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1.
J Neurochem ; 166(3): 427-452, 2023 08.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37161795

Brain aging is a naturally occurring process resulting in the decline of cognitive functions and increased vulnerability to develop age-associated disorders. Fluctuation in lipid species is crucial for normal brain development and function. However, impaired lipid metabolism and changes in lipid composition in the brain have been increasingly recognized to play a crucial role in physiological aging, as well as in several neurodegenerative diseases. In the last decades, the role of sexual dimorphism in the vulnerability to develop age-related neurodegeneration has increased. However, further studies are warranted for detailed assessment of how age, sex, and additional non-biological factors may influence the lipid changes in brains. The aim of this work is to address the presence of sex differences in the brain lipid changes that occur along aging, and in the two most common age-related neurodegenerative disorders (Alzheimer's and Parkinson's diseases). We included the studies that assessed lipid-related alterations in the brain of both humans and experimental models. Additionally, we explored the influence of sex on lipid-lowering therapies. We conclude that sex exerts a notable effect on lipid modifications occurring with age and neurodegeneration, and in lipid-reducing interventions. Therefore, the application of sex as an experimental variable is strongly encouraged for future research in the field of precision medicine approach.


Alzheimer Disease , Neurochemistry , Humans , Female , Male , Alzheimer Disease/metabolism , Brain/metabolism , Aging/metabolism , Lipid Metabolism , Lipids
2.
Neurochem Res ; 48(6): 1783-1797, 2023 Jun.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36695984

Failure of the immune system to discriminate myelin components from foreign antigens plays a critical role in the pathophysiology of multiple sclerosis. In fact, the appearance of anti-myelin autoantibodies, targeting both proteins and glycolipids, is often responsible for functional alterations in myelin-producing cells in this disease. Nevertheless, some of these antibodies were reported to be beneficial for remyelination. Recombinant human IgM22 (rHIgM22) binds to myelin and to the surface of O4-positive oligodendrocytes, and promotes remyelination in mouse models of chronic demyelination. Interestingly, the identity of the antigen recognized by this antibody remains to be elucidated. The preferential binding of rHIgM22 to sulfatide-positive cells or tissues suggests that sulfatide might be part of the antigen pattern recognized by the antibody, however, cell populations lacking sulfatide expression are also responsive to rHIgM22. Thus, we assessed the binding of rHIgM22 in vitro to purified lipids and lipid extracts from various sources to identify the antigen(s) recognized by this antibody. Our results show that rHIgM22 is indeed able to bind both sulfatide and its deacylated form, whereas no significant binding for other myelin sphingolipids has been detected. Remarkably, binding of rHIgM22 to sulfatide in lipid monolayers can be positively or negatively regulated by the presence of other lipids. Moreover, rHIgM22 also binds to phosphatidylinositol, phosphatidylserine and phosphatidic acid, suggesting that not only sulfatide, but also other membrane lipids might play a role in the binding of rHIgM22 to oligodendrocytes and to other cell types not expressing sulfatide.


Remyelination , Animals , Humans , Mice , Immunoglobulin M , Myelin Sheath/metabolism , Oligodendroglia/metabolism , Sulfoglycosphingolipids/metabolism , Lipids/immunology
3.
4.
Int J Mol Sci ; 23(16)2022 Aug 21.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36012705

Globoid cell leukodystrophy (GLD), or Krabbe disease, is a neurodegenerative sphingolipidosis caused by genetic deficiency of lysosomal ß-galactosylceramidase (GALC), characterized by neuroinflammation and demyelination of the central (CNS) and peripheral nervous system. The acute phase protein long pentraxin-3 (PTX3) is a soluble pattern recognition receptor and a regulator of innate immunity. Growing evidence points to the involvement of PTX3 in neurodegeneration. However, the expression and role of PTX3 in the neurodegenerative/neuroinflammatory processes that characterize GLD remain unexplored. Here, immunohistochemical analysis of brain samples from Krabbe patients showed that macrophages and globoid cells are intensely immunoreactive for PTX3. Accordingly, Ptx3 expression increases throughout the course of the disease in the cerebrum, cerebellum, and spinal cord of GALC-deficient twitcher (Galctwi/twi) mice, an authentic animal model of GLD. This was paralleled by the upregulation of proinflammatory genes and M1-polarized macrophage/microglia markers and of the levels of PTX3 protein in CNS and plasma of twitcher animals. Crossing of Galctwi/twi mice with transgenic PTX3 overexpressing animals (hPTX3 mice) demonstrated that constitutive PTX3 overexpression reduced the severity of clinical signs and the upregulation of proinflammatory genes in the spinal cord of P35 hPTX3/Galctwi/twi mice when compared to Galctwi/twi littermates, leading to a limited increase of their life span. However, this occurred in the absence of a significant impact on the histopathological findings and on the accumulation of the neurotoxic metabolite psychosine when evaluated at this late time point of the disease. In conclusion, our results provide the first evidence that PTX3 is produced in the CNS of GALC-deficient Krabbe patients and twitcher mice. PTX3 may exert a protective role by reducing the neuroinflammatory response that occurs in the spinal cord of GALC-deficient animals.


C-Reactive Protein , Galactosylceramidase , Leukodystrophy, Globoid Cell , Nerve Tissue Proteins , Animals , C-Reactive Protein/genetics , Central Nervous System/metabolism , Disease Models, Animal , Galactosylceramidase/deficiency , Galactosylceramidase/genetics , Humans , Leukodystrophy, Globoid Cell/metabolism , Mice , Mice, Transgenic , Nerve Tissue Proteins/genetics , Psychosine , Up-Regulation
5.
J Mol Neurosci ; 72(7): 1482-1499, 2022 Jul.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35727525

Niemann-Pick type A disease (NPA) is a rare lysosomal storage disorder caused by mutations in the gene coding for the lysosomal enzyme acid sphingomyelinase (ASM). ASM deficiency leads to the consequent accumulation of its uncatabolized substrate, the sphingolipid sphingomyelin (SM), causing severe progressive brain disease. To study the effect of the aberrant lysosomal accumulation of SM on cell homeostasis, we loaded skin fibroblasts derived from a NPA patient with exogenous SM to mimic the levels of accumulation characteristic of the pathological neurons. In SM-loaded NPA fibroblasts, we found the blockage of the autophagy flux and the impairment of the mitochondrial compartment paralleled by the altered transcription of several genes, mainly belonging to the electron transport chain machinery and to the cholesterol biosynthesis pathway. In addition, SM loading induces the nuclear translocation of the transcription factor EB that promotes the lysosomal biogenesis and exocytosis. Interestingly, we obtained similar biochemical findings in the brain of the NPA mouse model lacking ASM (ASMKO mouse) at the neurodegenerative stage. Our work provides a new in vitro model to study NPA etiopathology and suggests the existence of a pathogenic lysosome-plasma membrane axis that with an impairment in the mitochondrial activity is responsible for the cell death.


Niemann-Pick Disease, Type A , Niemann-Pick Diseases , Animals , Apoptosis , Lysosomes/metabolism , Mice , Mitochondria/metabolism , Niemann-Pick Disease, Type A/genetics , Niemann-Pick Disease, Type A/pathology , Niemann-Pick Diseases/metabolism , Niemann-Pick Diseases/pathology , Sphingomyelins/metabolism , Sphingomyelins/pharmacology
6.
Adv Exp Med Biol ; 1325: 61-102, 2021.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34495530

Glycosphingolipids are amphiphilic plasma membrane components formed by a glycan linked to a specific lipid moiety. In this chapter we report on these compounds, on their role played in our cells to maintain the correct cell biology.In detail, we report on their structure, on their metabolic processes, on their interaction with proteins and from this, their property to modulate positively in health and negatively in disease, the cell signaling and cell biology.


Glycosphingolipids , Lipids , Cell Membrane , Signal Transduction
7.
Int J Mol Sci ; 22(12)2021 Jun 17.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34204326

Immunotherapy is now considered an innovative and strong strategy to beat metastatic, drug-resistant, or relapsing tumours. It is based on the manipulation of several mechanisms involved in the complex interplay between cancer cells and immune system that culminates in a form of immune-tolerance of tumour cells, favouring their expansion. Current immunotherapies are devoted enforcing the immune response against cancer cells and are represented by approaches employing vaccines, monoclonal antibodies, interleukins, checkpoint inhibitors, and chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-T cells. Despite the undoubted potency of these treatments in some malignancies, many issues are being investigated to amplify the potential of application and to avoid side effects. In this review, we discuss how sphingolipids are involved in interactions between cancer cells and the immune system and how knowledge in this topic could be employed to enhance the efficacy of different immunotherapy approaches. In particular, we explore the following aspects: how sphingolipids are pivotal components of plasma membranes and could modulate the functionality of surface receptors expressed also by immune cells and thus their functionality; how sphingolipids are related to the release of bioactive mediators, sphingosine 1-phosphate, and ceramide that could significantly affect lymphocyte egress and migration toward the tumour milieu, in addition regulating key pathways needed to activate immune cells; given the renowned capability of altering sphingolipid expression and metabolism shown by cancer cells, how it is possible to employ sphingolipids as antigen targets.


Immunomodulation , Neoplasms/immunology , Neoplasms/metabolism , Sphingolipids/metabolism , Animals , Antigens, Neoplasm/immunology , Cell Communication , Disease Management , Disease Susceptibility , Humans , Immune System/immunology , Immune System/metabolism , Immunotherapy/adverse effects , Immunotherapy/methods , Immunotherapy, Adoptive/adverse effects , Immunotherapy, Adoptive/methods , Lysophospholipids/metabolism , Neoplasms/therapy , Signal Transduction , Sphingolipids/chemistry , Sphingolipids/immunology , Sphingosine/analogs & derivatives , Sphingosine/metabolism , Treatment Outcome
8.
Cell Signal ; 80: 109929, 2021 04.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33493577

Spontaneous segregation of cholesterol and sphingolipids as a liquid-ordered phase leads to their clustering in selected membrane areas, the lipid rafts. These specialized membrane domains enriched in gangliosides, sphingomyelin, cholesterol and selected proteins involved in signal transduction, organize and determine the function of multiprotein complexes involved in several aspects of signal transduction, thus regulating cell homeostasis. Sphingosine 1-phosphate, an important biologically active mediator, is involved in several signal transduction processes regulating a plethora of cell functions and, not only several of its downstream effectors tend to localize in lipid rafts, some of the enzymes involved in its pathway, of receptors involved in its signalling and its transporters have been often found in these membrane microdomains. Considering this, in this review we address what is currently known regarding the relationship between sphingosine 1-phosphate metabolism and signalling and plasma membrane lipid rafts.


Lysophospholipids/metabolism , Membrane Microdomains/metabolism , Signal Transduction , Sphingosine/analogs & derivatives , Aldehyde-Lyases/metabolism , Caveolin 1/metabolism , Humans , Membrane Proteins/metabolism , Phosphoric Monoester Hydrolases/metabolism , Phosphotransferases (Alcohol Group Acceptor)/metabolism , Receptor Cross-Talk , Sphingosine/metabolism , Sphingosine-1-Phosphate Receptors/metabolism
9.
J Neurochem ; 156(4): 403-414, 2021 02.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33448358

Multiple sclerosis (MS) represents the most common demyelinating disease affecting the central nervous system (CNS) in adults as well as in children. Furthermore, in children, in addition to acquired diseases such as MS, genetically inherited diseases significantly contribute to the incidence of demyelinating disorders. Some genetic defects lead to sphingolipid alterations that are able to elicit neurological symptoms. Sphingolipids are essential for brain development, and their aberrant functionality may thus contribute to demyelinating diseases such as MS. In particular, sphingolipidoses caused by deficits of sphingolipid-metabolizing enzymes, are often associated with demyelination. Sphingolipids are not only structural molecules but also bioactive molecules involved in the regulation of cellular events such as development of the nervous system, myelination and maintenance of myelin stability. Changes in the sphingolipid metabolism deeply affect plasma membrane organization. Thus, changes in myelin sphingolipid composition might crucially contribute to the phenotype of diseases characterized by demyelinalization. Here, we review key features of several sphingolipids such as ceramide/dihydroceramide, sphingosine/dihydrosphingosine, glucosylceramide and, galactosylceramide which act in myelin formation during rat brain development and in human brain demyelination during the pathogenesis of MS, suggesting that this knowledge could be useful in identifying targets for possible therapies.


Demyelinating Diseases/metabolism , Demyelinating Diseases/pathology , Nerve Fibers, Myelinated/metabolism , Nerve Fibers, Myelinated/pathology , Sphingolipids/metabolism , Adult , Animals , Child , Humans , Myelin Sheath/metabolism , Myelin Sheath/pathology
10.
Methods Mol Biol ; 2187: 1-25, 2021.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32770498

Lipid rafts are membrane areas characterized by the clustering of selected membrane lipids, as the result of their phase separation forming a liquid-ordered phase floating in the lipid-disordered bulk membrane. van Meer and Simons hypothesized the existence of lipid rafts to explain the differential composition of the apical and basolateral domains of polarized epithelial cells and proposed that association of given proteins with lipid rafts along the traffic route might represent an important mechanism for protein sorting. However, great attention was paid to the lipid raft theory after Simons and Ikonen highlighted the enrichment of several proteins involved in signal transduction in "detergent-insoluble, glycolipid-enriched complexes," and postulated that lipid rafts might serve as hubs in regulating intracellular signaling. Most notably, the feature of detergent-insolubility was incorporated in the definition of lipid rafts used in 1997 by these authors. "Lipid rafts" and "detergent-resistant membranes" became almost synonymous after the publication, in 1992, of the seminal paper by Brown and Rose, describing the separation of a low-density, Triton X-100-insoluble fraction from epithelial cells, enriched in GSL and apical GPI-anchored proteins and depleted of basolateral membrane marker proteins. This paper provided a working definition of lipid rafts and a putative biochemical method for their separation. More than 2000 papers have been published using "the Triton method." Evidences obtained by the use of alternative biochemical methods for the isolation of lipid rafts and of methods enabling to analyze the dynamics of lipid rafts in intact cells highlighted the several limitations of the Triton X-100 method. On the other hand, the main findings obtained by this method have not been confuted, and the method is still widely used.In this chapter, we will discuss the most relevant methodological aspects related to the preparation of detergent-resistant membrane fractions, with a special focus on neural cells and tissues.


Membrane Lipids/chemistry , Membrane Microdomains/chemistry , Neurons/chemistry , Animals , Biomarkers/chemistry , Cattle , Cell Membrane/chemistry , Detergents/chemistry , Epithelial Cells/chemistry , Mice , Octoxynol/chemistry , Protein Transport/physiology , Rats , Signal Transduction/physiology , Solubility
11.
EMBO J ; 39(12): e101732, 2020 06 17.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32378734

Innate immune signaling via TLR4 plays critical roles in pathogenesis of metabolic disorders, but the contribution of different lipid species to metabolic disorders and inflammatory diseases is less clear. GM3 ganglioside in human serum is composed of a variety of fatty acids, including long-chain (LCFA) and very-long-chain (VLCFA). Analysis of circulating levels of human serum GM3 species from patients at different stages of insulin resistance and chronic inflammation reveals that levels of VLCFA-GM3 increase significantly in metabolic disorders, while LCFA-GM3 serum levels decrease. Specific GM3 species also correlates with disease symptoms. VLCFA-GM3 levels increase in the adipose tissue of obese mice, and this is blocked in TLR4-mutant mice. In cultured monocytes, GM3 by itself has no effect on TLR4 activation; however, VLCFA-GM3 synergistically and selectively enhances TLR4 activation by LPS/HMGB1, while LCFA-GM3 and unsaturated VLCFA-GM3 suppresses TLR4 activation. GM3 interacts with the extracellular region of TLR4/MD2 complex to modulate dimerization/oligomerization. Ligand-molecular docking analysis supports that VLCFA-GM3 and LCFA-GM3 act as agonist and antagonist of TLR4 activity, respectively, by differentially binding to the hydrophobic pocket of MD2. Our findings suggest that VLCFA-GM3 is a risk factor for TLR4-mediated disease progression.


G(M3) Ganglioside/metabolism , Monocytes/metabolism , Obesity/metabolism , Signal Transduction , Toll-Like Receptor 4/metabolism , Animals , G(M3) Ganglioside/chemistry , G(M3) Ganglioside/genetics , HEK293 Cells , Humans , Mice , Mice, Mutant Strains , Monocytes/chemistry , Obesity/genetics , Protein Multimerization , Toll-Like Receptor 4/chemistry , Toll-Like Receptor 4/genetics
12.
J Lipid Res ; 61(5): 636-654, 2020 05.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31871065

Lipid rafts are small, dynamic membrane areas characterized by the clustering of selected membrane lipids as the result of the spontaneous separation of glycolipids, sphingolipids, and cholesterol in a liquid-ordered phase. The exact dynamics underlying phase separation of membrane lipids in the complex biological membranes are still not fully understood. Nevertheless, alterations in the membrane lipid composition affect the lateral organization of molecules belonging to lipid rafts. Neural lipid rafts are found in brain cells, including neurons, astrocytes, and microglia, and are characterized by a high enrichment of specific lipids depending on the cell type. These lipid rafts seem to organize and determine the function of multiprotein complexes involved in several aspects of signal transduction, thus regulating the homeostasis of the brain. The progressive decline of brain performance along with physiological aging is at least in part associated with alterations in the composition and structure of neural lipid rafts. In addition, neurodegenerative conditions, such as lysosomal storage disorders, multiple sclerosis, and Parkinson's, Huntington's, and Alzheimer's diseases, are frequently characterized by dysregulated lipid metabolism, which in turn affects the structure of lipid rafts. Several events underlying the pathogenesis of these diseases appear to depend on the altered composition of lipid rafts. Thus, the structure and function of lipid rafts play a central role in the pathogenesis of many common neurodegenerative diseases.jlr;61/5/636/F1F1f1.


Aging/physiology , Membrane Microdomains/metabolism , Neurodegenerative Diseases/pathology , Aging/metabolism , Humans , Nervous System/pathology , Neurodegenerative Diseases/metabolism , Neurodegenerative Diseases/physiopathology
13.
Front Pharmacol ; 10: 807, 2019.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31427962

The central nervous system is characterized by a high content of sphingolipids and by a high diversity in terms of different structures. Stage- and cell-specific sphingolipid metabolism and expression are crucial for brain development and maintenance toward adult age. On the other hand, deep dysregulation of sphingolipid metabolism, leading to altered sphingolipid pattern, is associated with the majority of neurological and neurodegenerative diseases, even those totally lacking a common etiological background. Thus, sphingolipid metabolism has always been regarded as a promising pharmacological target for the treatment of brain disorders. However, any therapeutic hypothesis applied to complex amphipathic sphingolipids, components of cellular membranes, has so far failed probably because of the high regional complexity and specificity of the different biological roles of these structures. Simpler sphingosine-based lipids, including ceramide and sphingosine 1-phosphate, are important regulators of brain homeostasis, and, thanks to the relative simplicity of their metabolic network, they seem a feasible druggable target for the treatment of brain diseases. The enzymes involved in the control of the levels of bioactive sphingoids, as well as the receptors engaged by these molecules, have increasingly allured pharmacologists and clinicians, and eventually fingolimod, a functional antagonist of sphingosine 1-phosphate receptors with immunomodulatory properties, was approved for the therapy of relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis. Considering the importance of neuroinflammation in many other brain diseases, we would expect an extension of the use of such analogs for the treatment of other ailments in the future. Nevertheless, many aspects other than neuroinflammation are regulated by bioactive sphingoids in healthy brain and dysregulated in brain disease. In this review, we are addressing the multifaceted possibility to address the metabolism and biology of bioactive sphingosine 1-phosphate as novel targets for the development of therapeutic paradigms and the discovery of new drugs.

14.
J Neurochem ; 148(5): 600-611, 2019 03.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29959861

Ceramide, sphingomyelin, and glycosphingolipids (both neutral and acidic) are characterized by the presence in the lipid moiety of an aliphatic base known as sphingosine. Altogether, they are called sphingolipids and are particularly abundant in neuronal plasma membranes, where, via interactions with the other membrane lipids and membrane proteins, they play a specific role in modulating the cell signaling processes. The metabolic pathways determining the plasma membrane sphingolipid composition are thus the key point for functional changes of the cell properties. Unnatural changes of the neuronal properties are observed in sphingolipidoses, lysosomal storage diseases occurring when a lysosomal sphingolipid hydrolase is not working, leading to the accumulation of the substrate and to its distribution to all the cell membranes interacting with lysosomes. Moreover, secondary accumulation of sphingolipids is a common trait of other lysosomal storage diseases. This article is part of the Special Issue "Lysosomal Storage Disorders".


Lysosomal Storage Diseases/metabolism , Nerve Degeneration/metabolism , Sphingolipidoses/metabolism , Sphingolipids/metabolism , Animals , Humans , Lysosomal Storage Diseases/pathology , Lysosomes/metabolism , Lysosomes/pathology , Nerve Degeneration/pathology , Sphingolipidoses/pathology
15.
Neurochem Res ; 44(6): 1460-1474, 2019 Jun.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30569280

Remyelination promoting human IgMs effectively increase the number of myelinated axons in animal models of multiple sclerosis. Hence, they ultimately stimulate myelin production by oligodendrocytes (OLs); however, their exact mechanism of action remains to be elucidated, and in particular, it remains unclear whether they are directly targeting OLs, or their action is mediated by effects on other cell types. We assessed the effect of remyelination promoting antibody rHIgM22 on the proliferative response and on the ceramide/sphingosine 1-phosphate rheostat in mixed glial cell cultures (MGCs). rHIgM22 treatment caused a time-dependent increase in PDGFαR protein in MGCs. Forty-eight hours of treatment with rHIgM22 induced a dose-dependent proliferative response (evaluated as total cell number and as EdU(+) cell number) in MGCs. When the proliferation response of MGCs to rHIgM22 was analyzed as a function of the cell types, the most significant proliferative response was associated with GLAST(+) cells, i.e., astrocytes. In many cell types, the balance between different sphingolipid mediators (the "sphingolipid rheostat"), in particular ceramide and sphingosine 1-phosphate, is critical in determining the cell fate. rHIgM22 treatment in MGCs induced a moderate but significant inhibition of total acidic sphingomyelinase activity (measured in vitro on cell lysates), the main enzyme responsible for the stimulus-mediated production of ceramide, when treatment was performed in serum containing medium, but no significant differences were observed when antibody treatment was performed in the absence of serum. Moreover, rHIgM22 treatment, either in the presence or in absence of serum, had no effects on ceramide levels. On the other hand, rHIgM22 treatment for 24 h induced increased production and release of sphingosine 1-phosphate in the extracellular milieu of MGC. Release of sphingosine 1-phosphate upon rHIgM22 treatment was strongly reduced by a selective inhibitor of PDGFαR. Increased sphingosine 1-phosphate production does not seem to be mediated by regulation of the biosynthetic enzymes, sphingosine kinase 1 and 2, since protein levels of these enzymes and phosphorylation of sphingosine kinase 1 were unchanged upon rHIgM22 treatment. Instead, we observed a significant reduction in the levels of sphingosine 1-phosphate lyase 1, one of the key catabolic enzymes. Remarkably, rHIgM22 treatment under the same experimental conditions did not induce changes in the production and/or release of sphingosine 1-phosphate in pure astrocyte cultures. Taken together, these data suggest that rHIgM22 indirectly influences the proliferation of astrocytes in MGCs, by affecting the ceramide/sphingosine 1-phosphate balance. The specific cell population directly targeted by rHIgM22 remains to be identified, however our study unveils another aspect of the complexity of rHIgM22-induced remyelinating effect.


Astrocytes/metabolism , Cell Proliferation/physiology , Immunoglobulin M/immunology , Myelin Sheath/metabolism , Remyelination/drug effects , Sphingolipids/metabolism , Animals , Ceramides/metabolism , Humans , Lysophospholipids/metabolism , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Receptor, Platelet-Derived Growth Factor alpha/genetics , Receptor, Platelet-Derived Growth Factor alpha/metabolism , Recombinant Proteins/immunology , Sphingosine/analogs & derivatives , Sphingosine/metabolism , Up-Regulation/drug effects
17.
Glycoconj J ; 35(4): 397-402, 2018 08.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30145639

Sphingolipid metabolism is an intricate network of several interdependent and co-regulated pathways. In addition to the mainstream biosynthetic and catabolic pathways, several processes, even if less important in contributing to the final tissue sphingolipid composition from the quantitative point of view, might become relevant when sphingolipid metabolism is for any reason dysregulated and concur to the onset of neuronal pathologies. The main subcellular sites involved in the mainstream metabolic pathway are represented by the Golgi apparatus (for the biosynthesis) and by the lysosomes (for catabolism). On the other hand, the minor collateral pathways are associated with the plasma membrane and membranes of other organelles, and likely play important roles in the local regulation of membrane dynamics and contribute to maintain a perfect membrane organization functional to the physiology of the cell. In this review, we will consider few aspects of the sphingolipid metabolic pathway depending by the dynamic of the membranes that seems to become relevant in neurodegenerative diseases.


Cell Membrane/metabolism , Golgi Apparatus/metabolism , Lysosomes/metabolism , Nervous System Diseases/metabolism , Neurons/metabolism , Sphingolipids/metabolism , Animals , Cell Membrane/genetics , Cell Membrane/pathology , Golgi Apparatus/genetics , Golgi Apparatus/pathology , Humans , Lysosomes/genetics , Lysosomes/pathology , Nervous System Diseases/genetics , Nervous System Diseases/pathology , Neurons/pathology , Sphingolipids/genetics
18.
Methods Mol Biol ; 1804: 1-17, 2018.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29926402

In this chapter, we briefly describe the structural features of gangliosides, and focus on the peculiar chemicophysical features of gangliosides, an important class of membrane amphipathic lipids that represent an important driving force determining the organization and properties of cellular membranes.


Chemical Phenomena , Gangliosides/chemistry , Molecular Conformation
19.
NPJ Parkinsons Dis ; 4: 17, 2018.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29900402

During aging, neuronal organelles filled with neuromelanin (a dark-brown pigment) and lipid bodies accumulate in the brain, particularly in the substantia nigra, a region targeted in Parkinson's disease. We have investigated protein and lipid systems involved in the formation of these organelles and in the synthesis of the neuromelanin of human substantia nigra. Membrane and matrix proteins characteristic of lysosomes were found in neuromelanin-containing organelles at a lower number than in typical lysosomes, indicating a reduced enzymatic activity and likely impaired capacity for lysosomal and autophagosomal fusion. The presence of proteins involved in lipid transport may explain the accumulation of lipid bodies in the organelle and the lipid component in neuromelanin structure. The major lipids observed in lipid bodies of the organelle are dolichols with lower amounts of other lipids. Proteins of aggregation and degradation pathways were present, suggesting a role for accumulation by this organelle when the ubiquitin-proteasome system is inadequate. The presence of proteins associated with aging and storage diseases may reflect impaired autophagic degradation or impaired function of lysosomal enzymes. The identification of typical autophagy proteins and double membranes demonstrates the organelle's autophagic nature and indicates that it has engulfed neuromelanin precursors from the cytosol. Based on these data, it appears that the neuromelanin-containing organelle has a very slow turnover during the life of a neuron and represents an intracellular compartment of final destination for numerous molecules not degraded by other systems.

20.
Prog Mol Biol Transl Sci ; 156: 83-120, 2018.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29747825

Since the structure of GM1 was elucidated 55years ago, researchers have been attracted by the sialylated glycans of gangliosides. Gangliosides head groups, protruding toward the extracellular space, significantly contribute to the cell glycocalyx; and in certain cells, such as neurons, are major determinants of the features of the cell surface. Expression of glycosyltransferases involved in the de novo biosynthesis of gangliosides is tightly regulated along cell differentiation and activation, and is regarded as the main metabolic mechanism responsible for the acquisition of cell-specific ganglioside patterns. The resulting sialooligosaccharides are characterized by a high degree of geometrical complexity and by highly dynamic properties, which seem to be functional for complex interactions with other molecules sitting on the same cellular membrane (cis-interactions) or soluble molecules present in the extracellular environment, or molecules associated with the surface of other cells (trans-interactions). There is no doubt that the multifaceted biological functions of gangliosides are largely dependent on oligosaccharide-mediated molecular interactions. However, gangliosides are amphipathic membrane lipids, and their chemicophysical, aggregational, and, consequently, biological properties are dictated by the properties of the monomers as a whole, which are not merely dependent on the structures of their polar head groups. In this chapter, we would like to focus on the peculiar chemicophysical features of gangliosides (in particular, those of the nervous system), that represent an important driving force determining the organization and properties of cellular membranes, and to emphasize the causal connections between altered ganglioside-dependent membrane organization and relevant pathological conditions.


Cell Membrane/chemistry , Cell Membrane/metabolism , Gangliosides/metabolism , Membrane Microdomains/metabolism , Animals , Humans
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