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1.
The host response to infection and inflammation is associated with multiple alterations in lipid metabolism. We have shown that endotoxin [lipopolysaccharide (LPS)] stimulates hepatic sphingolipid synthesis and increases ceramide and glucosylceramide (GlcCer) content in circulating lipoproteins in Syrian hamsters. LPS also increases the activity and mRNA levels of serine palmitoyltransferase (SPT) and GlcCer synthase, the committed enzymes in sphingolipid and glycosphingolipid (GSL) synthesis, respectively, in the liver. To determine whether sphingolipid and GSL metabolism are regulated in other tissues during the host response to infection, we examined the effect of LPS on the regulation of SPT and GlcCer synthase in extrahepatic tissues in Syrian hamsters. LPS significantly increased SPT activity in spleen and kidney after 16 h of treatment, but had no effect on SPT activity in lung and brain, suggesting that the effect of LPS on sphingolipid metabolism is tissue specific. LPS also increased SPT mRNA levels in spleen and kidney by approximately 3-fold, suggesting that the increase in SPT activity is due to an increase in SPT mRNA expression. LPS significantly increased GlcCer synthase activity in spleen and kidney, and produced 4- and 15-fold increases in GlcCer synthase mRNA levels in spleen and kidney, respectively. LPS treatment increased GlcCer content by 1.3-fold in spleen and by 6.2-fold in kidney. LPS also increased the content of ceramide trihexoside by 1.7-fold in spleen. These results suggest that LPS regulates sphingolipid and GSL metabolism in spleen and kidney. An increase in GSL metabolites in spleen and kidney during the host response to infection and inflammation may be required for modulation of immune responses and regulation of cell growth. -- Memon, R. A., W. M. Holleran, Y. Uchida, A. H. Moser, C. Grunfeld, and K. R. Feingold. Regulation of sphingolipid and glycosphingolipid metabolism in extrahepatic tissues by endotoxin. J. Lipid Res. 2001. 42: 452--459.  相似文献   

2.
We have previously shown that ongoing glucosylceramide (GlcCer) synthesis is required for basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) and laminin to stimulate axonal growth in cultured hippocampal neurons (Boldin, S., and Futerman, A. H. (1997) J. Neurochem. 68, 882-885). We now demonstrate that stimulation of axonal growth by bFGF leads to an increase in the rate of GlcCer synthesis. Within minutes of incubation with bFGF, a significant increase in the rate of metabolism of [(14)C]hexanoyl ceramide to [(14)C]hexanoyl GlcCer is detected, but there are no changes in the rate of [(14)C]hexanoyl sphingomyelin synthesis. In vitro analysis of GlcCer synthase activity revealed an approximately 2-fold increase in the rate of [(14)C]hexanoyl GlcCer synthesis upon incubation with either bFGF or laminin; other growth factors, which did not effect the rate of axon growth, had no effect on the rate of [(14)C]hexanoyl GlcCer synthesis. The increased rate of [(14)C]hexanoyl GlcCer synthesis was not affected by preincubation with either cycloheximide or actinomycin, and no elevation of GlcCer synthase mRNA levels was detected, suggesting that GlcCer synthase is up-regulated by a post-translational mechanism. The relevance of these results for understanding the regulation of axonal growth is discussed.  相似文献   

3.
Saturated fatty acids promote lipotoxic ER (endoplasmic reticulum) stress in pancreatic β-cells in association with Type 2 diabetes. To address the underlying mechanisms we employed MS in a comprehensive lipidomic screen of MIN6 β-cells treated for 48 h with palmitate. Both the overall mass and the degree of saturation of major neutral lipids and phospholipids were only modestly increased by palmitate. The mass of GlcCer (glucosylceramide) was augmented by 70% under these conditions, without any significant alteration in the amounts of either ceramide or sphingomyelin. However, flux into ceramide (measured by [3H]serine incorporation) was augmented by chronic palmitate, and inhibition of ceramide synthesis decreased both ER stress and apoptosis. ER-to-Golgi protein trafficking was also reduced by palmitate pre-treatment, but was overcome by overexpression of GlcCer synthase. This was accompanied by increased conversion of ceramide into GlcCer, and reduced ER stress and apoptosis, but no change in phospholipid desaturation. Sphingolipid alterations due to palmitate were not secondary to ER stress since they were neither reproduced by pharmacological ER stressors nor overcome using the chemical chaperone phenylbutyric acid. In conclusion, alterations in sphingolipid, rather than phospholipid, metabolism are more likely to be implicated in the defective protein trafficking and enhanced ER stress and apoptosis of lipotoxic β-cells.  相似文献   

4.
Sphingolipids are membrane components and are involved in cell proliferation, apoptosis and metabolic regulation. In this study we investigated whether de novo sphingolipid biosynthesis in macrophages is regulated by inflammatory stimuli. Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) treatment upregulated Sptlc2, a subunit of serine palmitoyltransferase (SPT), mRNA and protein in Raw264.7 and mouse peritoneal macrophages, but Sptlc1, another subunit of SPT, was not altered. SPT activation by LPS elevated cellular levels of ceramides and sphingomyelin (SM). Pharmacological inhibition of nuclear factor kappa B (NFκB) prevented LPS-induced upregulation of Sptlc2 while transfection of p65 subunit of NFκB upregulated Sptlc2 and increased cellular ceramide levels. In contrast, MAP kinases were not involved in regulation of sphingolipid biosynthesis. Analysis of Sptlc2 promoter and chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) assay showed that NFκB binding sites are located in Sptlc2 promoter region. Our results demonstrate that inflammatory stimuli activate de novo sphingolipid biosynthesis via NFκB and may play a critical role in lipid metabolism in macrophages.  相似文献   

5.
Obesity increases the risk for hepatic steatosis. Recent studies have demonstrated that high fat diet (HFD) may affect sphingolipid formation in skeletal muscles, heart, and other tissues. In this work we sought to investigate whether HFD feeding provokes changes in content and fatty acids (FAs) composition of sphingomyelin and ceramide at the level of liver and hepatic nuclei. Furthermore, we investigated whether the ceramide formation is related to the activity of either neutral sphingomyelinase (N-SMase) or acidic sphingomyelinase (A-SMase). Three weeks of HFD provision induced pronounced ceramide and sphingomyelin accumulation in both liver and hepatic nuclei, accompanied by increased activity of N-SMase but not A-SMase. Furthermore, a shift toward greater FAs saturation status in these sphingolipids was also observed. These findings support the conclusion that HFD has a major impact on sphingolipid metabolism not only in the liver, but also in hepatic nuclei.  相似文献   

6.
Recent discoveries of two sphingolipid transfer proteins, CERT and FAPP2, have brought the field of sphingolipid metabolism to a more dynamic stage. CERT transfers ceramide from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) to the Golgi apparatus, a step crucial for sphingomyelin (SM) synthesis. The pleckstrin homology (PH) domain and the FFAT motif of CERT restrict the direction of transfer and destination of ceramide through binding to phosphatidylinositol 4-monophosphate (PI4P) at the Golgi and the ER resident proteins, VAPs, respectively. CERT is regulated by the phosphorylation and dephosphorylation of serine/threonine, in which protein kinase D, possibly casein kinase I, and PP2Cepsilon are involved. On the other hand, FAPP2 transfers glucosylceramide (GlcCer) to appropriate sites for the synthesis of complex glycosphingolipids. Like CERT, FAPP2 contains a PH domain, the binding of which to PI4P is required for its localization to the Golgi. These observations indicate that lipid transfer proteins, CERT and FAPP2, spatially regulate lipid metabolism on the cytosolic side.  相似文献   

7.
The oxidative stress induced by photodynamic therapy (PDT) with the photosensitizer phthalocyanine 4 is accompanied by increases in ceramide mass. To assess the regulation of de novo sphingolipid metabolism during PDT-induced apoptosis, Jurkat human T lymphoma and Chinese hamster ovary cells were labeled with [14C]serine, a substrate of serine palmitoyltransferase (SPT), the enzyme catalyzing the initial step in the sphingolipid biosynthesis. A substantial elevation in [14C]ceramide with a concomitant decrease in [14C]sphingomyelin was detected. The labeling of [14C]ceramide was completely abrogated by the SPT inhibitor ISP-1. In addition, ISP-1 partly suppressed PDT-induced apoptosis. Pulse-chase experiments showed that the contribution of sphingomyelin degradation to PDT-initiated increase in de novo ceramide was absent or minor. PDT had no effect on either mRNA amounts of the SPT subunits LCB1 and LCB2, LCB1 protein expression, or SPT activity in Jurkat cells. Moreover in Chinese hamster ovary cells LCB1 protein underwent substantial photodestruction, and SPT activity was profoundly inhibited after treatment. We next examined whether PDT affects conversion of ceramide to complex sphingolipids. Sphingomyelin synthase, as well as glucosylceramide synthase, was inactivated by PDT in both cell lines in a dose-dependent manner. These results are the first to show that in the absence of SPT up-regulation PDT induces accumulation of de novo ceramide by inhibiting its conversion to complex sphingolipids.  相似文献   

8.
Tissue injury in inflammation involves the release of several cytokines that activate sphingomyelinases and generate ceramide. In the lung, the impaired metabolism of surfactant phosphatidylcholine (PC) accompanies this acute and chronic injury. These effects are long-lived and extend beyond the time frame over which tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha and interleukin-1beta are elevated. In this paper, we demonstrate that in H441 lung cells these two processes, cytokine-induced metabolism of sphingomyelin and the inhibition of PC metabolism, are directly interrelated. First, metabolites of sphingomyelin hydrolysis themselves inhibit key enzymes necessary for restoring homeostasis between sphingomyelin and its metabolites. Ceramide stimulates sphingomyelinases as effectively as TNF-alpha, thereby amplifying the sphingomyelinase activation, and TNF-alpha, ceramide, and sphingosine all inhibit PC:ceramide phosphocholine transferase (sphingomyelin synthase), the enzyme that restores homeostasis between sphingomyelin and ceramide pools. Second, ceramide inhibits PC synthesis, probably because of its effects on CTP:phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase, the rate-limiting enzymatic step in de novo PC synthesis. The data presented here suggest that TNF-alpha may be an inhibitor of phospholipid metabolism in inflammatory tissue injury. These actions may be amplified because of the ability of metabolites of sphingomyelin to inhibit the pathways that should restore the normal ceramide-sphingomyelin homeostasis.  相似文献   

9.
Ceramide is a key bioactive mediator that inhibits surfactant phosphatidylcholine (PtdCho) synthesis in lung epithelia. Ceramide availability is governed by sphingomyelin (SM) hydrolysis, but less is known regarding its de novo synthesis. In this study, we observed that ceramide synthesis within murine lung epithelia was associated with high-level ceramide synthase (dihydroceramide synthase) activity. Longevity assurance homolog 5 (LASS5) was the predominant ceramide synthase isoform detected in lung epithelia, whereas relatively lower level expression was detected for the other five mammalian homologs. Pulmonary LASS5 was developmentally regulated, but its expression was spatially and gender nonspecific. Exogenously expressed LASS5 in lung epithelia was membrane-associated, triggering increased ceramide synthesis, whereas knockdown studies using fumonisin B1 or LASS5 small, interfering RNA reduced ceramide synthase activity by 78% or 45%, respectively. Overexpression of LASS5 also reduced PtdCho synthesis, but maximal inhibition was achieved when LASS5 was coexpressed with a plasmid encoding a neutral sphingomyelinase involved in SM hydrolysis. These results demonstrate that LASS5 is the major ceramide synthase gene product involved in sphingolipid production that may also regulate PtdCho metabolism in pulmonary epithelia.  相似文献   

10.
Ceramides are vital components of the water barrier in mammalian skin. Epidermis-specific, a major ceramide portion contains omega-hydroxy very long chain fatty acids (C30-C36). These omega-hydroxy ceramides (Cers) are found in the extracellular lamellae of the stratum corneum either as linoleic acyl esters or protein bound. Glucosylceramide is the major glycosphingolipid of the epidermis. Synthesized from ceramide and UDP-glucose, it is thought to be itself an intracellular precursor and carrier for extracellular omega-hydroxy ceramides. To investigate whether GlcCer is an obligatory intermediate in ceramide metabolism to maintain epidermal barrier function, a mouse with an epidermis-specific glucosylceramide synthase (Ugcg) deficiency has been generated. Four days after birth animals devoid of GlcCer synthesis in keratinocytes showed a pronounced desquamation of the stratum corneum and extreme transepidermal water loss leading to death. The stratum corneum appeared as a thick unstructured mass. Lamellar bodies of the stratum granulosum did not display the usual ordered inner structure and were often irregularly arranged. Although the total amount of epidermal protein-bound ceramides remained unchanged, epidermal-free omega-hydroxy ceramides increased 4-fold and omega-hydroxy sphingomyelins, almost not detectable in wild type epidermis, emerged in quantities comparable with lost GlcCer. We conclude that the transient formation of GlcCer is vital for a regular arrangement of lipids and proteins in lamellar bodies and for the maintenance of the epidermal barrier.  相似文献   

11.
Intracellular movements of ceramide are strongly limited by its hydrophobic nature, and the mechanisms involved in ceramide transport can represent a crucial aspect of sphingolipid metabolism and signaling. The recent identification of the ceramide specific carrier protein CERT has revealed a novel pathway for the delivery of ceramide to the Golgi apparatus for sphingomyelin biosynthesis. In this study we investigated the metabolic and functional role of CERT in C6 glioma cells. These cells were found to constitutively express CERT, the protein being mainly associated with the cytosolic fraction. Metabolic experiments performed with different radioactive metabolic precursors of sphingolipids demonstrated that the down regulation of CERT by RNAi technology resulted in a significant but not complete reduction of ceramide metabolism to sphingomyelin, without affecting its utilization for glycosphingolipid biosynthesis. Since nitric oxide is an inhibitor of ceramide ER-to-Golgi traffic and metabolism in C6 glioma cells, we evaluated the possibility that the CERT-mediated transport of ceramide might represent a target for nitric oxide. The data obtained demonstrate that CERT down regulation does not affect the inhibitory activity of nitric oxide on Cer metabolism, and the effects of nitric oxide and CERT silencing on ceramide utilization were additive. These results strongly suggest that a CERT-mediated and a CERT-independent, nitric oxide-sensitive Cer transport coexist in C6 glioma cells and can separately contribute to the control of sphingolipid metabolism and Cer levels in these cells.  相似文献   

12.
Diabetes is considered a major public health problem affecting millions of individuals worldwide. Remarkably, scientific reports regarding salivary glands sphingolipid metabolism in diabetes are virtually non‐existent. This is odd given the well‐established link between the both in other tissues (e.g., skeletal muscles, liver) and the key role of these glands in oral health preservation. The aim of this paper is to examine sphingolipids metabolism in the salivary glands in (pre)diabetes (evoked by high fat diet feeding or streptozotocin). Wistar rats were allocated into three groups: control, HFD‐, or STZ‐diabetes. The content of major sphingolipid classes in the parotid (PSG) and submandibular (SMSG) glands was assessed via chromatography. Additionally, Western blot analyses were employed for the evaluation of key sphingolipid signaling pathway enzyme levels. No changes in ceramide content in the PSG were found, whereas an increase in ceramide concentration for SMSG of the STZ group was observed. This was accompanied by an elevation in SPT1 level. Probably also sphingomyelin hydrolysis was increased in the SMSG of the STZ‐diabetic rats, since we observed a significant drop in the amount of SM. PSG and SMSG respond differently to (pre)diabetes, with clearer pattern presented by the later gland. An activation of sphingomyelin signaling pathway was observed in the course of STZ‐diabetes, that is, metabolic condition with rapid onset/progression. Whereas, chronic HFD lead to an inhibition of sphingomyelin signaling pathway in the salivary glands (manifested in an inhibition of ceramide de novo synthesis and accumulation of S1P).  相似文献   

13.
Sphingolipids are essential components of eukaryotic membranes, and many unicellular eukaryotes, including kinetoplastid protozoa, are thought to synthesize exclusively inositol phosphorylceramide (IPC). Here we characterize sphingolipids from Trypanosoma brucei, and a trypanosome sphingolipid synthase gene family (TbSLS1-4) that is orthologous to Leishmania IPC synthase. Procyclic trypanosomes contain IPC, but also sphingomyelin, while surprisingly bloodstream-stage parasites contain sphingomyelin and ethanolamine phosphorylceramide (EPC), but no detectable IPC. In vivo fluorescent ceramide labelling confirmed stage-specific biosynthesis of both sphingomyelin and IPC. Expression of TbSLS4 in Leishmania resulted in production of sphingomyelin and EPC suggesting that the TbSLS gene family has bi-functional synthase activity. RNAi silencing of TbSLS1-4 in bloodstream trypanosomes led to rapid growth arrest and eventual cell death. Ceramide levels were increased more than threefold by silencing suggesting a toxic downstream effect mediated by this potent intracellular messenger. Topology predictions support a revised six-transmembrane domain model for the kinetoplastid sphingolipid synthases consistent with the proposed mammalian sphingomyelin synthase structure. This work reveals novel diversity and regulation in sphingolipid metabolism in this important group of human parasites.  相似文献   

14.
Sphingolipids have been implicated as key mediators of cell-stress responses and effectors of mitochondrial function. To investigate potential mechanisms underlying mitochondrial dysfunction, an important contributor to diabetic cardiomyopathy, we examined alterations of cardiac sphingolipid metabolism in a mouse with streptozotocin-induced type 1 diabetes. Diabetes increased expression of desaturase 1, (dihydro)ceramide synthase (CerS)2, serine palmitoyl transferase 1, and the rate of ceramide formation by mitochondria-resident CerSs, indicating an activation of ceramide biosynthesis. However, the lack of an increase in mitochondrial ceramide suggests concomitant upregulation of ceramide-metabolizing pathways. Elevated levels of lactosylceramide, one of the initial products in the formation of glycosphingolipids were accompanied with decreased respiration and calcium retention capacity (CRC) in mitochondria from diabetic heart tissue. In baseline mitochondria, lactosylceramide potently suppressed state 3 respiration and decreased CRC, suggesting lactosylceramide as the primary sphingolipid responsible for mitochondrial defects in diabetic hearts. Moreover, knocking down the neutral ceramidase (NCDase) resulted in an increase in lactosylceramide level, suggesting a crosstalk between glucosylceramide synthase- and NCDase-mediated ceramide utilization pathways. These data suggest the glycosphingolipid pathway of ceramide metabolism as a promising target to correct mitochondrial abnormalities associated with type 1 diabetes.  相似文献   

15.
Ceramides (Cer) have been shown as lipotoxic inducers, which disturb numerous cell-signaling pathways, leading to metabolic disorders such as type 2 diabetes. In this study, we aimed to determine the role of de novo hepatic ceramide synthesis in energy and liver homeostasis in mice. We generated mice lacking serine palmitoyltransferase 2 (Sptlc2), the rate limiting enzyme of ceramide de novo synthesis, in liver under albumin promoter. Liver function, glucose homeostasis, bile acid (BA) metabolism and hepatic sphingolipids content were assessed using metabolic tests and LC-MS. Despite lower expression of hepatic Sptlc2, we observed an increased concentration of hepatic Cer, associated with a 10-fold increase in neutral sphingomyelinase 2 (nSMase2) expression, and a decreased sphingomyelin content in the liver. Sptlc2ΔLiv mice were protected against obesity induced by high fat diet and displayed a defect in lipid absorption. In addition, an important increase in tauro-muricholic acid was associated with a downregulation of the nuclear BA receptor FXR target genes. Sptlc2 deficiency also enhanced glucose tolerance and attenuated hepatic glucose production, while the latter effect was dampened in presence of nSMase2 inhibitor. Finally, Sptlc2 disruption promoted apoptosis, inflammation and progressive development of hepatic fibrosis, worsening with age. Our data suggest a compensatory mechanism to regulate hepatic ceramides content from sphingomyelin hydrolysis, with deleterious impact on liver homeostasis. In addition, our results show the involvement of hepatic sphingolipid modulation in BA metabolism and hepatic glucose production in an insulin-independent manner, which highlight the still under-researched role of ceramides in many metabolic functions.  相似文献   

16.
The phorbol ester tetradecanoylphorbol acetate (TPA) induces promyelocytic leukaemia cells to differentiate to macrophage-like cells in vitro. During the course of this differentiation, the cells adhere to the bottom of the culture dish, a process that requires an increase in cell surface glycosphingolipids (GSLs). We examined the cellular content of glucosylceramide (GlcCer), the simplest of the GSLs, in a TPA-treated leukaemia cell line, U937. Following TPA treatment, we observed a 3.5-fold increase in GlcCer levels that was caused by enhanced activity of ceramide glucosyltransferase (GlcT-1), which catalyses ceramide glycosylation. Furthermore, in TPA-treated cell GlcT-1 amounts were increased at both the mRNA and protein levels. We also found decreased activity of lactosylceramide synthase in TPA-treated cells, which could also contribute to the increase in cellular GlcCer content.  相似文献   

17.
The propensity of LDLs (low-density lipoproteins) for aggregation and/or oxidation has been linked to their sphingolipid content, specifically the levels of SM (sphingomyelin) and ceramide. To investigate this association in vivo, ldlr (LDL receptor)-null mice (ldlr-/-) were fed on a modified (atherogenic) diet containing saturated fats and cholesterol. The diet led to significantly elevated SM content in all serum lipoproteins. In contrast, ceramide increased only in the LDL particles. MS-based analyses of the lipid acyl chain composition revealed a marked elevation in C16:0 fatty acid in SM and ceramide, consistent with the prevalence of palmitic acid in the modified diet. The diet also led to increased activity of the S-SMase [secretory SMase (sphingomyelinase)], a protein that is generated by ASMase (acid SMase) and acts on serum LDL. An increased macrophage secretion seemed to be responsible for the elevated S-SMase activity. ASMase-deficient mice (asm-/-/ldlr-/-) lacked S-SMase activity and were protected from diet-induced elevation in LDL ceramide. LDL from asm-/-/ldlr-/- mice fed on the modified diet were less aggregated and oxidized than LDL from asm+/+/ldlr-/- mice. When tested in vitro, the propensity for aggregation was dependent on the SM level: only LDL from animals on modified diet that have high SM content aggregated when treated with recombinant S-SMase. In conclusion, LDL-SM content and S-SMase activity are up-regulated in mice fed on an atherogenic diet. S-SMase mediates diet-induced changes in LDL ceramide content and aggregation. S-SMase effectiveness in inducing aggregation is dependent on diet-induced enrichment of LDL with SM, possibly through increased hepatic synthesis.  相似文献   

18.
In previous studies we showed that the replication of Cryptococcus neoformans in the lung environment is controlled by the glucosylceramide (GlcCer) synthase gene (GCS1), which synthesizes the membrane sphingolipid GlcCer from the C9-methyl ceramide. Here, we studied the effect of the mutation of the sphingolipid C9 methyltransferase gene (SMT1), which adds a methyl group to position 9 of the sphingosine backbone of ceramide. The C. neoformans Δsmt1 mutant does not make C9-methyl ceramide and, thus, any methylated GlcCer. However, it accumulates demethylated ceramide and demethylated GlcCer. The Δsmt1 mutant loses more than 80% of its virulence compared with the wild type and the reconstituted strain. Interestingly, growth of C. neoformans Δsmt1 in the lung was decreased and C. neoformans cells were contained in lung granulomas, which significantly reduced the rate of their dissemination to the brain reducing the onset of meningoencephalitis. Thus, using fluorescent spectroscopy and atomic force microscopy we compared the wild type and Δsmt1 mutant and found that the altered membrane composition and GlcCer structure affects fungal membrane rigidity, suggesting that specific sphingolipid structures are required for proper fungal membrane organization and integrity. Therefore, we propose that the physical structure of the plasma membrane imparted by specific classes of sphingolipids represents a critical factor for the ability of the fungus to establish virulence.  相似文献   

19.
20.
In a recent study, we showed that in response to high fat feeding C57BL/6, 129X1, DBA/2 and FVB/N mice all developed glucose intolerance, while BALB/c mice displayed minimal deterioration in glucose tolerance and insulin action. Lipidomic analysis of livers across these five strains has revealed marked strain-specific differences in ceramide (Cer) and sphingomyelin (SM) species with high-fat feeding; with increases in C16-C22 (long-chain) and reductions in C > 22 (very long-chain) Cer and SM species observed in the four strains that developed HFD-induced glucose intolerance. Intriguingly, the opposite pattern was observed in sphingolipid species in BALB/c mice. These strain-specific changes in sphingolipid acylation closely correlated with ceramide synthase 2 (CerS2) protein content and activity, with reduced CerS2 levels/activity observed in glucose intolerant strains and increased content in BALB/c mice. Overexpression of CerS2 in primary mouse hepatocytes induced a specific elevation in very long-chain Cer, but despite the overall increase in ceramide abundance, there was a substantial improvement in insulin signal transduction, as well as decreased ER stress and gluconeogenic markers. Overall our findings suggest that very long-chain sphingolipid species exhibit a protective role against the development of glucose intolerance and hepatic insulin resistance.  相似文献   

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