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The Role of Lipids in Cellular Architecture and Function

All cells are delimited by membranes that protect the cell from the surrounding environment. In eukaryotic cells the same principle applies at subcellular level where membranes delimit functional cell organelles. The membrane structure, properties and function are defined in part by their lipid composition. Lipidomics is the large‐scale study of pathways and networks of cellular lipids in biological systems. It involves the identification and quantitation of cellular lipid molecular species and their interactions with other lipids, proteins, and other metabolites. Lipidomics has been greatly facilitated by recent advances in ionization technology and mass spectrometric capabilities which have simplified the sample processing prior to analysis, giving rise to shotgun lipidomics. Shotgun lipidomics is fast, highly sensitive, and can identify hundreds of lipids missed by other methods. However, Glycosphingolipids are an important lipid family that was out of the scope of shotgun lipidomics due to the lack of suitable analytical tools.
The aim of my thesis was two‐fold. The first aim was the establishment of Glycosphingolipid identification and quantification by shotgun approach. This allowed us to perform lipidomic studies with unprecedented comprehensiveness (~300 lipid species from 15 different lipid classes) from low sample amounts and with minimal sample processing. The second was the application of this technology in studies of the role of lipids in several processes like vesicular carrier formation, cell polarization, protein delivery to the plasma membrane and viral budding.
This work resulted in several findings. We found that there is sorting of sphingolipids and sterols into plasma membrane targeted vesicular carriers in budding yeast. When kidney cells change from a mesenchymal to an epithelial morphology there is a profound remodeling of their lipidome, with the synthesis of longer, more saturated, more hydroxylated, and more glycosylated sphingolipids. When these sphingolipids and sterols are depleted in epithelial cells, the apical transport in epithelial cells is impaired. These data strongly support the idea that lipid rafts play an important role in sorting and delivery of lipid and protein cargo to the plasma membrane. Finally, we found that the envelopes of vesicular stomatitis virus and Semliki forest virus assert little specificity in the incorporation of lipids from the plasma membrane. This weak specificity seems to be related to a combination of virus lipid bilayer asymmetry and curvature.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:DRESDEN/oai:qucosa.de:bsz:14-qucosa-70070
Date15 June 2011
CreatorsLopes Sampaio, Julio
ContributorsTechnische Universität Dresden, Fakultät Mathematik und Naturwissenschaften, Prof. Dr. Kai Simons, Prof. Dr. Francis Stewart, Prof. Dr. Kai Simons
PublisherSaechsische Landesbibliothek- Staats- und Universitaetsbibliothek Dresden
Source SetsHochschulschriftenserver (HSSS) der SLUB Dresden
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
Typedoc-type:doctoralThesis
Formatapplication/pdf

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