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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

Identification of small subunits of mammalian serine palmitoyltransferase that confer distinct acyl-CoA substrate specificities

Gongshe Han; Sita D. Gupta; Kenneth Gable; Somashekarappa Niranjanakumari; Prasun Moitra; Florian Eichler; Robert H. Brown; Jeffrey M. Harmon; Teresa M. Dunn

Serine palmitoyltransferase (SPT) catalyzes the first committed step in sphingolipid biosynthesis. In yeast, SPT is composed of a heterodimer of 2 highly-related subunits, Lcb1p and Lcb2p, and a third subunit, Tsc3p, which increases enzyme activity markedly and is required for growth at elevated temperatures. Higher eukaryotic orthologs of Lcb1p and Lcb2p have been identified, but SPT activity is not highly correlated with coexpression of these subunits and no ortholog of Tsc3p has been identified. Here, we report the discovery of 2 proteins, ssSPTa and ssSPTb, which despite sharing no homology with Tsc3p, each substantially enhance the activity of mammalian SPT expressed in either yeast or mammalian cells and therefore define an evolutionarily conserved family of low molecular weight proteins that confer full enzyme activity. The 2 ssSPT isoforms share a conserved hydrophobic central domain predicted to reside in the membrane, and each interacts with both hLCB1 and hLCB2 as assessed by positive split ubiquitin 2-hybrid analysis. The presence of these small subunits, along with 2 hLCB2 isofoms, suggests that there are 4 distinct human SPT isozymes. When each SPT isozyme was expressed in either yeast or CHO LyB cells lacking endogenous SPT activity, characterization of their in vitro enzymatic activities, and long-chain base (LCB) profiling revealed differences in acyl-CoA preference that offer a potential explanation for the observed diversity of LCB seen in mammalian cells.


The Plant Cell | 2011

Sphingolipids in the Root Play an Important Role in Regulating the Leaf Ionome in Arabidopsis thaliana

Dai-Yin Chao; Kenneth Gable; Ming Chen; Ivan Baxter; Charles R. Dietrich; Edgar B. Cahoon; Mary Lou Guerinot; Brett Lahner; Shiyou Lü; Jonathan E. Markham; Joe Morrissey; Gongshe Han; Sita D. Gupta; Jeffrey M. Harmon; Jan G. Jaworski; Teresa M. Dunn; David E. Salt

Sphingolipids are a diverse group of essential membrane lipids thought to play important roles in both membrane function and cellular signaling. By identifying an Arabidopsis thaliana mutant lacking 3-ketodihydrosphinganine reductase, a critical enzyme in sphingolipid biosynthesis, this work uncovers a connection between sphingolipid metabolism in roots and whole-plant mineral ion homeostasis. Sphingolipid synthesis is initiated by condensation of Ser with palmitoyl-CoA producing 3-ketodihydrosphinganine (3-KDS), which is reduced by a 3-KDS reductase to dihydrosphinganine. Ser palmitoyltransferase is essential for plant viability. Arabidopsis thaliana contains two genes (At3g06060/TSC10A and At5g19200/TSC10B) encoding proteins with significant similarity to the yeast 3-KDS reductase, Tsc10p. Heterologous expression in yeast of either Arabidopsis gene restored 3-KDS reductase activity to the yeast tsc10Δ mutant, confirming both as bona fide 3-KDS reductase genes. Consistent with sphingolipids having essential functions in plants, double mutant progeny lacking both genes were not recovered from crosses of single tsc10A and tsc10B mutants. Although the 3-KDS reductase genes are functionally redundant and ubiquitously expressed in Arabidopsis, 3-KDS reductase activity was reduced to 10% of wild-type levels in the loss-of-function tsc10a mutant, leading to an altered sphingolipid profile. This perturbation of sphingolipid biosynthesis in the Arabidopsis tsc10a mutant leads an altered leaf ionome, including increases in Na, K, and Rb and decreases in Mg, Ca, Fe, and Mo. Reciprocal grafting revealed that these changes in the leaf ionome are driven by the root and are associated with increases in root suberin and alterations in Fe homeostasis.


Methods in Enzymology | 1995

[49] Modification of bacterial lipoproteins

Krishnan Sankaran; Sita D. Gupta; Henry C. Wu

Publisher Summary This chapter summarizes current knowledge of the lipid modification enzymes in the pathway for the maturation of bacterial lipoproteins. Lipid modification of bacterial lipoproteins is catalyzed by three enzymes: diacylglyceryltransferase, signal peptidase II, and N -acyltransferase. Major phospholipids in the bacterial cell envelope serve as both the diacylglyceryl and acyl donors. Phosphatidylglycerol (PG) is the major diacylglyceryl donor for diacylglyceryltransferase, whereas N -acyltransferase does not exhibit a preference for any particular acyl donor. The ability of Tricine- sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel (SDS-PAGE) to separate the various intermediates in the biosynthesis of murein lipoprotein is exploited to develop assays for diacylglyceryl modification of prolipoprotein and for N -acylation of apolipoprotein. A simpler and quicker peptide-based assay for diacylglyceryltransferase is available and a similar one for N -acyltransferase is required for its purification. The availability of the genes for the enzymes should enable hyper expression and the development of simple purification protocols. The specificity toward PG in vivo is demonstrated in vitro by delipidating the inverted vesicles with aqueous acetone extraction followed by incubation of the delipidated enzyme preparations with individual phospholipid species.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

A Disease-causing Mutation in the Active Site of Serine Palmitoyltransferase Causes Catalytic Promiscuity

Kenneth Gable; Sita D. Gupta; Gongshe Han; Somashekarappa Niranjanakumari; Jeffrey M. Harmon; Teresa M. Dunn

The autosomal dominant peripheral sensory neuropathy HSAN1 results from mutations in the LCB1 subunit of serine palmitoyltransferase (SPT). Serum from patients and transgenic mice expressing a disease-causing mutation (C133W) contain elevated levels of 1-deoxysphinganine (1-deoxySa), which presumably arise from inappropriate condensation of alanine with palmitoyl-CoA. Mutant heterodimeric SPT is catalytically inactive. However, mutant heterotrimeric SPT has ∼10–20% of wild-type activity and supports growth of yeast cells lacking endogenous SPT. In addition, long chain base profiling revealed the synthesis of significantly more 1-deoxySa in yeast and mammalian cells expressing the heterotrimeric mutant enzyme than in cells expressing wild-type enzyme. Wild-type and mutant enzymes had similar affinities for serine. Surprisingly, the enzymes also had similar affinities for alanine, indicating that the major affect of the C133W mutation is to enhance activation of alanine for condensation with the acyl-CoA substrate. In vivo synthesis of 1-deoxySa by the mutant enzyme was proportional to the ratio of alanine to serine in the growth media, suggesting that this ratio can be used to modulate the relative synthesis of sphinganine and 1-deoxySa. By expressing SPT as a single-chain fusion protein to ensure stoichiometric expression of all three subunits, we showed that GADD153, a marker for endoplasmic reticulum stress, was significantly elevated in cells expressing mutant heterotrimers. GADD153 was also elevated in cells treated with 1-deoxySa. Taken together, these data indicate that the HSAN1 mutations perturb the active site of SPT resulting in a gain of function that is responsible for the HSAN1 phenotype.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2004

The Topology of the Lcb1p Subunit of Yeast Serine Palmitoyltransferase

Gongshe Han; Ken Gable; Lianying Yan; Mukil Natarajan; Jayasree Krishnamurthy; Sita D. Gupta; Anna Borovitskaya; Jeffrey M. Harmon; Teresa M. Dunn

The structural organization and topology of the Lcb1p subunit of yeast and mammalian serine palmitoyltransferases (SPT) were investigated. In the yeast protein, three membrane-spanning domains were identified by insertion of glycosylation and factor Xa cleavage sites at various positions. The first domain of the yeast protein, located between residues 50 and 84, was not required for the stability, membrane association, interaction with Lcb2p, or enzymatic activity. Deletion of the comparable domain of the mammalian protein SPTLC1 also had little effect on its function, demonstrating that this region is not required for membrane localization or heterodimerization with SPTLC2. The second and third membrane-spanning domains of yeast Lcb1p, located between residues 342 and 371 and residues 425 and 457, respectively, create a luminal loop of ∼60 residues. In contrast to the first membrane-spanning domain, the second and third membrane-spanning domains were both required for Lcb1p stability. In addition, mutations in the luminal loop destabilized the SPT heterodimer indicating that this region of the protein is important for SPT structure and function. Mutations in the extreme carboxyl-terminal region of Lcb1p also disrupted heterodimer formation. Taken together, these data suggest that in contrast to other members of the α-oxoamine synthases that are soluble homodimers, the Lcb1p and Lcb2p subunits of the SPT heterodimer may interact in the cytosol, as well as within the membrane and/or the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum.


Journal of Lipid Research | 2014

Autophagy regulates sphingolipid levels in the liver

Aikaterini Alexaki; Sita D. Gupta; Saurav Majumder; Mari Kono; Galina Tuymetova; Jeffrey M. Harmon; Teresa M. Dunn; Richard L. Proia

Sphingolipid levels are tightly regulated to maintain cellular homeostasis. During pathologic conditions such as in aging, inflammation, and metabolic and neurodegenerative diseases, levels of some sphingolipids, including the bioactive metabolite ceramide, are elevated. Sphingolipid metabolism has been linked to autophagy, a critical catabolic process in both normal cell function and disease; however, the in vivo relevance of the interaction is not well-understood. Here, we show that blocking autophagy in the liver by deletion of the Atg7 gene, which is essential for autophagosome formation, causes an increase in sphingolipid metabolites including ceramide. We also show that overexpression of serine palmitoyltransferase to elevate de novo sphingolipid biosynthesis induces autophagy in the liver. The results reveal autophagy as a process that limits excessive ceramide levels and that is induced by excessive elevation of de novo sphingolipid synthesis in the liver. Dysfunctional autophagy may be an underlying mechanism causing elevations in ceramide that may contribute to pathogenesis in diseases.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2013

Topological and Functional Characterization of the ssSPTs, Small Activating Subunits of Serine Palmitoyltransferase

Jeffrey M. Harmon; Dagmar Bacikova; Kenneth Gable; Sita D. Gupta; Gongshe Han; Nivedita Sengupta; Niranjanakumari Somashekarappa; Teresa M. Dunn

Background: The ssSPTs activate serine palmitoyltransferase and specify its acyl-CoA selectivity. Results: Both properties are contained within a 33-amino acid core that spans the membrane. Conclusion: A single amino acid difference between ssSPTa and ssSPTb is responsible for the acyl-CoA preference of heterotrimers containing each isoform. Significance: The ssSPTs are critical regulatory components of the rate-limiting enzyme in sphingolipid biosynthesis. The topological and functional organization of the two isoforms of the small subunits of human serine palmitoyltransferase (hssSPTs) that activate the catalytic hLCB1/hLCB2 heterodimer was investigated. A variety of experimental approaches placed the N termini of the ssSPTs in the cytosol, their C termini in the lumen, and showed that they contain a single transmembrane domain. Deletion analysis revealed that the ability to activate the heterodimer is contained in a conserved 33-amino acid core domain that has the same membrane topology as the full-length protein. In combination with analysis of isoform chimera and site-directed mutagenesis, a single amino acid residue in this core (Met25 in ssSPTa and Val25 in ssSPTb) was identified which confers specificity for palmitoyl- or stearoyl-CoA, respectively, in both yeast and mammalian cells. This same residue also determines which isoform is a better activator of a mutant heterodimer, hLCB1S331F/hLCB2a, which has increased basal SPT activity and decreased amino acid substrate selectivity. This suggests that the role of the ssSPTs is to increase SPT activity without compromising substrate specificity. In addition, the observation that the C-terminal domains of ssSPTa and ssSPTb, which are highly conserved within each subfamily but are the most divergent regions between isoform subfamilies, are not required for activation of the heterodimer or for acyl-CoA selectivity suggests that the ssSPTs have additional roles that remain to be discovered.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2015

Expression of the ORMDLS, modulators of serine palmitoyltransferase, is regulated by sphingolipids in mammalian cells.

Sita D. Gupta; Kenneth Gable; Aikaterini Alexaki; Panagiotis Chandris; Richard L. Proia; Teresa M. Dunn; Jeffrey M. Harmon

Background: In contrast to their yeast orthologues, the mechanism by which mammalian ORMDLs regulate serine palmitoyltransferase is not understood. Results: Overexpression of serine palmitoyltransferase in HEK293 cells results in increased long-chain base synthesis and an activity-dependent increase in ORMDL expression. Conclusion: A product of ceramide synthase mediates regulation of ORMDL expression and inhibition of serine palmitoyltransferase. Significance: Serine palmitoyltransferase activity indirectly regulates ORMDL expression. The relationship between serine palmitoyltransferase (SPT) activity and ORMDL regulation of sphingolipid biosynthesis was investigated in mammalian HEK293 cells. Each of the three human ORMDLs reduced the increase in long-chain base synthesis seen after overexpression of wild-type SPT or SPT containing the C133W mutation in hLCB1, which produces the non-catabolizable sphingoid base, 1-deoxySa. ORMDL-dependent repression of sphingoid base synthesis occurred whether SPT was expressed as individual subunits or as a heterotrimeric single-chain SPT fusion protein. Overexpression of the single-chain SPT fusion protein under the control of a tetracycline-inducible promoter in stably transfected cells resulted in increased endogenous ORMDL expression. This increase was not transcriptional; there was no significant increase in any of the ORMDL mRNAs. Increased ORMDL protein expression required SPT activity since overexpression of a catalytically inactive SPT with a mutation in hLCB2a had little effect. Significantly, increased ORMDL expression was also blocked by myriocin inhibition of SPT as well as fumonisin inhibition of the ceramide synthases, suggesting that increased expression is a response to a metabolic signal. Moreover, blocking ORMDL induction with fumonisin treatment resulted in significantly greater increases in in vivo SPT activity than was seen when ORMDLs were allowed to increase, demonstrating the physiological significance of this response.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Elevation of 20-carbon long chain bases due to a mutation in serine palmitoyltransferase small subunit b results in neurodegeneration

Lihong Zhao; Stefka D. Spassieva; Kenneth Gable; Sita D. Gupta; Lanying Shi; Jieping Wang; Jacek Bielawski; Wanda L. Hicks; Mark P. Krebs; Juergen K Naggert; Yusuf A. Hannun; Teresa M. Dunn; Patsy M. Nishina

Significance Sphingolipids are essential in eukaryotes and are particularly important in neural tissues. Generally, sphingolipids have an 18-carbon (C18) long chain base (LCB) backbone. However, low-abundance sphingolipids containing LCBs of 16 or 20 carbons have also been discovered. Yet their specific functions and biological significance is not known. This work demonstrates that elevation of 20-carbon LCBs and/or sphingolipids containing C20 LCBs has detrimental neurodegenerative effects in the brain and the retina, leading to perturbation of protein homeostasis. This work describes, for the first time to our knowledge, the specific pathological roles of a class of low-abundance LCBs in vivo. Sphingolipids typically have an 18-carbon (C18) sphingoid long chain base (LCB) backbone. Although sphingolipids with LCBs of other chain lengths have been identified, the functional significance of these low-abundance sphingolipids is unknown. The LCB chain length is determined by serine palmitoyltransferase (SPT) isoenzymes, which are trimeric proteins composed of two large subunits (SPTLC1 and SPTLC2 or SPTLC3) and a small subunit (SPTssa or SPTssb). Here we report the identification of an Sptssb mutation, Stellar (Stl), which increased the SPT affinity toward the C18 fatty acyl-CoA substrate by twofold and significantly elevated 20-carbon (C20) LCB production in the mutant mouse brain and eye, resulting in surprising neurodegenerative effects including aberrant membrane structures, accumulation of ubiquitinated proteins on membranes, and axon degeneration. Our work demonstrates that SPT small subunits play a major role in controlling SPT activity and substrate affinity, and in specifying sphingolipid LCB chain length in vivo. Moreover, our studies also suggest that excessive C20 LCBs or C20 LCB-containing sphingolipids impair protein homeostasis and neural functions.


Journal of Lipid Research | 2009

Tsc10p and FVT1: topologically distinct short-chain reductases required for long-chain base synthesis in yeast and mammals

Sita D. Gupta; Kenneth Gable; Gongshe Han; Anna Borovitskaya; Luke Selby; Teresa M. Dunn; Jeffrey M. Harmon

In yeast, Tsc10p catalyzes reduction of 3-ketosphinganine to dihydrosphingosine. In mammals, it has been proposed that this reaction is catalyzed by FVT1, which despite limited homology and a different predicted topology, can replace Tsc10p in yeast. Silencing of FVT1 revealed a direct correlation between FVT1 levels and reductase activity, showing that FVT1 is the principal 3-ketosphinganine reductase in mammalian cells. Localization and topology studies identified an N-terminal membrane-spanning domain in FVT1 (absent in Tsc10p) oriented to place it in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) lumen. In contrast, protease digestion studies showed that the N terminus of Tsc10p is cytoplasmic. Fusion of the N-terminal domain of FVT1 to green fluorescent protein directed the fusion protein to the ER, demonstrating that it is sufficient for targeting. Although both proteins have two predicted transmembrane domains C-terminal to a cytoplasmic catalytic domain, neither had an identifiable lumenal loop. Nevertheless, both Tsc10p and the residual fragment of FVT1 produced by removal of the N-terminal domain with factor Xa protease behave as integral membrane proteins. In addition to their topological differences, mutation of conserved catalytic residues had different effects on the activities of the two enzymes. Thus, while FVT1 can replace Tsc10p in yeast, there are substantial differences between the two enzymes that may be important for regulation of sphingolipid biosynthesis in higher eukaryotes.

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Teresa M. Dunn

Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences

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Jeffrey M. Harmon

Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences

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Kenneth Gable

Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences

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Gongshe Han

Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences

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Henry C. Wu

Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences

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Ishaiahu Shechter

Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences

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Aikaterini Alexaki

National Institutes of Health

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Anna Borovitskaya

Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences

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Dagmar Bacikova

Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences

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