ganglioside gm3
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2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (24) ◽  
pp. 13624
Author(s):  
Tong Rong ◽  
Bo Wei ◽  
Meiying Ao ◽  
Haonan Zhao ◽  
Yuanfang Li ◽  
...  

Recently, the atheroprotective role of endogenous GM3 and an atherogenesis-inhibiting effect of exogenous GM3 suggested a possibility of exogenous GM3 being recruited as an anti-atherosclerotic drug. This study seeks to endow exogenous GM3 with atherosclerotic targetability via reconstituted high-density lipoprotein (rHDL), an atherosclerotic targeting drug nanocarrier. Unloaded rHDL, rHDL loaded with exogenous GM3 at a low concentration (GM3L-rHDL), and rHDL carrying GM3 at a relatively high concentration (GM3H-rHDL) were prepared and characterized. The inhibitory effect of GM3-rHDL on lipid deposition in macrophages was confirmed, and GM3-rHDL did not affect the survival of red blood cells. In vivo experiments using ApoE−/− mice fed a high fat diet further confirmed the anti-atherosclerotic efficacy of exogenous GM3 and demonstrated that GM3 packed in HDL nanoparticles (GM3-rHDL) has an enhanced anti-atherosclerotic efficacy and a reduced effective dose of GM3. Then, the macrophage- and atherosclerotic plaque-targeting abilities of GM3-rHD, most likely via the interaction of ApoA-I on GM3-rHDL with its receptors (e.g., SR-B1) on cells, were certified via a microsphere-based method and an aortic fragment-based method, respectively. Moreover, we found that solution acidification enhanced GM3 release from GM3-rHDL nanoparticles, implying the pH-responsive GM3 release when GM3-rHDL enters the acidic atherosclerotic plaques from the neutral blood. The rHDL-mediated atherosclerotic targetability and pH-responsive GM3 release of GM3-rHDL enhanced the anti-atherosclerotic efficacy of exogenous GM3. The development of the GM3-rHDL nanoparticle may help with the application of exogenous GM3 as a clinical drug. Moreover, the data imply that the GM3-rHDL nanoparticle has the potential of being recruited as a drug nanocarrier with atherosclerotic targetability and enhanced anti-atherosclerotic efficacy.


Cells ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (12) ◽  
pp. 3298
Author(s):  
Philipp Selke ◽  
Kaya Bork ◽  
Tao Zhang ◽  
Manfred Wuhrer ◽  
Christian Strauss ◽  
...  

Meningiomas are the most common non-malignant intracranial tumors and prefer, like most tumors, anaerobic glycolysis for energy production (Warburg effect). This anaerobic glycolysis leads to an increased synthesis of the metabolite methylglyoxal (MGO) or glyoxal (GO), which is known to react with amino groups of proteins. This reaction is called glycation, thereby building advanced glycation end products (AGEs). In this study, we investigated the influence of glycation on sialylation in two meningioma cell lines, representing the WHO grade I (BEN-MEN-1) and the WHO grade III (IOMM-Lee). In the benign meningioma cell line, glycation led to differences in expression of sialyltransferases (ST3GAL1/2/3/5/6, ST6GAL1/2, ST6GALNAC2/6, and ST8SIA1/2), which are known to play a role in tumor progression. We could show that glycation of BEN-MEN-1 cells led to decreased expression of ST3Gal5. This resulted in decreased synthesis of the ganglioside GM3, the product of ST3Gal5. In the malignant meningioma cell line, we observed changes in expression of sialyltransferases (ST3GAL1/2/3, ST6GALNAC5, and ST8SIA1) after glycation, which correlates with less aggressive behavior.


2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (19) ◽  
pp. 10198
Author(s):  
Enrica Torretta ◽  
Micaela Garziano ◽  
Mariacristina Poliseno ◽  
Daniele Capitanio ◽  
Mara Biasin ◽  
...  

The reason behind the high inter-individual variability in response to SARS-CoV-2 infection and patient’s outcome is poorly understood. The present study targets the sphingolipid profile of twenty-four healthy controls and fifty-nine COVID-19 patients with different disease severity. Sera were analyzed by untargeted and targeted mass spectrometry and ELISA. Results indicated a progressive increase in dihydrosphingosine, dihydroceramides, ceramides, sphingosine, and a decrease in sphingosine-1-phosphate. These changes are associated with a serine palmitoyltransferase long chain base subunit 1 (SPTLC1) increase in relation to COVID-19 severity. Severe patients showed a decrease in sphingomyelins and a high level of acid sphingomyelinase (aSMase) that influences monosialodihexosyl ganglioside (GM3) C16:0 levels. Critical patients are characterized by high levels of dihydrosphingosine and dihydroceramide but not of glycosphingolipids. In severe and critical patients, unbalanced lipid metabolism induces lipid raft remodeling, leads to cell apoptosis and immunoescape, suggesting active sphingolipid participation in viral infection. Furthermore, results indicated that the sphingolipid and glycosphingolipid metabolic rewiring promoted by aSMase and GM3 is age-dependent but also characteristic of severe and critical patients influencing prognosis and increasing viral load. AUCs calculated from ROC curves indicated ceramides C16:0, C18:0, C24:1, sphingosine and SPTLC1 as putative biomarkers of disease evolution.


2021 ◽  
Vol 129 (Suppl_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Mateusz M Tomczyk ◽  
Arun Surendran ◽  
Bo Xiang ◽  
Prasoon Agarwal ◽  
Kyle G Cheung ◽  
...  

Doxorubicin (DOX) is a chemotherapeutic with dose-dependent cardiotoxic effects that limits its use in patients. Previously we showed that DOX decreases expression of the mitochondrial lysine deacetylase SIRT3 in the mouse heart. We hypothesize that DOX impairs cardiac function and energy production through reduced SIRT3 and altered mitochondrial acetylation. We further hypothesize that increased SIRT3 expression could attenuate DOX-induced cardiac dysfunction via alterations of protein acetylation to enzymes involved in lipid remodeling and metabolic processes. Mice expressing cardiac restricted full length M1-SIRT3 (mitochondrial localized), and short M3-SIRT3 (lacking localization signal) received saline or DOX injections of 8 mg/kg body weight for 4 weeks and compared to non-transgenic (Non-Tg) littermates. Transthoracic echocardiography was performed on all mice (n=10). Total cardiac lipids were isolated from DOX treated cardiac tissue by chloroform:methanol extraction and global lipid analysis was performed by QTRAP LC-MS/MS (n=6). Cardiac mitochondria were and an anti-acetylated lysine antibody was used to enrich for tryptic digested peptides containing Acetyl-K and analyzed by QTRAP LC-MS/MS (n=6). In non-Tg mice, DOX caused cardiac dysfunction and expression of M1-SIRT3 and M3-SIRT3 transgenes in the heart preserved left ventricular posterior wall thickness (P<0.05) and ejection fraction (P<0.05) in DOX treated mice. Triglycerides and phospholipids (PE, PI, PC) were decreased in DOX treated mouse hearts while phosphatidylserine (PS), sphingomyelin and ganglioside (GM3) lipid species were increased (p<0.05). A negative correlation between decreased cardiac output and increased GM3 24:1 (R=-0.62, P<0.05), PS 38:4 levels (R=-0.81, P<0.005) and SM 35:1 (R=-0.65, P<0.05) was identified. 36 acetylated peptides involved in metabolic processes, oxidative stress resistance and lipid remodeling (eg. IDH2, SOD2, HADHA, P<0.05) were significantly altered in DOX-treated mice. Increased SIRT3 expression in the heart rescues DOX-induced cardiac dysfunction. DOX-induced cardiac dysfunction involved alterations in cardiac lipids and acetylated proteins that could be rescued by increased SIRT3 expression in the heart.


2021 ◽  
Vol 569 ◽  
pp. 10-16
Author(s):  
Mira Suzuki ◽  
Masaki Nagane ◽  
Kazuhiro Kato ◽  
Akinori Yamauchi ◽  
Takuto Shimizu ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lumi Zhang ◽  
Lingxiao Li ◽  
Fanxia Meng ◽  
Jie Yu ◽  
Fangping He ◽  
...  

Background and Aim: Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the most common type of dementia and presents with metabolic perturbations early in the disease process. In order to explore biomarkers useful in predicting early AD, we compared serum metabolites among patients suffering different stages of AD.Methods: We recruited 107 participants including 23 healthy controls (HC), 21 amnestic mild cognitive impairment (aMCI), 24 non-amnestic mild cognitive impairment (naMCI) and 39 AD patients. Via liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry based serum untargeted lipidomics analysis, we compared differences in serum lipid metabolites among these patient groups and further elucidated biomarkers that differentiate aMCI from HC.Results: There were significant differences of serum lipid metabolites among the groups, and 20 metabolites were obtained under negative ion mode from HC and aMCI comparison. Notably, 16:3 cholesteryl ester, ganglioside GM3 (d18:1/9z-18:1) and neuromedin B were associated with cognition and increased the predictive effect of aMCI to 0.98 as revealed by random forest classifier. The prediction model composed of MoCA score, 16:3 cholesteryl ester and ganglioside GM3 (d18:1/9z-18:1) had good predictive performance for aMCI. Glycerophospholipid metabolism was a pathway common among HC/aMCI and aMCI/AD groups.Conclusion: This study provides preliminary evidence highlighting that 16:3 cholesteryl ester were useful for AD disease monitoring while ganglioside GM3 (d18:1/9z-18:1) and neuromedin B discriminated aMCI from HC, which can probably be applied in clinic for early predicting of AD.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michelle Dookwah ◽  
Shannon K Wagner ◽  
Mayumi Ishihara ◽  
Seok-ho Yu ◽  
Heidi Ulrichs ◽  
...  

GM3 Synthase Deficiency (GM3SD) is a neurodevelopmental disorder resulting from pathogenic variants in the ST3GAL5 gene, which encodes GM3 synthase, a glycosphingolipid (GSL)-specific sialyltransferase. This enzyme adds a single alpha3-linked sialic acid to the terminal galactose of lactosylceramide (LacCer) to produce the monosialylated ganglioside GM3. In turn, GM3 is extended by other glycosyltransferases to generate nearly all the complex gangliosides enriched in neural tissue. Pathogenic mechanisms that account for neural phenotypes associated with GM3SD are not known. To explore how loss of GM3 impacts neural-specific glycolipid glycosylation and cell signaling, GM3SD patient fibroblasts bearing one of two different ST3GAL5 variants were reprogrammed to induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) and then differentiated to neural crest cells (NCCs). GM3 and GM3-derived gangliosides were undetectable in iPSCs and NCCs from both variants, while LacCer precursor levels were elevated compared to wildtype (WT). NCCs of both variants synthesized elevated levels of neutral lacto- and globo-series, as well as minor alternatively sialylated, GSLs compared to WT. Shifts in ceramide profiles associated with iPSC and NCC GSLs were also detected in GM3SD variants. Altered GSL profiles in the GM3SD cells were accompanied by dynamic changes in the cell surface proteome, protein O-GlcNAcylation, and receptor tyrosine kinase abundance. GM3SD cells also exhibited increased apoptosis and sensitivity to erlotnib, an inhibitor of epidermal growth factor receptor signaling. Pharmacologic inhibition of O-GlcNAcase increased protein O-GlcNAcylation and significantly rescued baseline and erlotnib-induced apoptosis. Collectively, these findings indicate broad effects on cell signaling during differentiation of GM3SD patient-derived iPSCs to NCCs. Thus, human GM3SD cells provide a novel platform to investigate structure/function relationships that connect GSL diversity to cell signaling, cell survival, and neural differentiation.


2021 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Shuqiang Chen ◽  
Ming Wang ◽  
Li Li ◽  
Jun Wang ◽  
Xuhui Ma ◽  
...  

Abstract Background It has been previously demonstrated that cholesterol content and cholesterol/phospholipid ratio were significantly higher in asthenozoospermia and oligoasthenoteratozoospermia. The majority of published studies have investigated the fatty acid composition of phospholipids rather than lipids themselves. This study evaluated the lipid composition of asthenozoospermic and normozoospermic spermatozoa, and identified the exact lipid species that correlated with sperm motility. Methods A total of 12 infertile asthenozoospermia patients and 12 normozoospermia subjects with normal sperm motility values were tested for semen volume, sperm concentration, count, motility, vitality and morphology. High-coverage targeted lipidomics with 25 individual lipid classes was performed to analyze the sperm lipid components and establish the exact lipid species that correlated with sperm motility. Results A total of 25 individual lipid classes and 479 lipid molecular species were identified and quantified. Asthenozoospermic spermatozoa showed an increase in the level of four lipid classes, including Cho, PE, LPI and GM3. A total of 48 lipid molecular species were significantly altered between normozoospermic and asthenozoospermic spermatozoa. Furthermore, the levels of total GM3 and six GM3 molecular species, which were altered in normozoospermic spermatozoa versus asthenozoospermic spermatozoa, were inversely correlated with sperm progressive and total motility. Conclusions Several unique lipid classes and lipid molecular species were significantly altered between asthenozoospermic and normozoospermic spermatozoa, revealing new possibilities for further mechanistic pursuits and highlighting the development needs of culture medium formulations to improve sperm motility.


Cells ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (4) ◽  
pp. 849
Author(s):  
Tamara L. Paget ◽  
Emma J. Parkinson-Lawrence ◽  
Paul J. Trim ◽  
Chiara Autilio ◽  
Madhuriben H. Panchal ◽  
...  

Mucopolysaccharidosis IIIA (MPS IIIA) is a lysosomal storage disease with significant neurological and skeletal pathologies. Respiratory dysfunction is a secondary pathology contributing to mortality in MPS IIIA patients. Pulmonary surfactant is crucial to optimal lung function and has not been investigated in MPS IIIA. We measured heparan sulphate (HS), lipids and surfactant proteins (SP) in pulmonary tissue and bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF), and surfactant activity in healthy and diseased mice (20 weeks of age). Heparan sulphate, ganglioside GM3 and bis(monoacylglycero)phosphate (BMP) were increased in MPS IIIA lung tissue. There was an increase in HS and a decrease in BMP and cholesteryl esters (CE) in MPS IIIA BALF. Phospholipid composition remained unchanged, but BALF total phospholipids were reduced (49.70%) in MPS IIIA. There was a reduction in SP-A, -C and -D mRNA, SP-D protein in tissue and SP-A, -C and -D protein in BALF of MPS IIIA mice. Captive bubble surfactometry showed an increase in minimum and maximum surface tension and percent surface area compression, as well as a higher compressibility and hysteresis in MPS IIIA surfactant upon dynamic cycling. Collectively these biochemical and biophysical changes in alveolar surfactant are likely to be detrimental to lung function in MPS IIIA.


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