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The Role of Ceramide Metabolism and Signaling in the Regulation of Mitophagy and Cancer Therapy

期刊

CANCERS
卷 13, 期 10, 页码 -

出版社

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cancers13102475

关键词

cancer; ceramide; sphingolipids; mitophagy; apoptosis

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资金

  1. Training in Craniofacial and Oral Health Research (T-COHR) grant [T32DE017551]
  2. NIH [DE016572, CA203628, CA214461, AG069769]
  3. NIH (SC SmartState Endowment in Lipidomics and Drug Discovery)

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Sphingolipids are membrane-associated lipids that play crucial roles in regulating cell functions such as proliferation, migration, senescence, and death. In cancer cells, sphingolipids are involved in pathways relevant to cancer therapy, including invasion, metastasis, apoptosis, and lethal mitophagy. Notable sphingolipids like ceramide and sphingosine-1 phosphate have contrasting effects on cell survival and chemotherapeutic resistance, with ceramide inducing death and lethal mitophagy, and sphingosine-1 phosphate promoting survival. These lipids are characterized by a long-chain sphingosine backbone linked to a fatty acyl chain with variable length, and alterations in ceramide synthases and sphingolipid regulation of mitophagy have important implications for cancer therapy.
Simple Summary Sphingolipids are membrane-associated lipids that are involved in signal transduction pathways regulating cell death, growth, and migration. In cancer cells, sphingolipids regulate pathways relevant to cancer therapy, such as invasion, metastasis, apoptosis, and lethal mitophagy. Notable sphingolipids include ceramide, a sphingolipid that induces death and lethal mitophagy, and sphingosine-1 phosphate, a sphingolipid that induces survival and chemotherapeutic resistance. These sphingolipids participate in regulating the process of mitophagy, where cells encapsulate damaged mitochondria in double-membrane vesicles (called autophagosomes) for degradation. Lethal mitophagy is an anti-tumorigenic mechanism mediated by ceramide, where cells degrade many mitochondria until the cancer cell dies in an apoptosis-independent manner. Sphingolipids are bioactive lipids responsible for regulating diverse cellular functions such as proliferation, migration, senescence, and death. These lipids are characterized by a long-chain sphingosine backbone amide-linked to a fatty acyl chain with variable length. The length of the fatty acyl chain is determined by specific ceramide synthases, and this fatty acyl length also determines the sphingolipid's specialized functions within the cell. One function in particular, the regulation of the selective autophagy of mitochondria, or mitophagy, is closely regulated by ceramide, a key regulatory sphingolipid. Mitophagy alterations have important implications for cancer cell proliferation, response to chemotherapeutics, and mitophagy-mediated cell death. This review will focus on the alterations of ceramide synthases in cancer and sphingolipid regulation of lethal mitophagy, concerning cancer therapy.

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