1. Different rates of flux through the biosynthetic pathway for long-chain versus very-long-chain sphingolipids
- Author
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Dimple Kauhanen, Iris D. Zelnik, Tamar Arazi, Anthony H. Futerman, Reijo Laaksonen, Katriina Aalto-Setälä, Leena E. Viiri, Giora Volpert, Tampere University, and Clinical Medicine
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Ceramide ,hexosylceramide ,QD415-436 ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Ceramides ,3121 Internal medicine ,fatty acids ,Biochemistry ,sphingomyelin ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Endocrinology ,Lipidomics ,ceramide ,Research Articles ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Sphingolipids ,Fatty acid metabolism ,turnover ,Fatty acid ,Cell Biology ,Metabolism ,Sphingolipid ,Sphingomyelins ,030104 developmental biology ,chemistry ,lipidomics ,1182 Biochemistry, cell and molecular biology ,lipids (amino acids, peptides, and proteins) ,Sphingomyelin ,Flux (metabolism) ,Half-Life - Abstract
The backbone of all sphingolipids (SLs) is a sphingoid long-chain base (LCB) to which a fatty acid is N-acylated. Considerable variability exists in the chain length and degree of saturation of both of these hydrophobic chains, and recent work has implicated ceramides with different LCBs and N-acyl chains in distinct biological processes; moreover, they may play different roles in disease states and possibly even act as prognostic markers. We now demonstrate that the halflife, or turnover rate, of ceramides containing diverse N-acyl chains is different. By means of a pulse-labeling protocol using stable-isotope, deuterated free fatty acids, and following their incorporation into ceramide and downstream SLs, we show that very-long-chain (VLC) ceramides containing C24:0 or C24:1 fatty acids turn over much more rapidly than longchain (LC) ceramides containing C16:0 or C18:0 fatty acids due to the more rapid metabolism of the former into VLC sphingomyelin and VLC hexosylceramide. In contrast, d16:1 and d18:1 ceramides show similar rates of turnover, indicating that the length of the sphingoid LCB does not influence the flux of ceramides through the biosynthetic pathway. Together, these data demonstrate that the N-acyl chain length of SLs may not only affect membrane biophysical properties but also influence the rate of metabolism of SLs so as to regulate their levels and perhaps their biological functions. publishedVersion
- Published
- 2020