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Lysophosphatidylcholine Acyltransferase 1 (LPCAT1) Specifically Interacts with Phospholipid Transfer Protein StarD10 to Facilitate Surfactant Phospholipid Trafficking in Alveolar Type II Cells. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Pulmonary surfactant, composed mainly of saturated phosphatidylcholine (SatPC) and proteins, helps maintain alveolar stability for gas exchange.
  • LPCAT1 enzyme is crucial for synthesizing SatPC by modifying unsaturated phosphatidylcholine and was thought to form a complex with specific transport proteins for its movement to storage lamellar bodies (LBs).
  • The study found that LPCAT1 directly interacts with StarD10, indicating that StarD10 plays a significant role in the transport of phospholipids to LBs, as its absence reduces this transport.

Article Abstract

Pulmonary surfactant, a mixture of proteins and phospholipids, plays an important role in facilitating gas exchange by maintaining alveolar stability. Saturated phosphatidylcholine (SatPC), the major component of surfactant, is synthesized both de novo and by the remodeling of unsaturated phosphatidylcholine (PC) by lyso-PC acyltransferase 1 (LPCAT1). After synthesis in the endoplasmic reticulum, SatPC is routed to lamellar bodies (LBs) for storage prior to secretion. The mechanism by which SatPC is transported to LB is not understood. The specificity of LPCAT1 for lyso-PC as an acyl acceptor suggests that formation of SatPC via LPCAT1 reacylation is a final step in SatPC synthesis prior to transport. We hypothesized that LPCAT1 forms a transient complex with SatPC and specific phospholipid transport protein(s) to initiate trafficking of SatPC from the endoplasmic reticulum to the LB. Herein we have assessed the ability of different StarD proteins to interact with LPCAT1. We found that LPCAT1 interacts with StarD10, that this interaction is direct, and that amino acids 79-271 of LPCAT1 and the steroidogenic acute regulatory protein-related lipid transfer (START) domain of START domain-containing protein 10 (StarD10) are sufficient for this interaction. The role of StarD10 in trafficking of phospholipid to LB was confirmed by the observation that knockdown of StarD10 significantly reduced transport of phospholipid to LB. LPCAT1 also interacted with one isoform of StarD7 but showed no interaction with StarD2/PC transfer protein.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4513115PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M115.666701DOI Listing

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