| Literature DB >> 26491702 |
Valeria Manganelli1, Antonella Capozzi1, Serena Recalchi1, Michele Signore2, Vincenzo Mattei3, Tina Garofalo1, Roberta Misasi1, Mauro Degli Esposti4, Maurizio Sorice1.
Abstract
Apoptosis has been reported to induce changes in the remodelling of membrane lipids; after death receptor engagement, specific changes of lipid composition occur not only at the plasma membrane, but also in intracellular membranes. This paper focuses on one important aspect of apoptotic changes in cellular lipids, namely, the redistribution of the mitochondria-specific phospholipid, cardiolipin (CL). CL predominantly resides in the inner mitochondrial membrane, even if the rapid remodelling of its acyl chains and the subsequent degradation occur in other membrane organelles. After death receptor stimulation, CL appears to concentrate into mitochondrial "raft-like" microdomains at contact sites between inner and outer mitochondrial membranes, leading to local oligomerization of proapoptotic proteins, including Bid. Clustering of Bid in CL-enriched contacts sites is interconnected with pathways of CL remodelling that intersect membrane traffic routes dependent upon actin. In addition, CL association with cytoskeleton protein vimentin was observed. Such novel association also indicated that CL molecules may be expressed at the cell surface following apoptotic stimuli. This observation adds a novel implication of biomedical relevance. The association of CL with vimentin at the cell surface may represent a "new" target antigen in the context of the apoptotic origin of anti-vimentin/CL autoantibodies in Antiphospholipid Syndrome.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26491702 PMCID: PMC4603604 DOI: 10.1155/2015/847985
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol Res ISSN: 2314-7156 Impact factor: 4.818
Figure 1Cardiolipin-mitochondria association following apoptotic triggering. T cells, untreated or treated with anti-CD95/Fas for 20 min, were stained with MCL-BODIPY, a green fluorescent analogue of CL [30, 31], and then with 50 nM Mitotracker red. Projected images from 33 z-sections of 0.2 nm, obtained after 10 cycles of deconvolution, were acquired by using a state-of-the-art Deltavision RT system.
Figure 2Schematic drawing depicting the intracellular traffic of cardiolipin and its metabolites following apoptotic triggering.