首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 46 毫秒
1.
Schneiter R 《Biochimie》2007,89(2):255-259
Eukaryotic cells synthesize sterols in the endoplasmatic reticulum (ER) from where it needs to be efficiently transported to the plasma membrane, which harbors approximately 90% of the free sterol pool of the cell. Sterols that are being taken up from the environment, on the other hand, are transported back from the plasma membrane to the ER, where the free sterols are esterified to steryl esters. The molecular mechanisms that govern this bidirectional movement of sterols between the ER and the plasma membrane of eukaryotic cells are only poorly understood. Proper control of this transport is important for normal cell function and development as indicated by fatal human pathologies such as Niemann Pick type C disease and atherosclerosis, which are characterized by an over-accumulation of free sterols within endosomal membranes and the ER, respectively. Recently, a number of complementary approaches using Saccharomyces cerevisiae as a model organism lead to a more precise characterization of the pathways that control the subcellular transport of sterols and led to the identification of components that directly or indirectly affect sterol uptake at the plasma membrane and its transport back to the ER. A genetic approach that is based on the fact that yeast is a facultative anaerobic organism, which becomes auxotrophic for sterols in the absence of oxygen, resulted in the identification of 17 genes that are required for efficient uptake and/or transport of sterols. Unexpectedly, many of these genes are required for mitochondrial functions. A possible connection between mitochondrial biogenesis and sterol biosynthesis and uptake will be discussed in light of the fact that cholesterol transport into the inner membranes of mitochondria is a well established sterol transport route in vertebrates, where it is required to convert cholesterol into pregnenolone, the precursor of steroids.  相似文献   

2.
Sterols are moved between cellular membranes by nonvesicular pathways whose functions are poorly understood. In yeast, one such pathway transfers sterols from the plasma membrane (PM) to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). We show that this transport requires oxysterol-binding protein (OSBP)-related proteins (ORPs), which are a large family of conserved lipid-binding proteins. We demonstrate that a representative member of this family, Osh4p/Kes1p, specifically facilitates the nonvesicular transfer of cholesterol and ergosterol between membranes in vitro. In addition, Osh4p transfers sterols more rapidly between membranes containing phosphoinositides (PIPs), suggesting that PIPs regulate sterol transport by ORPs. We confirmed this by showing that PM to ER sterol transport slows dramatically in mutants with conditional defects in PIP biosynthesis. Our findings argue that ORPs move sterols among cellular compartments and that sterol transport and intracellular distribution are regulated by PIPs.  相似文献   

3.
Little is known about the mechanisms of intracellular sterol transport or how cells maintain the high sterol concentration of the plasma membrane (PM). Here we demonstrate that two inducible ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters (Aus1p and Pdr11p) mediate nonvesicular movement of PM sterol to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. This transport facilitates exogenous sterol uptake, which we find requires steryl ester synthesis in the ER. Surprisingly, while expression of Aus1p and Pdr11p significantly increases sterol movement from PM to ER, it does not alter intracellular sterol distribution. Thus, ER sterol is likely rapidly returned to the PM when it is not esterified in the ER. We show that the propensity of PM sterols to be moved to the ER is largely determined by their affinity for sterol sphingolipid-enriched microdomains (rafts). Our findings suggest that raft association is a primary determinant of sterol accumulation in the PM and that Aus1p and Pdr11p facilitate sterol uptake by increasing the cycling of sterol between the PM and ER.  相似文献   

4.
Cellular cholesterol homeostasis involves sterol sensing at the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and sterol export from the plasma membrane (PM). Sterol sensing at the ER requires efficient sterol delivery from the PM; however, the macromolecules that facilitate retrograde sterol transport at the PM have not been identified. ATP-binding cassette transporter A1 (ABCA1) mediates cholesterol and phospholipid export to apolipoprotein A-I for the assembly of high density lipoprotein (HDL). Mutations in ABCA1 cause Tangier disease, a familial HDL deficiency. Several lines of clinical and experimental evidence suggest a second function of ABCA1 in cellular cholesterol homeostasis in addition to mediating cholesterol efflux. Here, we report the unexpected finding that ABCA1 also plays a key role in facilitating retrograde sterol transport from the PM to the ER for sterol sensing. Deficiency in ABCA1 delays sterol esterification at the ER and activates the SREBP-2 cleavage pathway. The intrinsic ATPase activity in ABCA1 is required to facilitate retrograde sterol transport. ABCA1 deficiency causes alternation of PM composition and hampers a clathrin-independent endocytic activity that is required for ER sterol sensing. Our finding identifies ABCA1 as a key macromolecule facilitating bidirectional sterol movement at the PM and shows that ABCA1 controls retrograde sterol transport by modulating a certain clathrin-independent endocytic process.  相似文献   

5.
Cholera and the related AB(5)-subunit toxins co-opt plasma membrane (PM) glycolipids to move retrograde into the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) of the host cell where a portion of the toxin is retro-translocated to the cytosol to induce disease. Only glycolipids that associate strongly with detergent insoluble membrane microdomains can sort the toxins backwards from PM to ER. The way certain lipids and proteins are clustered in the plane of the membrane to form lipid rafts likely explains how the glycolipids can function as sorting motifs for the toxins.  相似文献   

6.
Intestinal epithelial lipid rafts contain ganglioside GM1 that is the receptor for cholera toxin (CT). The ganglioside binds CT at the plasma membrane (PM) and carries the toxin through the trans-Golgi network (TGN) to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). In the ER, a portion of the toxin unfolds and translocates to the cytosol to activate adenylyl cyclase. Activation of the cyclase leads to an increase in intracellular cAMP, which results in apical chloride secretion. Here, we find that an intact actin cytoskeleton is necessary for the efficient transport of CT to the Golgi and for subsequent activation of adenylyl cyclase. CT bound to GM1 on the cell membrane fractionates with a heterogeneous population of lipid rafts, a portion of which is enriched in actin and other cytoskeletal proteins. In this actin-rich fraction of lipid rafts, CT and actin colocalize on the same membrane microdomains, suggesting a possible functional association. Depolymerization or stabilization of actin filaments interferes with transport of CT from the PM to the Golgi and reduces the levels of cAMP generated in the cytosol. Depletion of membrane cholesterol, which also inhibits CT trafficking to the TGN, causes displacement of actin from the lipid rafts while CT remains stably raft associated. On the basis of these observations, we propose that the CT-GM1 complex is associated with the actin cytoskeleton via the lipid rafts and that the actin cytoskeleton plays a role in trafficking of CT from the PM to the Golgi/ER and the subsequent activation of adenylyl cyclase. membrane microdomains; membrane lipids; bacterial toxins; endocytosis; intestinal mucosa  相似文献   

7.
8.
Cholera toxin (CT) and related AB5-subunit toxins move from the plasma membrane through the trans-Golgi and endoplasmic reticulum (ER) to the cytosol of host cells. The toxins exploit a specific glycolipid pathway rather than a protein pathway. They bind glycolipids that associate with lipid rafts at the cell surface, which carry the toxins retrograde to the Golgi and ER. In the ER, the A1-chain of the CT unfolds and enters the cytosol by hijacking the cellular machinery that enables misfolded proteins to cross the membrane for degradation by the proteasome, a process termed retro-translocation. Upon entering the cytosol, the A1-chain rapidly refolds, avoids the proteasome and induces toxicity.  相似文献   

9.
Sterol transport between the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and plasma membrane (PM) occurs by an ATP-dependent, non-vesicular mechanism that is presumed to require sterol transport proteins (STPs). In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, homologs of the mammalian oxysterol-binding protein (Osh1-7) have been proposed to function as STPs. To evaluate this proposal we took two approaches. First we used dehydroergosterol (DHE) to visualize sterol movement in living cells by fluorescence microscopy. DHE was introduced into the PM under hypoxic conditions and observed to redistribute to lipid droplets on growing the cells aerobically. Redistribution required ATP and the sterol acyltransferase Are2, but did not require PM-derived transport vesicles. DHE redistribution occurred robustly in a conditional yeast mutant (oshΔ osh4-1(ts)) that lacks all functional Osh proteins at 37°C. In a second approach we used a pulse-chase protocol to analyze the movement of metabolically radiolabeled ergosterol from the ER to the PM. Arrival of radiolabeled ergosterol at the PM was assessed in isolated PM-enriched fractions as well as by extracting sterols from intact cells with methyl-β-cyclodextrin. These experiments revealed that whereas ergosterol is transported effectively from the ER to the PM in Osh-deficient cells, the rate at which it moves within the PM to equilibrate with the methyl-β-cyclodextrin extractable sterol pool is slowed. We conclude (i) that the role of Osh proteins in non-vesicular sterol transport between the PM, ER and lipid droplets is either minimal, or subsumed by other mechanisms and (ii) that Osh proteins regulate the organization of sterols at the PM.  相似文献   

10.
Cholera toxin (CT), and members of the AB(5) family of toxins enter host cells and hijack the cell's endogenous pathways to induce toxicity. CT binds to a lipid receptor on the plasma membrane (PM), ganglioside GM1, which has the ability to associate with lipid rafts. The toxin can then enter the cell by various modes of receptor-mediated endocytosis and traffic in a retrograde manner from the PM to the Golgi and the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). Once in the ER, a portion of the toxin is unfolded and retro-translocated to the cytosol so as to induce disease. GM1 is the vehicle that carries CT from PM to ER. Thus, the toxin pathway from PM to ER is a lipid-based sorting pathway, which is potentially meditated by the determinants of the GM1 ganglioside structure itself.  相似文献   

11.
Genetic disorders of cholesterol biosynthesis result in accumulation of cholesterol precursors and cause severe disease. We examined whether cholesterol precursors alter the stability and properties of ordered lipid domains (rafts). Tempo quenching of a raft-binding fluorophore was used to measure raft stability in vesicles containing sterol, dioleoylphosphatidylcholine, and one of the following ordered domain-forming lipids/lipid mixtures: dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC), sphingomyelin (SM), a SM/cerebroside mixture or a SM/ceramide (cer) mixture. Relative to cholesterol, early cholesterol precursors containing an 8-9 double bond (lanosterol, dihydrolanosterol, zymosterol, and zymostenol) only weakly stabilized raft formation by SM or DPPC. Desmosterol, a late precursor containing the same 5-6 double bond as cholesterol, but with an additional 24-25 double bond, also stabilized domain formation weakly. In contrast, two late precursors containing 7-8 double bonds (lathosterol and 7-dehydrocholesterol) were better raft stabilizers than cholesterol. For vesicles containing SM/cerebroside and SM/cer mixtures the effect of precursor upon raft stability was small, although the relative effects of different precursors were the same. Using both detergent resistance and a novel assay involving fluorescence quenching induced by certain sterols we found cholesterol precursors were displaced from cer-rich rafts, and could displace cer from rafts. Precursor displacement by cer was inversely correlated to precursor raft-stabilizing abilities, whereas precursor displacement of cer was greatest for the most highly raft-stabilizing precursors. These observations support the hypothesis that sterols and cer compete for raft-association (Megha, and London, E. (2004) J. Biol. Chem. 279, 9997-10004). The results of this study have important implications for how precursors might alter raft structure and function in cells, and for the Bloch hypothesis, which postulates that sterol properties are gradually optimized for function along the biosynthetic pathway.  相似文献   

12.
Cholera toxin (CT) enters host cells by binding to ganglioside GM1 in the apical plasma membrane (PM). GM1 carries CT retrograde from the PM to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), where a portion of the toxin, the A1-chain, retro-translocates to the cytosol, causing disease. Trafficking in this pathway appears to depend on the association of CT–GM1 complexes with sphingomyelin (SM)- and cholesterol-rich membrane microdomains termed lipid rafts. Here, we find that in polarized intestinal epithelia, the conversion of apical membrane SM to ceramide by bacterial sphingomyelinase attenuates CT toxicity, consistent with the lipid raft hypothesis. The effect is reversible, specific to toxin entry via the apical membrane, and recapitulated by the addition of exogenous long-chain ceramides. Conversion of apical membrane SM to ceramide inhibits the efficiency of toxin endocytosis, but retrograde trafficking from the apical PM to the Golgi and ER is not affected. This result suggests that the cause for toxin resistance occurs at steps required for retro-translocation of the CT A1-chain to the cytosol.  相似文献   

13.
Cholera toxin (CT) travels from the plasma membrane of intestinal cells to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) where a portion of the A-subunit, the A1 chain, crosses the membrane into the cytosol to cause disease. A related toxin, LTIIb, binds to intestinal cells but does not cause toxicity. Here, we show that the B-subunit of CT serves as a carrier for the A-subunit to the ER where disassembly occurs. The B-subunit binds to gangliosides in lipid rafts and travels with the ganglioside to the ER. In many cells, LTIIb follows a similar pathway, but in human intestinal cells it binds to a ganglioside that fails to associate with lipid rafts and it is sorted away from the retrograde pathway to the ER. Our results explain why LTIIb does not cause disease in humans and suggest that gangliosides with high affinity for lipid rafts may provide a general vehicle for the transport of toxins to the ER.  相似文献   

14.
The pan‐eukaryotic endoplasmic reticulum (ER) membrane protein Arv1 has been suggested to play a role in intracellular sterol transport. We tested this proposal by comparing sterol traffic in wild‐type and Arv1‐deficient Saccharomyces cerevisiae. We used fluorescence microscopy to track the retrograde movement of exogenously supplied dehydroergosterol (DHE) from the plasma membrane (PM) to the ER and lipid droplets and high performance liquid chromatography to quantify, in parallel, the transport‐coupled formation of DHE esters. Metabolic labeling and subcellular fractionation were used to assay anterograde transport of ergosterol from the ER to the PM. We report that sterol transport between the ER and PM is unaffected by Arv1 deficiency. Instead, our results indicate differences in ER morphology and the organization of the PM lipid bilayer between wild‐type and arv1Δ cells suggesting a distinct role for Arv1 in membrane homeostasis. In arv1Δ cells, specific defects affecting single C‐terminal transmembrane domain proteins suggest that Arv1 might regulate membrane insertion of tail‐anchored proteins involved in membrane homoeostasis .  相似文献   

15.
In the present work, we induced obesity in rats with high-energy-starch diet and studied exocrine pancreas response. The zymogen granule (ZG) or purified plasma membrane (PM) from the exocrine pancreas was used for the isolation of the detergent-resistant membranes (DRMs). Based on high content of cholesterol, GM1, the bile salt dependent lipase (BSDL), and GP2 enrichment, the low-density fractions were defined as lipid rafts. Additionally, the rafts vesicles were determined by immunogold labeling with anti BSDL. By combining MALDI-TOF/MS and nano-LC ESI Q-TOF MS/MS proteomic identification we have selected 33 proteins from the lipid rafts which were classified into at least four functional families. Our data suggest that the acinar PM from the diet-induced obesity rats may be organized into lipid rafts, and characterization of rafts proteome can contribute to improve our understanding of food digestion under obesity.  相似文献   

16.
Sterols are essential lipid components of eukaryotic membranes. Here we summarize recent advances in understanding how sterols are transported between different membranes. Baker's yeast is a particularly attractive organism to dissect this lipid transport pathway, because cells can synthesize their own major sterol, ergosterol, in the membrane of the endoplasmic reticulum from where it is then transported to the plasma membrane. However, Saccharomyces cerevisiae is also a facultative anaerobic organism, which becomes sterol auxotroph in the absence of oxygen. Under these conditions, cells take up sterol from the environment and transport the lipid back into the membrane of the endoplasmic reticulum, where the free sterol becomes esterified and is then stored in lipid droplets. Steryl ester formation is thus a reliable readout to assess the back-transport of exogenously provided sterols from the plasma membrane to the endoplasmic reticulum. Structure/function analysis has revealed that the bulk membrane function of the fungal ergosterol can be provided by structurally related sterols, including the mammalian cholesterol. Foreign sterols, however, are subject to a lipid quality control cycle in which the sterol is reversibly acetylated. Because acetylated sterols are efficiently excreted from cells, the substrate specificity of the deacetylating enzymes determines which sterols are retained. Membrane-bound acetylated sterols are excreted by the secretory pathway, more soluble acetylated sterol derivatives such as the steroid precursor pregnenolone, on the other hand, are excreted by a pathway that is independent of vesicle formation and fusion. Further analysis of this lipid quality control cycle is likely to reveal novel insight into the mechanisms that ensure sterol homeostasis in eukaryotic cells. Article from a special issue on Steroids and Microorganisms.  相似文献   

17.
The glycosphingolipid GM1 binds cholera toxin (CT) on host cells and carries it retrograde from the plasma membrane (PM) through endosomes, the trans-Golgi (TGN), and the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) to induce toxicity. To elucidate how a membrane?lipid can specify trafficking in these pathways, we synthesized GM1 isoforms with alternate ceramide domains and imaged their trafficking in live cells.?Only GM1 with unsaturated acyl chains sorted efficiently from PM to TGN and ER. Toxin binding, which effectively crosslinks GM1 lipids, was dispensable, but membrane cholesterol and the lipid raft-associated proteins actin and flotillin were required. The results implicate a protein-dependent mechanism of lipid sorting by ceramide structure and provide a molecular explanation for the diversity?and specificity of retrograde trafficking by CT in?host cells.  相似文献   

18.
Transport of newly synthesized cholesterol and vesicular stomatitis virus G protein from the endoplasmic reticulum to the plasma membrane is interrupted by incubation at 15 degrees C. Under this condition the newly synthesized molecules accumulate in both the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and a subcellular vesicle fraction of low density called the lipid-rich vesicle fraction. The material in the lipid-rich vesicle fraction appears to be a post-ER intermediate in the transport process to the plasma membrane (PM). Although both newly synthesized cholesterol and G protein accumulate in this intermediate compartment at 15 degrees C, suggesting cotransport, treatment with Brefeldin A does not affect cholesterol transport to the PM, whereas it strongly inhibits G protein transport. We conclude that cholesterol and G protein leave the ER in separate vesicles, the cholesterol containing vesicles bypass the Golgi apparatus and proceed to the PM, whereas G protein containing vesicles follow the well documented Golgi route to the cell surface.  相似文献   

19.
Niemann-Pick type C1 disease (NPC1) is an inherited neurovisceral lipid storage disorder, hallmarked by the intracellular accumulation of unesterified cholesterol and glycolipids in endocytic organelles. Cells acquire cholesterol through exogenous uptake and endogenous biosynthesis. NPC1 participation in the trafficking of LDL-derived cholesterol has been well studied; however, its role in the trafficking of endogenously synthesized cholesterol (endoCHOL) has received much less attention. Previously, using mutant Chinese hamster ovary cells, we showed that endoCHOL moves from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) to the plasma membrane (PM) independent of NPC1. After arriving at the PM, it moves between the PM and internal compartments. The movement of endoCHOL from internal membranes back to the PM and the ER for esterification was shown to be defective in NPC1 cells. To test the generality of these findings, we have examined the trafficking of endoCHOL in four different physiologically relevant cell types isolated from wild-type, heterozygous, and homozygous BALB/c NPC1NIH mice. The results show that all NPC1 homozygous cell types (embryonic fibroblasts, peritoneal macrophages, hepatocytes, and cerebellar glial cells) exhibit partial trafficking defects, with macrophages and glial cells most prominently affected. Our findings suggest that endoCHOL may contribute significantly to the overall cholesterol accumulation observed in selective tissues affected by Niemann-Pick type C disease.  相似文献   

20.
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号