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1.
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Cytoplasmic lipid droplets (CLD) in mammary epithelial cells undergo secretion by a unique membrane envelopment process to produce milk lipids. Adipophilin (ADPH/Plin2), a member of the perilipin/PAT family of lipid droplet-associated proteins, is hypothesized to mediate CLD secretion through interactions with apical plasma membrane elements. We found that the secretion of CLD coated by truncated ADPH lacking the C-terminal region encoding a putative four-helix bundle structure was impaired relative to that of CLD coated by full-length ADPH. We used homology modeling and analyses of the solution and membrane binding properties of purified recombinant ADPH C terminus to understand how this region possibly mediates CLD secretion. Homology modeling supports the concept that the ADPH C terminus forms a four-helix bundle motif and suggests that this structure can form stable membrane bilayer interactions. Circular dichroism and protease mapping studies confirmed that the ADPH C terminus is an independently folding α-helical structure that is relatively resistant to urea denaturation. Liposome binding studies showed that the purified C terminus binds to phospholipid membranes through electrostatic dependent interactions, and cell culture studies documented that it localizes to the plasma membrane. Collectively, these data provide direct evidence that the ADPH C terminus forms a stable membrane binding helical structure that is important for CLD secretion. We speculate that interactions between the four-helix bundle of ADPH and membrane phospholipids may be an initial step in milk lipid secretion.  相似文献   

3.
Cytoplasmic lipid droplets (CLD) are organelle-like structures that function in neutral lipid storage, transport and metabolism through the actions of specific surface-associated proteins. Although diet and metabolism influence hepatic CLD levels, how they affect CLD protein composition is largely unknown. We used non-biased, shotgun, proteomics in combination with metabolic analysis, quantitative immunoblotting, electron microscopy and confocal imaging to define the effects of low- and high-fat diets on CLD properties in fasted-refed mice. We found that the hepatic CLD proteome is distinct from that of CLD from other mammalian tissues, containing enzymes from multiple metabolic pathways. The hepatic CLD proteome is also differentially affected by dietary fat content and hepatic metabolic status. High fat feeding markedly increased the CLD surface density of perilipin-2, a critical regulator of hepatic neutral lipid storage, whereas it reduced CLD levels of betaine-homocysteine S-methyltransferase, an enzyme regulator of homocysteine levels linked to fatty liver disease and hepatocellular carcinoma. Collectively our data demonstrate that the hepatic CLD proteome is enriched in metabolic enzymes, and that it is qualitatively and quantitatively regulated by diet and metabolism. These findings implicate CLD in the regulation of hepatic metabolic processes, and suggest that their properties undergo reorganization in response to hepatic metabolic demands.  相似文献   

4.
The majority of retinoid (vitamin A and its metabolites) present in the body of a healthy vertebrate is contained within lipid droplets present in the cytoplasm of hepatic stellate cells (HSCs). Two types of lipid droplets have been identified through histological analysis of HSCs within the liver: smaller droplets bounded by a unit membrane and larger membrane-free droplets. Dietary retinoid intake but not triglyceride intake markedly influences the number and size of HSC lipid droplets. The lipids present in rat HSC lipid droplets include retinyl ester, triglyceride, cholesteryl ester, cholesterol, phospholipids and free fatty acids. Retinyl ester and triglyceride are present at similar concentrations, and together these two classes of lipid account for approximately three-quarters of the total lipid in HSC lipid droplets. Both adipocyte-differentiation related protein and TIP47 have been identified by immunohistochemical analysis to be present in HSC lipid droplets. Lecithin:retinol acyltransferase (LRAT), an enzyme responsible for all retinyl ester synthesis within the liver, is required for HSC lipid droplet formation, since Lrat-deficient mice completely lack HSC lipid droplets. When HSCs become activated in response to hepatic injury, the lipid droplets and their retinoid contents are rapidly lost. Although loss of HSC lipid droplets is a hallmark of developing liver disease, it is not known whether this contributes to disease development or occurs simply as a consequence of disease progression. Collectively, the available information suggests that HSC lipid droplets are specialized organelles for hepatic retinoid storage and that loss of HSC lipid droplets may contribute to the development of hepatic disease.  相似文献   

5.
The assembly of very low density lipoproteins involves the formation of a primordial, poorly lipidated apoB-containing particle in the endoplasmic reticulum, followed by the addition of neutral lipid from luminal lipid droplets (LLD). However, the lipid and protein compositions of LLD have not been determined. We have isolated LLD from mouse liver microsomes and analyzed their lipid and protein compositions. LLD are variably sized particles relatively poor in triacylglycerol (TG) content when compared with the lipid composition of cytosolic lipid droplets (CLD). They are devoid of apoB, adipophilin, and albumin but contain numerous proteins different from those found on CLD, including TG hydrolase (TGH), carboxylesterase 1 (Ces1), microsomal triglyceride transfer protein (MTP), and apoE. Ectopic expression of TGH in McArdle RH7777 hepatoma cells resulted in decreased cellular TG levels, demonstrating a role for TGH in the mobilization of hepatic neutral lipid stores. The isolation and characterization of LLD provide new supporting evidence for the two-step assembly of very low density lipoproteins.  相似文献   

6.
Processing of dietary fats in the intestine is a highly regulated process that influences whole-body energy homeostasis and multiple physiological functions. Dysregulated lipid handling in the intestine leads to dyslipidemia and atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease. In intestinal enterocytes, lipids are incorporated into lipoproteins and cytoplasmic lipid droplets (CLDs). Lipoprotein synthesis and CLD metabolism are inter-connected pathways with multiple points of regulation. This review aims to highlight recent advances in the regulatory mechanisms of lipid processing in the enterocyte, with particular focus on CLDs. In-depth understanding of the regulation of lipid metabolism in the enterocyte may help identify therapeutic targets for the treatment and prevention of metabolic disorders.  相似文献   

7.
8.
Two lipid transfer proteins, designated lipid transfer protein-I (Mr 69 000) and lipid transfer protein-II (Mr 55 000), each of which facilitates the transfer of radiolabelled cholesteryl ester, triacylglycerol and phosphatidylcholine between plasma lipoproteins, were purified from human plasma. Immunoglobulin G was prepared from goat antiserum to human lipid transfer protein-I (i.e., anti-human LTP-I IgG). The progressive addition of anti-human LTP-I IgG to buffered solutions containing either a highly purified mixture of human lipid transfer protein-I and lipid transfer protein-II, or highly purified rabbit lipid transfer protein (Abbey, M., Calvert, G.D. and Barter, P.J. (1984) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 793, 471-480) resulted in specific immunoprecipitation and the removal of increasing amounts, up to 100%, of cholesteryl ester, triacylglycerol and phosphatidylcholine transfer activities. However, similar precipitation studies on human and rabbit lipoprotein-free plasma resulted in the progressive removal of all cholesteryl ester and triacylglycerol transfer activities but only 30% (human) or 20% (rabbit) of phosphatidylcholine transfer activity. In all cases more anti-human LTP-I IgG was required to precipitate rabbit lipid transfer activity than human lipid transfer activity. These results suggest that lipid transfer protein-I and lipid transfer protein-II have antigenic sites in common, allowing precipitation of both proteins by specific antibody to lipid transfer protein-I. Most plasma phosphatidylcholine transfer activity is mediated by a protein (or proteins) other than lipid transfer protein-I and lipid transfer protein-II. In lipoprotein-free plasma all cholesteryl ester and triacylglycerol transfer activity, and some phosphatidylcholine transfer activity, is mediated by lipid transfer protein-I (or lipid transfer protein-I and an antigenically similar protein, lipid transfer protein-II.  相似文献   

9.
Transfer of lipids was studied between human plasma low density lipoproteins (LDL) and triolein particles coated with an egg phosphatidylcholine monolayer, with diameter of 27 +/- 4 nm. The lipid particles were unstable and seemed to aggregate to LDL when incubated with LDL either in the presence or the absence of bovine serum albumin. Human apolipoproteins A-I, A-II, C-II, C-III, and E stabilized the lipid particles and completely prevented this process. Cholesterol rapidly appeared in the lipid particles to reach homogeneous distribution among the phospholipid surfaces of LDL and the lipid particles regardless of whether apolipoproteins were present or absent. Cholesteryl ester spontaneously appeared in the lipid particles to some extent in the absence of the apolipoproteins, and human plasma lipid transfer protein enhanced this reaction only to a very limited extend. When the lipid particles were stabilized with the apolipoproteins, spontaneous cholesteryl ester transfer was minimized and the lipid transfer protein catalyzed the transfer of cholesteryl ester markedly. There was no specific difference among the apolipoproteins in stabilizing the particles and enhancing the transfer reaction. Reciprocal decrease in volume of triglyceride was observed at the same time in the lipid particles until the relative content of cholesteryl ester in the cores of LDL was the same as in the lipid particles. The kinetics of the cholesteryl ester and triglyceride transfer was consistent with the model that the reaction is bidirectional in equilibrium and takes both non-polar lipids as substrate in a single pool.  相似文献   

10.
The interaction of a purified human plasma lipid transfer complex with cholesteryl ester, triacylglycerol and phosphatidylcholine in binary and ternary lipid monolayers was investigated. The lipid transfer complex, designated LTC, catalyzes the removal of cholesteryl oleate and triacylglycerol from phosphatidylcholine monolayers. Preincubation of LTC with p-chloromercuriphenyl sulfonate inhibits LTC-catalyzed removal of triacylglycerol; cholesteryl ester removal is not affected. The rate of LTC-facilitated removal of cholesteryl oleate from a phosphatidylcholine monolayer depends on the amount of LTC added to the subphase up to 100 μg protein. In addition, the rate of the LTC-catalyzed transfer of cholesteryl oleate to the subphase increases linearly as the amount of cholesteryl oleate in the monolayer increases to 6 mol%. LTC also removes cholesterol from phosphatidylcholine-cholesterol monolayers, albeit at a rate which is 15% of that for removal of cholesteryl oleate. The ability of LTC to facilitate triacylglycerol and cholesteryl ester removal depends on the composition of the monolayer. Phosphatidylcholine supports cholesteryl ester transfer whereas sphingomyelin-cholesteryl ester monolayers are almost refractory to LTC. In contrast, LTC removes triacylglycerol from either a phosphatidylcholine or a sphingomyelin monolayer. The results suggest the existence of at least two lipid transfer proteins, one of which catalyzes the removal of cholesteryl ester and the other triacylglycerol. The role of these proteins as they relate to lipoprotein metabolism is discussed.  相似文献   

11.
The modulation of substrate selectivity of human plasma LTP reaction is the subject of the present investigation. The moderate selectivity by a factor of 5 to 6 was observed in the LTP-catalyzed transfer of cholesteryl ester over triacylglycerol between plasma lipoproteins. On the other hand, the transfer of cholesteryl ester by LTP was highly selective over the negligible transfer of triacylglycerol, by a factor of 60 to 500, between the microemulsions with LDL size, regardless of the activators such as human and pig apolipoprotein (apo) A-I, human apo C-III and apo E that bound to the surface of the emulsion in equilibrium. The presence of free cholesterol in these microemulsions reduced slightly the rate of cholesteryl ester transfer but had no effect on triacylglycerol transfer. Other surface-active reagents such as cholic acid, Triton X-100 and Tween-20, did not have an effect on the triacylglycerol transfer either. Triacylglycerol transfer by LTP became measurable between such lipid particles as prepared by co-sonication of lipid with pig apo A-I and isolated as the mixed-microemulsions in the density of LDL and HDL. In these conditions, the substrate selectivity for cholesteryl ester over triacylglycerol was a factor of 6 to 16 mimicking the ratio in plasma lipoproteins. The conformation of pig apo A-I estimated by circular dichroism showed that its apparent helical content was further more induced when apo A-I was integrated into the mixed-microemulsion by co-sonication than the lipid-bound apo A-I in equilibrium. Apo A-I, thus integrated into lipid particles, was highly resistant to the denaturation by guanidine hydrochloride while the lipid-bound apo A-I in equilibrium was denatured as readily as the lipid-free protein. Thus, triacylglycerol transfer by LTP was induced by structural modulation of substrate-carrying lipid particles such as higher integration of apolipoproteins.  相似文献   

12.
Transfer of cholesteryl ester between triacylglycerol/phospholipid microemulsions catalyzed by human plasma lipid transfer protein was investigated with a pyrene-containing analogue of which fluorescent properties depend on its concentration in the core of the microemulsions. The transfer of pyrene-cholesteryl ester between the emulsions was increased by the transfer protein linearly with its concentration, but maximally only to the extent of twice as much as spontaneous transfer in the given experimental conditions. When human apolipoproteins A-I or A-II are present in the reaction mixture enough to saturate the surface of the emulsion, the enhancement of the pyrene-cholesteryl ester transfer reaction by the transfer protein was 7.5-times more than in the absence of the apolipoproteins while the rate of spontaneous transfer was not affected significantly by the apolipoproteins. Bovine serum albumin did not have such an effect. Furthermore, the enhancement of the lipid transfer protein reaction by apolipoprotein A-I was linearly proportional to the percent saturation of the surface of the microemulsion with the apolipoprotein.  相似文献   

13.
The access of enzymes and lipid transfer proteins to neutral lipids located predominantly in the core compartment of lipoproteins may be determined to some degree by the solubility of the neutral lipids in the surface monolayer of phospholipid. This report concerns the hypothesis that unesterfied cholesterol can affect the partition of a cholesteryl ester between the surface monolayer of a lipid emulsion and the internal core compartment, thus controlling the degree to which the cholesteryl ester is presented at the emulsion surface. For microemulsions composed of dimyristoyl phosphatidylcholine and cholesteryl oleate, the addition of unesterified cholesterol results in an increase in the particle size from about 170 nm diameter to 210 nm diameter at 13.5 mol% unesterified cholesterol. Fluorescent quenching methods were devised to determine the apparent partition of a fluorescent cholesteryl ester (cholesteryl anthracene-9-carboxylate) between surface and core compartments. The addition of unesterified cholesterol resulted in the movement of the fluorescent cholesteryl ester from the surface monolayer to the core compartment. The apparent partition coefficient, defined as the ratio of the concentration of probe in the monolayer to that in the core, decreased from 1.03 in the absence of unesterfied cholesterol to 0.54 at 28 mol% unesterified cholesterol in the emulsion. In this process, the fluorescent cholesteryl ester becomes less accessible to a quencher (5-doxyl stearate) located in the surface monolayer. The decrease in the surface curvature resulting from incorporation of unesterified cholesterol into the particle does not influence this quenching process. We conclude that the presence of unesterified cholesterol in the emulsion causes the fluorescent cholesteryl ester to become less soluble in the surface monolayer.  相似文献   

14.
This study investigates the ability of human plasma-derived lipid transfer protein to facilitate lipid transfer to and from intact viable cells in culture. Mouse peritoneal macrophages or J774 macrophages were preincubated with acetylated low density lipoprotein and [3H]oleate/albumin to promote the intracellular synthesis and accumulation of cholesteryl [3H]oleate and 3H-labeled triglyceride. The addition of partially purified lipid transfer protein to cultures of lipid-loaded macrophages resulted in a time and concentration-dependent transfer of radiolabeled cholesteryl ester and triglyceride from macrophages to the medium. At 48 hr, lipid transfer protein facilitated the net transfer of 16 and 11% of cellular cholesteryl ester and triglyceride radioactivity, respectively, to the medium; transfer in the absence of the lipid transfer protein was less than 2%. The transfer of cholesteryl ester radioactivity was accompanied by a similar decrease in cellular cholesteryl ester mass indicating a net transfer event. Lipid transfer from cells was not dependent on the presence of a lipoprotein acceptor in the medium; however, low and high density lipoproteins present at 200 micrograms cholesterol/ml did significantly stimulate the transfer protein-facilitated efflux of these lipids. Lipid transfer protein did not appear capable of transferring radiolabeled lipid from low density or high density lipoprotein to macrophages. Radiolabeled cholesteryl ester and triglyceride transferred from cells to the medium by lipid transfer protein were associated with large molecular weight (greater than 2 x 10(6)) components in the medium with an average density greater than 1.21 g/ml; these lipids were not associated with lipid transfer protein itself. However, these radiolabeled lipids were readily incorporated into low or high density lipoproteins when these lipoproteins were added to the medium either during or after its incubation with cells. It is concluded that lipid transfer protein can facilitate the net efflux of cholesteryl esters from intact, living macrophages. These studies suggest a novel and potentially antiatherogenic role for lipid transfer protein.  相似文献   

15.
For a long time lipid peroxidation has only been considered a deleterious process leading to disruption of biomembranes and thus, to cellular dysfunction. However, when restricted to a certain cellular compartment and tightly regulated, lipid peroxidation may have beneficial effects. Early on during evolution of living organisms special lipid peroxidizing enzymes, called lipoxygenases, appeared and they have been conserved during phylogenesis of plants and animals. In fact, a diverse family of lipoxygenase isoforms has evolved starting from a putative ancient precursor. As with other enzymes, lipoxygenases are regulated on various levels of gene expression and there are endogenous antagonists controlling their cellular activity. Among the currently known mammalian lipoxygenase isoforms only 12/15-lipoxygenases are capable of directly oxygenating ester lipids even when they are bound to membranes and lipoproteins. Thus, these enzymes represent the pro-oxidative part in the cellular metabolism of complex hydroperoxy ester lipids. Its metabolic counterplayer, representing the antioxidative part, appears to be the phospholipid hydroperoxide glutathione peroxidase. This enzyme is unique among glutathione peroxidases because of its capability of reducing ester lipid hydroperoxides. Thus, 12/15-lipoxygenase and phospholipid hydroperoxide glutathione peroxidase constitute a pair of antagonizing enzymes in the metabolism of hydroperoxy ester lipids, and a balanced regulation of the two proteins appears to be of major cell physiological importance. This review is aimed at summarizing the recent developments in the enzymology and molecular biology of 12/15-lipoxygenase and phospholipid hydroperoxide glutathione peroxidase, with emphasis on cytokine-dependent regulation and their regulatory interplay.  相似文献   

16.
Biosynthesis of certain biologically active substances (prostaglandins, thromboxanes, prostacyclins and leukotrienes) in animal tissues occurs with participation of cyclooxygenases and lipoxygenases, enzymic systems of lipid peroxidation. In normal physiological and pathological processes the enzymic lipid peroxidation by microsomal dioxygenases is considerably more active than the nonenzymic one in the same membrane structures. The molecular structure of the products of the enzymic and nonenzymic peroxidation of lipids also differs essentially. An assumption is advanced that cytosol lipoxygenase may be an easily dissociating component of the cyclooxygenase multienzymic complex and its transition from the biomembrane to the cell cytoplasm is accompanied by changes in the enzyme conformation and chemical nature of the products resulted from polyenic lipids oxidation catalyzed by the enzyme.  相似文献   

17.
Hepatic stellate cell (HSC) lipid droplets are specialized organelles for the storage of retinoid, accounting for 50-60% of all retinoid present in the body. When HSCs activate, retinyl ester levels progressively decrease and the lipid droplets are lost. The objective of this study was to determine if the HSC population in a healthy, uninjured liver demonstrates heterogeneity in its capacity for retinoid and lipid storage in lipid droplets. To this end, we utilized two methods of HSC isolation, which leverage distinct properties of these cells, including their vitamin A content and collagen expression. HSCs were isolated either from wild type (WT) mice in the C57BL/6 genetic background by flotation in a Nycodenz density gradient, followed by fluorescence activated cell sorting (FACS) based on vitamin A autofluorescence, or from collagen-green fluorescent protein (GFP) mice by FACS based on GFP expression from a GFP transgene driven by the collagen I promoter. We show that GFP-HSCs have: (i) increased expression of typical markers of HSC activation; (ii) decreased retinyl ester levels, accompanied by reduced expression of the enzyme needed for hepatic retinyl ester synthesis (LRAT); (iii) decreased triglyceride levels; (iv) increased expression of genes associated with lipid catabolism; and (v) an increase in expression of the retinoid-catabolizing cytochrome, CYP2S1. CONCLUSION: Our observations suggest that the HSC population in a healthy, uninjured liver is heterogeneous. One subset of the total HSC population, which expresses early markers of HSC activation, may be "primed" and ready for rapid response to acute liver injury.  相似文献   

18.
Evidence of oxidative stress and the accumulation of fibrillar amyloid beta proteins (Abeta) in senile plaques throughout the cerebral cortex are consistent features in the pathology of Alzheimer disease. To define a mechanistic link between these two processes, various aspects of the relationship between oxidative lipid membrane damage and amyloidogenesis were characterized by chemical and physical techniques. Earlier studies of this relationship demonstrated that oxidatively damaged synthetic lipid membranes promoted amyloidogenesis. The studies reported herein specify that 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal (HNE) is produced in both synthetic lipids and human brain lipid extracts by oxidative lipid damage and that it can account for accelerated amyloidogenesis. Abeta promotes the copper-mediated generation of HNE from polyunsaturated lipids, and in turn, HNE covalently modifies the histidine side chains of Abeta. HNE-modified Abeta have an increased affinity for lipid membranes and an increased tendency to aggregate into amyloid fibrils. Thus, the prooxidant activity of Abeta leads to its own covalent modification and to accelerated amyloidogenesis. These results illustrate how lipid membranes may be involved in templating the pathological misfolding of Abeta, and they suggest a possible chemical mechanism linking oxidative stress with amyloid formation.  相似文献   

19.
Background information. Intestinal absorption of alimentary lipids is a complex process ensured by enterocytes and leading to TRL [TAG (triacylglycerol)‐rich lipoprotein] assembly and secretion. The accumulation of circulating intestine‐derived TRL is associated with atherosclerosis, stressing the importance of the control of postprandial hypertriglyceridaemia. During the postprandial period, TAGs are also transiently stored as CLDs (cytosolic lipid droplets) in enterocytes. As a first step for determining whether CLDs could play a role in the control of enterocyte TRL secretion, we analysed the protein endowment of CLDs isolated by sucrose‐gradient centrifugation from differentiated Caco‐2/TC7 enterocytes, the only human model able to secrete TRL in culture and to store transiently TAGs as CLDs when supplied with lipids. Cells were analysed after a 24 h incubation with lipid micelles and thus in a state of CLD‐associated TAG mobilization. Results. Among the 105 proteins identified in the CLD fraction by LC‐MS/MS (liquid chromatography coupled with tandem MS), 27 were directly involved in lipid metabolism pathways potentially relevant to enterocyte‐specific functions. The transient feature of CLDs was consistent with the presence of proteins necessary for fatty acid activation (acyl‐CoA synthetases) and for TAG hydrolysis. In differentiated Caco‐2/TC7 enterocytes, we identified for the first time LPCAT2 (lysophosphatidylcholine acyltransferase 2), involved in PC (phosphatidylcholine) synthesis, and 3BHS1 (3‐β‐hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase 1), involved in steroid metabolism, and confirmed their partial CLD localization by immunofluorescence. In enterocytes, LPCAT2 may provide an economical source of PC, necessary for membrane synthesis and lipoprotein assembly, from the lysoPC present in the intestinal lumen. We also identified proteins involved in lipoprotein metabolism, such as ApoA‐IV (apolipoprotein A‐IV), which is specifically expressed by enterocytes and has been proposed to play many functions in vivo, including the formation of lipoproteins and the control of their size. The association of ApoA‐IV with CLD was confirmed by confocal and immunoelectron microscopy and validated in vivo in the jejunum of mice fed with a high‐fat diet. Conclusions. We report for the first time the protein endowment of Caco‐2/TC7 enterocyte CLDs. Our results suggest that their formation and mobilization may participate in the control of enterocyte TRL secretion in a cell‐specific manner.  相似文献   

20.
Organelle biogenesis and intracellular lipid transport in eukaryotes.   总被引:8,自引:1,他引:7  
The inter- and intramembrane transport of phospholipids, sphingolipids, and sterols involves the most fundamental processes of membrane biogenesis. Identification of the mechanisms involved in these lipid transport reactions has lagged significantly behind that for intermembrane protein traffic until recently. Application of methods that include fluorescently labeled and spin-labeled lipid analogs, new cellular fractionation techniques, topographically specific chemical modification techniques, the identification of organelle-specific metabolism, permeabilized cell methodology, and yeast molecular genetics has contributed to revealing a diverse biochemical array of transport processes for lipids. Compelling evidence now exists for ATP-dependent, ATP-independent, vesicle-dependent, and vesicle-independent transport processes that are lipid and membrane specific. ATP-dependent transport processes include the transbilayer movement of phosphatidylserine and phosphatidylethanolamine at the plasma membrane and the transport of phosphatidylserine from its site of synthesis to the mitochondria. ATP-independent processes include the transbilayer movement of virtually all lipids at the endoplasmic reticulum, the movement of phosphatidylserine between the inner and outer mitochondrial membranes, and the transfer of nascent phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylethanolamine to the plasma membrane. The ATP-independent movement of lipids between organelles is believed to be due to the action of lipid transfer proteins, but this still remains to be proved. Vesicle-based transport mechanisms (which are also inherently ATP dependent) include the transport of nascent cholesterol, sphingomyelin, and glycosphingolipids from the Golgi apparatus to the plasma membrane and the recycling of sphingolipids and selected pools of phosphatidylcholine from the plasma membrane to the cell interior. The vesicles involved in cholesterol transport to the plasma membrane are different from those involved in bulk protein transport to the cell surface. The vesicles involved in recycling sphingomyelin to and from the cell surface are different from those involved in the assembly of newly synthesized sphingolipids into the plasma membrane. The preliminary characterization of these lipid translocation processes suggests divergent rather than unifying mechanisms for lipid transport in organelle assembly.  相似文献   

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