| Literature DB >> 32314087 |
Tore Skotland1, Simona Kavaliauskiene1, Kirsten Sandvig2,3.
Abstract
Several studies have demonstrated interactions between the two leaflets in membraneEntities:
Keywords: Cancer; Caveolae; Endocytosis; Leaflet interdigitation; Membrane domains; Molecular dynamic simulation
Year: 2020 PMID: 32314087 PMCID: PMC7311489 DOI: 10.1007/s10555-020-09872-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Metastasis Rev ISSN: 0167-7659 Impact factor: 9.264
Most common lipid classes in biological membranes
| Lipid class/abbreviation | R1 | R2 | Headgroup |
|---|---|---|---|
Phosphatidylcholine/PC LysoPC/LPCb Ether-linked PCc | FAa FA Alkyl, alkenyl | FA H FA | Choline |
| Phosphatidylserine/PS | FA | FA | Serine |
| Phosphatidylethanolamine/PE | FA | FA | Ethanolamine |
| Phosphatidylinositol/PI | FA | FA | Inositol |
| Phosphatidylglycerol/PG | FA | FA | Glycerol |
| Phosphatidic acid/PA | FA | FA | H |
| Ceramide/Cer | LCBd | FA | H |
| Sphingomyelin/SM | LCB | FA | Phosphocholine |
| Glycosphingolipids/GSLe | LCB | FA | Carbohydrates |
| Cholesterol/CHOL | Structure shown in Fig. | ||
aFA, fatty acyl chain. bLysolipids may be present in all classes listed in this table (except for cholesterol), but are for simplicity shown for PC only. cEther-linked lipids (see Fig. 1) may be present in all glycerophospholipid classes shown (PC, PS, PE, PI, PG, and PA), but are for simplicity shown for PC only. Ether lipids with an alkyl chain is abbreviated as exemplified for PC-O and ether lipids with an alkenyl chain is abbreviated PC-P (the alkenyl ether phospholipids are often called plamalogens). dLCB, long-chain base (see Fig. 1). eThe GSLs contain many different classes with a large variation in the carbohydrate structures (see [7] for an overview of these classes)
Fig. 1Illustrations of some lipid structures. Cholesterol is shown on the top followed by PC16:0/16:0, an example of a phospholipid with two saturated fatty acyl chains, which although much used in model membranes is not very common in biological samples. PS 18:0/18:1 is an example of a phospholipid with one saturated and one unsaturated fatty acyl chain, which is a very common combination, and this PS species is the most common PS species in many cells. Note that the unsaturated fatty acyl chains most often are found in the sn-2 position and that all double bonds in phospholipids are in a cis-configuration. PE-P 18:0/20:4 is an example of an ether lipid with an alkenyl chain, i.e., a plasmalogen. The ether lipids often contain polyunsaturated fatty acyl groups in the sn-2 position. Since all double bonds are in the cis-configuration, the polyunsaturated fatty acyl groups will “curl back” towards their head groups and not penetrate into the opposite leaflet even when containing as many carbon atoms as C20:4 (arachidonic acid) or C22:6 (DHA). The sphingolipid SM d18:1/24:1 is shown with the sphingosine part marked in pink. Note that the very long-chain N-amidated fatty acyl chain with 24 carbon atoms is so long that it can reach approximately halfway into the opposite leaflet. Glycosphingolipids contain very little of unsaturated fatty acyl chains, except for the 24:1 that is very common. The structures have been made by using the structure drawing tools available at Lipid Maps (https://lipidmaps.org/)
Fig. 2Schematic model of the lipid bilayer of exosomes, which have a lipid composition similar to lipid rafts, e.g., with a high content of SM and CHOL. The number of lipid molecules (excluding CHOL) shown in the outer (29) and inner (21) leaflet is close to the ratio of 1.36 for the outer and inner surface of exosomes with an outer diameter of 70 nm. The lipid composition of the membrane in this simplified illustration is based on the quantitative lipidomic data reported for 22 lipid classes of exosomes excreted from PC-3 cells [20], i.e.,16 SM, 13 PC, 12 PS, 6 PE, 3 PE-O (PE ethers), and 39 molecules of cholesterol (assuming a close to symmetric distribution of cholesterol between the two leaflets). In the right part of the membrane, a possible handshaking between the very-long-chain sphingolipids in the outer leaflet and PS 18:0/18:1 in the inner leaflet in the presence of cholesterol is illustrated. In the rest of the membrane, the lipids are distributed more or less evenly. Nine out of the 16 SM molecules shown contain a very-long-chain N-amidated fatty acyl chain in accordance with the data published. The figure is reproduced from [11]
Fig. 3Two EM pictures (a and b) are showing examples of caveolae in cardiac capillary endothelium. These images are reproduced from van Deurs et al. [55] with permission from Elsevier. The scale bar in b is 200 nm. The two drawings at the bottom (c and d) illustrate the possibility for transendothelial transport via caveolae without formation of free intracellular vesicles