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Transport of lipids by ABC proteins: Interactions and implications for cellular toxicity, viability and function
Authors:Irving LMH Aye  Jeffrey A Keelan
Institution:School of Women's and Infant's Health, University of Western Australia, King Edward Memorial Hospital, 374 Bagot Road, Subiaco, Perth, WA 6008, Australia
Abstract:Members of the ATP-binding cassette (ABC) family of membrane-bound transporters are involved in multiple aspects of transport and redistribution of various lipids and their conjugates. Most ABC transporters localize to the plasma membrane; some are associated with liquid-ordered cholesterol-/sphingolipid-rich microdomains, and to a lesser extent the membranes of the Golgi and endoplasmic reticulum. Hence, ABC transporters are well placed to regulate plasma membrane lipid composition and the efflux and redistribution of structural phospholipids and sphingolipids during periods of cellular stress and recovery. ABC transporters can also modulate cellular sensitivity to extrinsic pro-apoptotic signals through regulation of sphingomyelin-ceramide biosynthesis and metabolism. The functionality of ABC transporters is, in turn, modulated by the lipid content of the microdomains in which they reside. Cholesterol, a major membrane microdomain component, is not only a substrate of several ABC transporters, but also regulates ABC activity through its effects on microdomain structure. Several important bioactive lipid mediators and toxic lipid metabolites are also effluxed by ABC transporters. In this review, the complex interactions between ABC transporters and their lipid/sterol substrates will be discussed and analyzed in the context of their relevance to cellular function, toxicity and apoptosis.
Keywords:ABC transporters  Phospholipids  Sphingolipids  Ceramide  Cholesterol  Apoptosis
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