Literature DB >> 21762071

Regulation of death and growth signals at the plasma membrane by sphingomyelin synthesis: implications for hematological malignancies.

Elodie Lafont1, Kazuyuki Kitatani, Toshiro Okazaki, Bruno Ségui.   

Abstract

Resistance to death receptor ligands (such as FasL and TRAIL) and anticancer treatments is a hallmark of cancer cells. Ceramide, a biologically active sphingolipid, antagonizes cell growth and promotes apoptosis and non-apoptotic forms of cell death. The intracellular levels of ceramide are highly regulated via complex metabolic pathways. Sphingomyelin synthases (SMS) 1 and 2 convert ceramide to sphingomyelin (SM), a ubiquitous phospholipid in mammals. A growing body of evidence in the literature indicates that SMSs likely modulate hematological cell growth and sensitivity to stress-induced apoptosis. On one hand, complete and sustained inhibition of SMS activity is likely to alter membrane composition and properties through membrane SM depletion, perturbing intracellular signaling pathways and leukemia cell growth and conferring partial resistance to death receptor ligands. On the other hand, different patents & reports point to anti-apoptotic functions for SMSs. In patients with chemoresistant leukemia, a decreased intracellular ceramide level was associated with a higher SMS activity. Thus, SMSs and cofactors may constitute original pharmacological targets to treat leukemia.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21762071     DOI: 10.2174/157489211796957801

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Recent Pat Anticancer Drug Discov        ISSN: 1574-8928            Impact factor:   4.169


  4 in total

Review 1.  Sphingolipid abnormalities in cancer multidrug resistance: Chicken or egg?

Authors:  Wing-Kee Lee; Richard N Kolesnick
Journal:  Cell Signal       Date:  2017-07-04       Impact factor: 4.315

2.  The janus face of lipids in human breast cancer: how polyunsaturated Fatty acids affect tumor cell hallmarks.

Authors:  Benoît Chénais; Vincent Blanckaert
Journal:  Int J Breast Cancer       Date:  2012-07-02

3.  Sphingomyelin synthase 2 promotes an aggressive breast cancer phenotype by disrupting the homoeostasis of ceramide and sphingomyelin.

Authors:  Kehong Zheng; Zetao Chen; Haizhan Feng; Ying Chen; Cheng Zhang; Jinlong Yu; Yunfeng Luo; Liang Zhao; Xiancheng Jiang; Fujun Shi
Journal:  Cell Death Dis       Date:  2019-02-15       Impact factor: 8.469

4.  The tricyclodecan-9-yl-xanthogenate D609 triggers ceramide increase and enhances FasL-induced caspase-dependent and -independent cell death in T lymphocytes.

Authors:  Delphine Milhas; Nathalie Andrieu-Abadie; Thierry Levade; Hervé Benoist; Bruno Ségui
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2012-07-16       Impact factor: 6.208

  4 in total

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