1. Long-lived Humans Have a Unique Plasma Sphingolipidome.
- Author
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Pradas I, Jové M, Huynh K, Ingles M, Borras C, Mota-Martorell N, Galo-Licona JD, Puig J, Viña J, Meikle PJ, and Pamplona R
- Subjects
- Aged, 80 and over, Animals, Humans, Lipidomics, Longevity, Sphingomyelins, Ceramides metabolism, Sphingolipids
- Abstract
A species-specific lipidome profile is an inherent feature linked to longevity in the animal kingdom. However, there is a lack of lipidomic studies on human longevity. Here, we use mass spectrometry-based lipidomics to detect and quantify 151 sphingolipid molecular species and use these to define a phenotype of healthy humans with exceptional life span. Our results demonstrate that this profile specifically comprises a higher content of complex glycosphingolipids (hexosylceramides and gangliosides), and lower levels of ceramide species from the de novo pathway, sphingomyelin and sulfatide; while for ceramide-derived signaling compounds, their content remains unchanged. Our findings suggest that structural glycosphingolipids may be more relevant to achieve the centenarian condition than signaling sphingolipids., (© The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Gerontological Society of America.)
- Published
- 2022
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