4.7 Article

Seipin Facilitates Triglyceride Flow to Lipid Droplet and Counteracts Droplet Ripening via Endoplasmic Reticulum Contact

Journal

DEVELOPMENTAL CELL
Volume 50, Issue 4, Pages 478-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.devcel.2019.05.016

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Academy of Finland [282192, 307415, l312491, 1287975]
  2. LENDULET-BIOMAG [2018342]
  3. European Regional Development Funds [GINOP-2.3.2-15-2016-00006]
  4. QLife program
  5. Paris Sciences et Lettres installation grant
  6. ANR-NanoDrop project [ANR-17-CE11-0003]
  7. Mobil grant [ANR-18-CE11-0012-01]
  8. Finnish Medical Foundation
  9. Paulo Foundation
  10. Alfred Kordelin Foundation
  11. Maud Kuistila Foundation
  12. Biomedicum Helsinki Foundation
  13. Emil Aaltonen Foundation

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Seipin is an oligomeric integral endoplasmic reticulum (ER) protein involved in lipid droplet (LD) biogenesis. To study the role of seipin in LD formation, we relocalized it to the nuclear envelope and found that LDs formed at these new seipin-defined sites. The sites were characterized by uniform seipin-mediated ER-LD necks. At low seipin content, LDs only grew at seipin sites, and tiny, growth-incompetent LDs appeared in a Rab18-dependent manner. When seipin was removed from ER-LD contacts within 1 h, no lipid metabolic defects were observed, but LDs became heterogeneous in size. Studies in seipin-ablated cells and model membranes revealed that this heterogeneity arises via a biophysical ripening process, with triglycerides partitioning from smaller to larger LDs through droplet-bilayer contacts. These results suggest that seipin supports the formation of structurally uniform ER-LD contacts and facilitates the delivery of triglycerides from ER to LDs. This counteracts ripening-induced shrinkage of small LDs.

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