Cells actively metabolize exogenously administered N-hexanoylsphingosine (C6-Cer) to natural (i.e. long-chain) ceramide (LC-Cer) via the sphingosine (Sph) salvage pathway, namely via C6-Cer deacylation and Sph reacylation with a long-chain fatty acid. Based on the observation that the mycotoxin brefeldin A (BFA), a Golgi complex disassembler, impairs C6-Cer-evoked LC-Cer accumulation, it has been hypothesized that the integrity of the above-mentioned organelle might be necessary for C6-Cer processing via the salvage pathway and that BFA might block the phenomenon at the step short-chain ceramide deacylation. The present study shows that BFA indeed attenuates C6-Cer-evoked LC-Cer accumulation in human neurotumor CHP-100 cells: evidence is however provided that the phenomenon is not due to impaired synthesis of LC-Cer, but to its enhanced conversion to glucosylceramide. The possibility is discussed that this outcome might be a consequence of the BFA well-established property to induce the merging of the cis-Golgi region with endoplasmic reticulum, namely the compartments in which glucosylceramide synthase and ceramide synthases have been reported to reside.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11745-013-3858-3DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

salvage pathway
12
c6-cer-evoked lc-cer
8
lc-cer accumulation
8
brefeldin limits
4
limits n-hexanoylsphingosine-induced
4
n-hexanoylsphingosine-induced accumulation
4
accumulation natural
4
ceramide
4
natural ceramide
4
ceramide salvage
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!