1. Sphingolipid trafficking and protein sorting in epithelial cells
- Subjects
APICAL PLASMA-MEMBRANE ,LIPID MICRODOMAINS ,DARBY CANINE KIDNEY ,NONVESICULAR TRANSPORT ,SUBAPICAL COMPARTMENT ,POLARIZED MDCK CELLS ,HEPG2 CELLS ,INFLUENZA-VIRUS HEMAGGLUTININ ,cell polarity ,TRANS-GOLGI NETWORK ,trafficking ,lipids (amino acids, peptides, and proteins) ,sphingolipid ,SPHINGOMYELIN SYNTHESIS ,sorting - Abstract
Sphingolipids represent a minor, but highly dynamic subclass of lipids in all eukaryotic cells. They are involved in functions that range from structural protection to signal transduction and protein sorting, and participate in lipid raft assembly. In polarized epithelial cells, which display an asymmetric apical and basolateral membrane surface, rafts have been proposed as a sorting principle for apical resident proteins, following their biosynthesis. However, raft-mediated trafficking is ubiquitous in cells. Also, sphingolipids per se, which are strongly enriched in the apical domain, are subject to sorting in polarity development. Next to the trans Golgi network, a subapical compartment called SAC or common endosome appears instrumental in regulating these sorting events. (C) 2002 Published by Elsevier Science B.V. on behalf of the Federation of European Biochemical Societies.
- Published
- 2002