Literature DB >> 15611152

Ceramide down-regulates System A amino acid transport and protein synthesis in rat skeletal muscle cells.

Russell Hyde1, Eric Hajduch, Darren J Powell, Peter M Taylor, Harinder S Hundal.   

Abstract

Skeletal muscle is a major insulin target tissue and has a prominent role in the control of body amino acid economy, being the principal store of free and protein-bound amino acids and a dominant locus for amino acid metabolism. Interplay between diverse stimuli (e.g., hormonal/nutritional/mechanical) modulates muscle insulin action to serve physiological need through the action of factors such as intramuscular signaling molecules. Ceramide, a product of sphingolipid metabolism and cytokine signaling, has a potent contra-insulin action with respect to the transport and deposition of glucose in skeletal muscle, although ceramide effects on muscle amino acid turnover have not previously been documented. Here, membrane permeant C2-ceramide is shown to attenuate the basal and insulin-stimulated activity of the Na+-dependent System A amino acid transporter in rat muscle cells (L6 myotubes) by depletion of the plasma membrane abundance of SNAT2 (a System A isoform). Concomitant with transporter down-regulation, ceramide diminished both intramyocellular amino acid abundance and the phosphorylation of translation regulators lying downstream of mTOR. The physiological outcome of ceramide signaling in this instance is a marked reduction in cellular protein synthesis, a result that is likely to represent an important component of the processes leading to muscle wasting in catabolic conditions.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15611152     DOI: 10.1096/fj.04-2284fje

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  FASEB J        ISSN: 0892-6638            Impact factor:   5.191


  59 in total

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9.  Increased ceramide content and NFκB signaling may contribute to the attenuation of anabolic signaling after resistance exercise in aged males.

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10.  Inhibition of Lysosomal Function Mitigates Protective Mitophagy and Augments Ceramide Nanoliposome-Induced Cell Death in Head and Neck Squamous Cell Carcinoma.

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