suggests a competition between hydroxycholesterol and NAS on the acyl-LPLA2 intermediate formed during the reaction. Raising cationic amphiphilic drug concentration or ionic strength in the reaction mixture evoked a reduction of the side-chain oxysterol esterification by LPLA2. This indicates that the esterification could progress via an interfacial interaction of LPLA2 with the lipid membrane surface through an electrostatic interaction. The docking model of acyl-LPLA2 intermediate and side-chain oxysterol provided new insight to elucidate the transacylation mechanism of sterols by LPLA2. Finally, exogenous 25-hydroxycholesterol esterification within alveolar macrophages prepared from wild-type mice was significantly higher than that from LPLA2 deficient mice. This suggests that there is an esterification pathway of side-chain oxysterols via LPLA2.  相似文献   

4.
Lysosomal phospholipase A(2) (Lpla2) is highly expressed in alveolar macrophages and may mediate the phospholipid metabolism of surfactant. Studies on the properties of this phospholipase are consistent with the presence of both phospholipase A(1) and phospholipase A(2) activities. These activities were studied through the production of O-acyl compounds, produced by the transacylase activity of Lpla2. Liposomes containing POPC and N-acetylsphingosine (NAS) were incubated with the soluble fraction obtained from MDCK cells stably transfected with the mouse Lpla2 gene. Two 1-O-acyl-NASs, 1-O-palmitoyl-NAS and 1-O-oleoyl-NAS, were produced by Lpla2. The formation rate of 1-O-oleoyl-NAS was 2.5-fold that of 1-O-palmitoyl-NAS. When 1-oleoyl-2-palmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (OPPC) was used, the formation rate of 1-O-oleoyl-NAS was 5-fold higher than that of 1-O-palmitoyl-NAS. Thus, Lpla2 can act on acyl groups at both sn-1 and sn-2 positions of POPC and OPPC. When 1-palmitoyl-2-unsaturated acyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholines were used as acyl donors, the transacylation of the acyl group from the sn-2 position to NAS was preferred to that of the palmitoyl group from the sn-1 position. An exception was observed for 1-palmitoyl-2-arachidonoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (PAPC), for which the formation rate of 1-O-palmitoyl-NAS from PAPC was 4-fold greater than that of 1-O-arachidonoyl-NAS. Thus, Lpla2 has broad positional specificity for the sn-1 and sn-2 acyl groups in phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylethanolamine.  相似文献   

5.
A deficiency of lysosomal phospholipase A2 (LPLA2) causes macrophage-associated phospholipidosis, suggesting that the enzyme is important in the lipid catabolism. Because LPLA2 is secreted by macrophages, extracellular LPLA2 activity may potentially reflect a change in macrophage activation. In this report, the detection of LPLA2 activity in plasma was established by the measurement of the transacylase activity of LPLA2 under acidic conditions. No transacylase activity of LPLA2 was detected in normal human plasma when the plasma was incubated with liposomes consisting of 1,2-dioleoylphosphatidylcholine/sulfatide/N-acetylsphingosine (NAS) at pH 4.5. However, the transacylase activity in the plasma was detected when liposomes consisting of 1,2-dioleoylphosphatidylglycerol/NAS were used as a substrate. To establish the specificity of the assay, ceramide transacylase activity was detected in the plasma of wild-type mice. By contrast, the plasma obtained from LPLA2-knockout mice had no measurable transacylase activity under the same conditions. The enzymatic activity of recombinant LPLA2 was inhibited by treatment with methylarachidonylfluorophosphonate. The inhibitor also suppressed the transacylase activity observed in both normal human and wild-type mouse plasma, establishing that the transacylase activity observed in plasma is due to LPLA2. Plasma LPLA2 activity may be a useful bioassay marker for the identification of LPLA2-related disorders.  相似文献   

6.
7.
To investigate the role of sphingomyelin (SM) in the regulation of inflammatory reactions, we studied its effect on the activity and fatty acid specificity of group X secretory phospholipase A(2) (sPLA(2)X). Compared with other phospholipases, recombinant sPLA(2)X released more arachidonate from HDL. Pretreatment of HDL with sphingomyelinase (SMase) C activated the sPLA(2)X activity, but the release of arachidonate was stimulated less than that of linoleate. In liposomes containing synthetic phosphatidylcholines (PCs), sPLA(2)X showed no clear selectivity among the various sn-2 unsaturated fatty acids. However, when SM was incorporated into liposomes at 30 mol%, the enzyme exhibited strong preference for arachidonate, although its overall activity was inhibited. Degradation of liposomal SM by SMase C resulted in sPLA(2)X activation and loss of its arachidonate preference. Incorporation of ceramide into HDL or PC liposomes activated the enzyme activity, the release of arachidonate being stimulated more than that of linoleate. SM-deficient cells released more arachidonate than normal cells in response to exogenous sPLA(2)X. SMase pretreatment of normal cells stimulated the release of arachidonate by the exogenous sPLA(2)X. These results show that SM not only inhibits sPLA(2)X activity but also contributes to its selectivity for arachidonate, whereas ceramide stimulates the hydrolysis of arachidonate-containing PCs.  相似文献   

8.
9.
It was reported that subcellular fractionation of bovine adrenal medulla results in the separation of distinct, non-calcium-dependent phospholipases A2--one associated with chromaffin granule ghosts, another with lysosomes. The basis of this distinction is pH optimum: in routine assays utilizing neat liposomal substrates, the chromaffin granule ghost-associated enzyme is alkaline-active whereas the lysosomal enzyme is acid-active (Husebye, E.S. and Flatmark, T. (1987) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 920, 120-130). We now report that biomembranes after liposomal substrates and/or lysosomal phospholipase A2 such that the enzyme now hydrolyzes them (at low cation concentration) with an alkaline pH optimum. In a lysosomal membrane fraction, phospholipase A2 activity at pH 7.5 relative to activity at pH 5.0 increases as increasing amounts of lysosomal membranes are assayed. The pH optimum of chromaffin granule ghost-associated phospholipase A2 toward liposomal substrates is likewise biomembrane-dependent and, when assayed carefully, is indistinguishable on the basis of optimal pH from the lysosomal enzyme. Although chromaffin granule ghost-associated phospholipase A2 is most likely a lysosomal contaminant, its broad, biomembrane-modulated pH range may still allow it to participate in catecholamine secretion. More importantly, however, sensitivity of adrenal medullary lysosomal phospholipase A2 to biomembranes broadens its potential physiologic pH range and may also play a role in the regulation of this potentially deleterious activity.  相似文献   

10.
Lysosomal acid phospholipase A1, as well as other lysosomal enzymes, may be released under pathophysiological conditions into extralysosomal compartments. As shown here, several unspecific mechanisms exist which inhibit the hydrolysis of membrane diacylphospholipids by lysosomal acid phospholipase A1 and hence prevent an uncontrolled membrane destruction. These findings were obtained by employing partially purified rat liver lysosomal acid phospholipase A1 and sonicated radioactively labeled phosphatidylethanolamine or phosphatidylcholine as substrate. The inhibitory principles found include (1) pH, (2) inorganic cations, and (3) various proteins. Inorganic cations and proteins, however, inhibited lysosomal acid phospholipase A1 activity only below pH 6.0, and inhibition never exceeded 96%. Of the inorganic cations studied, the divalent species, as compared to the monovalent one, impaired lysosomal acid phospholipase A1 activity at significantly lower concentrations. Virtually all of the intracellular and extracellular proteins studied inhibited the enzyme activity, but the inhibitory potencies of the different proteins varied considerably. In general, basic and hydrophobic proteins were the most potent inhibitors, whereas glycoproteins appeared to be less inhibitory. The degree of inhibition of the enzyme activity in both proteins and inorganic cations depended on the substrate concentration and not on that of the enzyme. Binding studies provided evidence for inhibitor-substrate and against inhibitor-enzyme interactions.  相似文献   

11.
A series of inhibitors of glucosylceramide synthesis, the PDMP based family of compounds, has been developed as a tool for the study of sphingolipid biochemistry and biology. During the course of developing more active glucosylceramide synthase inhibitors, we identified a second site of inhibitory activity for PDMP and its structural homologues that accounted for the ability of the inhibitors to raise cell and tissue ceramide levels. This inhibitory activity was directed against a previously unknown pathway for ceramide metabolism, viz. the formation of 1-O-acylceramide. In this pathway the addition of a fatty acyl group to the primary hydroxyl of ceramide occurs through a transacylation with either phosphatidylethanolamine or phosphatidylcholine as a substrate. However, both in the absence and presence of ceramide, water serves as an acceptor for the fatty acid. Thus the enzyme may be considered to be a phospholipase A2. The enzyme is unique in that it has an acidic pH optimum and is localized to lysosomes by cell fractionation. More recently, the 1-O-acylceramide synthase has been purified, sequenced, and cloned. This phospholipase A2 was discovered to be structurally homologous to lecithin cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT). However, this phospholipase A2 does not recognize cholesterol and lacks the defined lipoprotein-binding domain present in LCAT. We now refer to this enzyme as lysosomal phospholipase A2 (LPLA2). Although acidic phospholipase A2 activities have been previously identified, LPLA2 appears to be the first lysosomal PLA2 to have been sequenced. This new phospholipase A2 lacks an obvious and proven biological function. Published in 2004. This revised version was published online in August 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

12.
In this study, we investigated the mechanism of PLA(2)-induced lysosomal destabilization. Through the measurements of lysosomal beta-hexosaminidase free activity, their membrane potential, the intra-lysosomal pH and the lysosomal latency loss in hypotonic sucrose medium, we established that PLA(2) could increase the lysosomal membrane permeability to both potassium ions and protons. The enzyme could also enhance the organelle osmotic sensitivity. The increases in the lysosomal ion permeability promoted influx of potassium ions into the lysosomes via K(+)/H(+) exchange. The resulted osmotic imbalance across the lysosomal membranes osmotically destabilized the lysosomes. In addition, the enhancement of the lysosomal osmotic sensitivity caused the lysosomes to become more liable to destabilization in the osmotic stress. The results explain how PLA(2) destabilized the lysosomes.  相似文献   

13.
Pathophysiological conditions may lead to a release of lysosomal acid phospholipase A1 like that of other lysosomal enzymes into the blood stream. As shown here, various serum protein fractions, obtained by dye-ligand affinity chromatography, inhibit phosphoglyceride hydrolysis by lysosomal acid phospholipase A1 in vitro. Their inhibitory potencies vary considerably, and the degree of inhibition depends on the substrate concentration. A delayed phospholipid flotation rate in sucrose gradients in the presence of one of the more potent inhibitory serum proteins, serum albumin, suggests that the inhibition is due to inhibitor-substrate interactions. Although lysosomal phospholipase A1 activity at blood pH is extremely low, serum proteins may contribute to protect biomembranes which are exposed to the vascular lumen against uncontrolled destruction by this enzyme.  相似文献   

14.
Phospholipase A has been isolated from a crude lysosomal fraction from rat kidney cortex and purified 7600-fold with a recovery of 9.8% of the starting activity. The purified enzyme is a glycoprotein having an isoelectric point of pH 5.4 and an apparent molecular weight of 30,000 by high-pressure liquid chromatography gel permeation. Naturally occurring inhibitors of lysosomal phospholipase A are present in two of the lysosomal-soluble protein fractions obtained in the purification. They inhibit hydrolysis of 1,2-di[1-14C]oleoylphosphatidylcholine by purified phospholipase A1 with IC50 values of 7-11 micrograms. The inhibition is abolished by preincubation with trypsin at 37 degrees C, but preincubation with trypsin at 4 degrees C has no effect, providing evidence that the inhibitors are proteins. The results suggest that the activity of lysosomal phospholipase A may be regulated in part by inhibitory proteins. Lysosomal phospholipase A from rat kidney hydrolyzes the sn-1 acyl group of phosphatidylcholine, does not require divalent cations for full activity, and is not inhibited by ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid. It has an acid pH optimum of 3.6-3.8. Neither p-bromophenacyl bromide, diisopropyl fluorophosphate, nor mercuric ion inhibits phospholipase A1. In contrast to rat liver, which has two major isoenzymes of acid phospholipase A1, kidney cortex has only one isoenzyme of lysosomal phospholipase A1.  相似文献   

15.
The susceptibility of partially peroxidized liposomes of 2-[1-14C] linoleoylphosphatidylethanolamine ([14C]PE) to hydrolysis by cellular phospholipases was examined. [14C]PE was peroxidized by exposure to air at 37 degrees C, resulting in the formation of more polar derivatives, as determined by thin-layer chromatographic analysis. Hydrolysis of these partially peroxidized liposomes by lysosomal phospholipase C associated with cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum, and by rat liver lysosomal phospholipase C, was greater than hydrolysis of non-peroxidized liposomes. By contrast, hydrolysis of liposomes by purified human synovial fluid phospholipase A2 or bacterial phospholipase C was almost completely inhibited by partial peroxidation of PE. Lysosomal phospholipase C preferentially hydrolyzed the peroxidized component of the lipid substrate which had accumulated during autoxidation. The major product recovered under these conditions was 2-monoacylglycerol, indicating sequential degradation by phospholipase C and diacylglycerol lipase. Liposomes peroxidized at pH 7.0 were more susceptible to hydrolysis by lysosomal phospholipases C than were liposomes peroxidized at pH 5.0, in spite of greater production of polar lipid after peroxidation at pH 5.0. Sodium bisulfite, an antioxidant and an inhibitor of lysosomal phospholipases, prevented: (1) lipid autoxidation, (2) hydrolysis of both non-peroxidized and peroxidized liposomes by sarcoplasmic reticulum and (3) loss of lipid phosphorus from endogenous lipids when sarcoplasmic reticulum was incubated at pH 5.0. These studies show that lipid peroxidation may modulate the susceptibility of phospholipid to attack by specific phospholipases, and may therefore be an important determinant in membrane dysfunction during injury. Preservation of membrane structural and functional integrity by antioxidants may result from inhibition of lipid peroxidation, which in turn may modulate cellular phospholipase activity.  相似文献   

16.
Pathogenic mycobacteria are able to survive and proliferate in phagosomes within host macrophages (Mphi). This capability has been attributed in part to their cell wall, which consists of various unique lipids. Some of these are important in the host-pathogen interaction, such as resistance against microbicidal effector mechanisms and modulation of host cell functions, and/or are presented as Ags to T cells. Here we show that two lipids are released from the mycobacterial cell wall within the phagosome of infected Mphi and transported out of this compartment into intracellular vesicles. One of these lipids was identified as lysocardiolipin. Lysocardiolipin was generated through cleavage of mycobacterial cardiolipin by a Ca2+-independent phospholipase A2 present in Mphi lysosomes. This result indicates that lysosomal host cell enzymes can interact with released mycobacterial lipids to generate new products with a different intracellular distribution. This represents a novel pathway for the modification of bacterial lipid Ags.  相似文献   

17.
Recently, a novel enzyme, 1-O-acylceramide synthase (ACS), was purified and characterized from bovine brain. This enzyme has both calcium-independent phospholipase A(2) and transacylase activities. The discovery of this enzyme led us to propose a new pathway for ceramide metabolism in which the sn-2-acyl group of either phosphatidylethanolamine or phosphatidylcholine is transferred to the 1-hydroxyl group of ceramide. In this study, the partial amino acid sequences from the purified enzyme revealed that the enzyme contains amino acid sequences identical to those of human lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase-like lysophospholipase (LLPL). The coding sequences of the mouse, bovine, and human genes were obtained from the respective kidney cDNAs by PCR. The open reading frames of LLPL were cloned into pcDNA3 to generate carboxyl-terminally tagged proteins. The expression of mouse LLPL in COS-7 cells demonstrated that transfected cells had higher transacylase and phospholipase A(2) activities than did non-transfected cells. Immunoprecipitation confirmed that LLPL had ACS activity. There were no significant lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase and lysophospholipase activities in the mouse LLPL-transfected cells under either acidic or neutral conditions. Amino acid sequences from cDNAs of mouse, human, and bovine LLPLs demonstrated a signal peptide cleavage site, one lipase motif (AXSXG), and several N-linked glycosylation sites in each LLPL molecule. The replacement of serine with alanine in the lipase motif of mouse LLPL resulted in elimination of enzyme activity, indicating that the serine residue is part of the catalytic site. Deglycosylation of mouse, human, and bovine LLPLs yielded core proteins with a molecular mass of 42 kDa without change in enzyme activities. LLPL was post-translationally modified by signal peptide cleavage and N-linked glycosylation, and each mature LLPL had the same size core protein. Subcellular fractionation demonstrated that ACS activity co-localized with N-acetylglucosaminidase. Therefore, LLPL encodes a novel lysosomal enzyme, ACS.  相似文献   

18.
The porcine pancreatic phospholipase A2-catalyzed hydrolysis of the water-soluble chromogenic substrate 4-nitro-3-octanoyloxybenzoate shows an initial latency phase similar to the one observed in the hydrolysis of aggregated phospholipids by the same enzyme. We report here that during the latency phase the enzyme undergoes a slow, autocatalytic, substrate-level acylation whereby in a few of the catalytic events the scissile octanoyl group of the substrate, normally transferred to water, is transferred to the epsilon-amino group of lysine 56. The N epsilon 56-octanoylphospholipase shows a strong tendency to dimerize in solution and thus may be separated from the monomeric native enzyme by gel filtration. Octanoylation of Lys-56 activates the enzyme some 180-fold toward 4-nitro-3-octanoyloxybenzoate and more than 100-fold toward monolayers of 1,2-didecanoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine. Acylation also attends the enzymatic hydrolysis of 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine with the incorporation of 1 eq of palmitate. Kinetic analysis of the early phase of reaction with 4-nitro-3-octanoyloxybenzoate shows that in this initial step the rate of activation is first order with respect to enzyme and substrate. A much more rapid, autocatalytic activation occurs in the later phases of the reaction where the activation of the enzyme is catalyzed by the activated enzyme itself. These findings with porcine pancreatic phospholipase A2, together with those relative to a snake venom enzyme monomer (Cho, W., Tomasselli, A. G., Heinrikson, R. L., and Kézdy, F. J. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 11237-11241), strongly support the proposal that interfacial activation of monomeric phospholipases is due to substrate-level autoacylation resulting in fully potentiated dimeric enzymes.  相似文献   

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20.
Lysosomal phospholipases play a critical role for degradation of cellular membranes after their lysosomal segregation. We investigated the regulation of lysosomal phospholipase A1 by cholesterol, phosphatidylethanolamine, and negatively-charged lipids in correlation with changes of biophysical properties of the membranes induced by these lipids. Lysosomal phospholipase A1 activity was determined towards phosphatidylcholine included in liposomes of variable composition using a whole-soluble lysosomal fraction of rat liver as enzymatic source. Phospholipase A1 activity was then related to membrane fluidity, lipid phase organization and membrane potential as determined by fluorescence depolarization of DPH, 31P NMR and capillary electrophoresis. Phospholipase A1 activity was markedly enhanced when the amount of negatively-charged lipids included in the vesicles was increased from 10 to around 30% of total phospholipids and the intensity of this effect depended on the nature of the acidic lipids used (ganglioside GM1相似文献   

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