Department of Biochemistry, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, South Carolina 29425, USA.
Adv Exp Med Biol. 2010;688:1-23. doi: 10.1007/978-1-4419-6741-1_1.
Sphingolipids constitute a class of lipids defined by their eighteen carbon amino-alcohol backbones which are synthesized in the ER from nonsphingolipid precursors. Modification of this basic structure is what gives rise to the vast family of sphingolipids that play significant roles in membrane biology and provide many bioactive metabolites that regulate cell function. Despite the diversity of structure and function of sphingolipids, their creation and destruction are governed by common synthetic and catabolic pathways. In this regard, sphingolipid metabolism can be imagined as an array of interconnected networks that diverge from a single common entry point and converge into a single common breakdown pathway. In their simplest forms, sphingosine, phytosphingosine and dihydrosphingosine serve as the backbones upon which further complexity is achieved. For example, phosphorylation of the C1 hydroxyl group yields the final breakdown products and/or the important signaling molecules sphingosine-1-phosphate, phytosphingosine-1-phosphate and dihydrosphingosine-1-phosphate, respectively. On the other hand, acylation of sphingosine, phytosphingosine, or dihydrosphingosine with one of several possible acyl CoA molecules through the action of distinct ceramide synthases produces the molecules defined as ceramide, phytoceramide, or dihydroceramide. Ceramide, due to the differing acyl CoAs that can be used to produce it, is technically a class of molecules rather than a single molecule and therefore may have different biological functions depending on the acyl chain it is composed of. At the apex of complexity is the group of lipids known as glycosphingolipids (GSL) which contain dozens of different sphingolipid species differing by both the order and type of sugar residues attached to their headgroups. Since these molecules are produced from ceramide precursors, they too may have differences in their acyl chain composition, revealing an additional layer of variation. The glycosphingolipids are divided broadly into two categories: glucosphingolipids and galactosphingolipids. The glucosphingolipids depend initially on the enzyme glucosylceramide synthase (GCS) which attaches glucose as the first residue to the C1 hydroxyl position. Galactosphingolipids, on the other hand, are generated from galactosylceramide synthase (GalCerS), an evolutionarily dissimilar enzyme from GCS. Glycosphingolipids are further divided based upon further modification by various glycosyltransferases which increases the potential variation in lipid species by several fold. Far more abundant are the sphingomyelin species which are produced in parallel with glycosphingolipids, however they are defined by a phosphocholine headgroup rather than the addition of sugar residues. Although sphingomyelin species all share a common headgroup, they too are produced from a variety of ceramide species and therefore can have differing acyl chains attached to their C-2 amino groups. Whether or not the differing acyl chain lengths in SMs dictate unique functions or important biophysical distinctions has not yet been established. Understanding the function of all the existing glycosphingolipids and sphingomyelin species will be a major undertaking in the future since the tools to study and measure these species are only beginning to be developed (see Fig 1 for an illustrated depiction of the various sphingolipid structures). The simple sphingolipids serve both as the precursors and the breakdown products of the more complex ones. Importantly, in recent decades, these simple sphingolipids have gained attention for having significant signaling and regulatory roles within cells. In addition, many tools have emerged to measure the levels of simple sphingolipids and therefore have become the focus of even more intense study in recent years. With this thought in mind, this chapter will pay tribute to the complex sphingolipids, but focus on the regulation of simple sphingolipid metabolism.
鞘脂类化合物是由其十八碳氨基醇骨架定义的一类脂质,这些骨架是从非鞘脂类前体物质在 ER 中合成的。这种基本结构的修饰产生了大量的鞘脂类化合物,它们在膜生物学中发挥着重要作用,并提供了许多调节细胞功能的生物活性代谢物。尽管鞘脂类化合物的结构和功能具有多样性,但它们的产生和破坏受共同的合成和分解代谢途径的控制。在这方面,可以将鞘脂代谢想象为一系列相互连接的网络,这些网络从单个共同的入口点发散,然后汇聚到单个共同的分解途径中。在最简单的形式中,鞘氨醇、植物鞘氨醇和二氢鞘氨醇作为进一步复杂化的骨架。例如,C1 羟基的磷酸化产生最终的分解产物和/或重要的信号分子鞘氨醇-1-磷酸、植物鞘氨醇-1-磷酸和二氢鞘氨醇-1-磷酸。另一方面,通过不同的神经酰胺合酶的作用,用几种可能的酰基辅酶 A 分子酰化鞘氨醇、植物鞘氨醇或二氢鞘氨醇,产生定义为神经酰胺、植物神经酰胺或二氢神经酰胺的分子。由于可以用来产生神经酰胺的酰基辅酶 A 不同,因此技术上它是一类分子而不是单个分子,因此根据其组成的酰链,它可能具有不同的生物学功能。在复杂性的顶点是被称为糖鞘脂类(GSL)的脂质组,它们包含数十种不同的鞘脂类物质,其区别在于连接到其头部基团的糖残基的顺序和类型。由于这些分子是从神经酰胺前体物质产生的,因此它们的酰链组成也可能不同,从而揭示了更多的变化。糖鞘脂类广泛分为两类:葡萄糖鞘脂类和半乳糖鞘脂类。葡萄糖鞘脂类最初依赖于葡萄糖基神经酰胺合酶(GCS),它将葡萄糖作为第一个残基连接到 C1 羟基位置。另一方面,半乳糖鞘脂类由半乳糖基神经酰胺合酶(GalCerS)产生,GalCerS 是一种与 GCS 在进化上不同的酶。糖鞘脂类进一步根据各种糖基转移酶的进一步修饰进行分类,这些酶增加了脂质种类的潜在变化倍数。更为丰富的是鞘氨醇种类,它们与糖鞘脂类平行产生,然而它们是由磷酸胆碱头部基团定义的,而不是添加糖残基。尽管鞘氨醇种类都共享一个共同的头部基团,但它们也是由多种神经酰胺种类产生的,因此它们的 C-2 氨基上可以连接不同的酰链。鞘氨醇中的不同酰链长度是否决定了独特的功能或重要的生物物理差异尚未确定。由于研究和测量这些物质的工具才刚刚开始开发,因此了解所有现有的糖鞘脂类和鞘氨醇种类的功能将是未来的一项重大任务(参见图 1 以了解各种鞘脂类结构的图示描述)。简单的鞘脂类既作为更复杂的鞘脂类的前体物质,也作为其分解产物。重要的是,在最近几十年,这些简单的鞘脂类因其在细胞内具有重要的信号和调节作用而受到关注。此外,已经出现了许多测量简单鞘脂类水平的工具,因此近年来它们成为了更深入研究的焦点。考虑到这一点,本章将向复杂的鞘脂类致敬,但重点是调节简单鞘脂类代谢。