| Literature DB >> 25997737 |
Kazuyuki Kitatani1,2, Makoto Taniguchi3, Toshiro Okazaki3,4.
Abstract
Sphingolipids such as ceramide, sphingosine-1-phosphate and sphingomyelin have been emerging as bioactive lipids since ceramide was reported to play a role in human leukemia HL-60 cell differentiation and death. Recently, it is well-known that ceramide acts as an inducer of cell death, that sphingomyelin works as a regulator for microdomain function of the cell membrane, and that sphingosine-1-phosphate plays a role in cell survival/proliferation. The lipids are metabolized by the specific enzymes, and each metabolite could be again returned to the original form by the reverse action of the different enzyme or after a long journey of many metabolizing/synthesizing pathways. In addition, the metabolites may serve as reciprocal bio-modulators like the rheostat between ceramide and sphingosine-1-phosphate. Therefore, the change of lipid amount in the cells, the subcellular localization and the downstream signal in a specific subcellular organelle should be clarified to understand the pathobiological significance of sphingolipids when extracellular stimulation induces a diverse of cell functions such as cell death, proliferation and migration. In this review, we focus on how sphingolipids and their metabolizing enzymes cooperatively exert their function in proliferation, migration, autophagy and death of hematopoetic cells, and discuss the way developing a novel therapeutic device through the regulation of sphingolipids for effectively inhibiting cell proliferation and inducing cell death in hematological malignancies such as leukemia, malignant lymphoma and multiple myeloma.Entities:
Keywords: ceramide; leukemia; lymphoma; sphingolipid; sphingomyelin
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25997737 PMCID: PMC4469906 DOI: 10.14348/molcells.2015.0118
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cells ISSN: 1016-8478 Impact factor: 5.034
Fig. 1.Sphingolipid metabolism and subcellular compartmentalization. A diverse sphingolipids are synthesized and degraded through complex metabolizing pathways in each intracellular compartment. For example, SM (colored by yellow) is synthesized in Golgi apparatus by SMS1 and SMS2, and in plasma membrane by SMS2, and resides in endosomes, lysosomes, mitochondria and nucleus. Each SM is suggested to play a role as a regulator of micro-organelles and a source of other bioactive sphingolipids.
SMS family
| Name | Developer | SMS1 | SMS2 | SMSr |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gene symbol (Locus) | Human | |||
|
| ||||
| Mouse | ||||
| Amino Acids | Human | 413 | 365 | 414 |
|
| ||||
| Mouse | 419 | 365 | 432 | |
| Localization | Golgi | Golgi, Plasma membrane (PM) | ER | |
| Expression (high) | Ubiquitous (islet, testis) | Ubiquitous (liver, kidney, intestine) | Ubiquitous (brain) | |
| Enzymatic effect | Substrate | Cer + PC | Cer + PC | Cer + PE |
Cer, Ceramide; CPE, Ceramide phosphoethanolamine; DAG, Diacylglycerol; PC, Phosphatidylcholine; PE, Phosphatidylethanolamine
SMase family
| Acid | Neutral | Alkaline | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Protein | L-aSMase(lysosome) | S-aSMase (secreted) | nSMase1 | nSMase2 | nSMase3 | MA-nSMase | alk-SMase | |
| Gene symbol (Locus) | Human | — | ||||||
|
| ||||||||
| Mouse | ||||||||
| Amino acids | Human | 629 | 423 | 655 | 866 | — | 458 | |
|
| ||||||||
| Mouse | 627 | 498 | 655 | 823 | 483 | 446 | ||
| Localization | Lysosome/Endosome PM | Extracellular | ER | Golgi PM | ER Golgi PM | Mitochondria | — | |
| Expression (High) | Ubiquitous | Ubiquitous (kidney) | Ubiquitous (brain, spleen) | Ubiquitous (muscle, heart) | Ubiquitous (testis, pancreas, brain) | Intestinal mucosa | ||
| Enzyme Substrate/product | SM/Cer | SM/Cer (in | SM/Cer | SM/Cer | SM/Cer | SM/Cer | ||
| Cation | no need Zn2+ | Zn2+ | Mg2+ | Mg2+ | Mg2+ | Mg2+·Mn2+ | Inhibition by Zn2+ | |
| Optimal pH | pH 5.0 | pH 7.5 | pH 7.5 | pH 7.5 | pH 7.5 | pH 9.0 | ||
Cer, Ceramide
CerS family
| CerS1 | CerS2 | CerS3 | CerS4 | CerS5 | CerS6 | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Other names | LASS1 | LASS2 | LASS3 | LASS4 | LASS5 | LASS6 | |
| UOG1 | TRH3 | T3I | TRH1 | TRH4 | |||
| Gene symbol (Locus) | Human | ||||||
|
| |||||||
| Mouse | |||||||
| Amino acids | Human | 239, 337, 350 | 380 | 383, 394 | 394 | 334, 392 | 384, 392 |
|
| |||||||
| Mouse | 350 | 380 | 419 | 393 | 414 | 384 | |
| Localization | ER | ||||||
| Expression (High) | Brain, testis skeletal muscle | Kidney, liver | Testis, skin | Ubiquitous:low (skin, heart, liver) | Ubiquitous: low | Ubiquitous: low | |
| Enzyme Substrate/product | Sph/Cer (salvage pathway) | dHSph/dHCer ( | |||||
| Acyl-chain length specificity | C18 | C20–C26 | C22–C26 | C18, C20 | C14, C16 | C14, C16 | |
| 2.5 ± 1.7 | 4.8 ± 0.4 | 1.7 ± 0.4 | 1.8 ± 0.4 | 1.8 ± 0.4 | 2.0 ± 0.6 | ||
Cer, Ceramide; dHCer, Dihydroceramide; dHSph, Dihydroshingosine; Sph, sphingosine
CDase family
| Acid | Neutral | Alkaline | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Protein | aCDase | nCDase | Alk-CDase1 | Alk-CDase2 | Alk-CDase3 | |
| Gene symbol (Locus) | Human | |||||
|
| ||||||
| Mouse | ||||||
| Amino acids | Human | 389, 411 | 745short,780long | 264 | 275 | 172, 230, 267 |
|
| ||||||
| Mouse | 394 | 756 | 273 | 219, 229, 275 | 267 | |
| Localization | Lysosome | PMlong Mitochondriashort | ER | Golgi | ER Golgi | |
| Expression (High) | Kidney, lung, placenta brain, lskeltal muscle (heart) | Ubiquitous (kidney, skeletal muscle, heart) | Ubiquitous (skin) | Pancreas, heart (placenta) | Ubiquitous (placenta) | |
| Enzyme Substrate/product | Cer/Sph | Cer/Sph | Cer/Sph | Cer/Sph | Cer/Sph | |
| Cation | Activated | — | None | Ca2+ | Ca2+ | Ca2+ |
| Inhibited | — | None | Zn2+, Cu2+, Mn2+ | None | Zn2+ | |
| Optimal pH | pH 4.5 | pH 7.5–8.5 | pH 8.5 | pH 9.0 | pH 9.5 | |
Cer, Ceramide; Sph, sphingosine