4.6 Article

Ceramide kinase is required for a normal eicosanoid response and the subsequent orderly migration of fibroblasts

Journal

JOURNAL OF LIPID RESEARCH
Volume 55, Issue 7, Pages 1298-1309

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1194/jlr.M048207

Keywords

wound healing; ceramide-1-phosphate; lipidomics

Funding

  1. Veteran Administration VA Merit Award [BX001792]
  2. Veteran Administration Research Career Scientist Award
  3. National Institutes of Health [HL072925, CA154314, S10RR031535]
  4. US-Israel Binational Science Foundation Grants BSF [2011380, NH1C06-RR17393]
  5. National Institutes of Health National Cancer Institute Cancer Center Support Grant [P30 CA016059]
  6. National Research Service Award-T32 Post-Doctoral Fellowship in Wound Healing [GM008695]
  7. Career Development Award CDA1 from the Department of Veterans Affairs
  8. National Research Service Award-T31 Pre-Doctoral Fellowship in Functional Lipidomics in Cardiovascular and Respiratory Diseases [HL094290]
  9. Georgia Cancer Coalition Scholar Award

Ask authors/readers for more resources

In these studies, the role of ceramide-1-phosphate (C1P) in the wound-healing process was investigated. Specifically, fibroblasts isolated from mice with the known anabolic enzyme for C1P, ceramide kinase (CERK), ablated (CERK-/- mice) and their wild-type littermates (CERK+/+) were subjected to in vitro wound-healing assays. Simulation of mechanical trauma of a wound by scratching a monolayer of fibroblasts from CERK+/+ mice demonstrated steadily increasing levels of arachidonic acid in a time-dependent manner in stark contrast to CERK-/- fibroblasts. This observed difference was reflected in scratch-induced eicosanoid levels. Similar, but somewhat less intense, changes were observed in a more complex system utilizing skin biopsies obtained from CERK-null mice. Importantly, C1P levels increased during the early stages of human wound healing correlating with the transition from the inflammatory stage to the peak of the fibroplasia stage (e. g., proliferation and migration of fibroblasts). Finally, the loss of proper eicosanoid response translated into an abnormal migration pattern for the fibroblasts isolated from CERK-/-. As the proper migration of fibroblasts is one of the necessary steps of wound healing, these studies demonstrate a novel requirement for the CERK-derived C1P in the proper healing response of wounds.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available