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A Mathematical Model for the Determination of Steady-State Cardiolipin Remodeling Mechanisms Using Lipidomic Data
- Source :
- PLoS ONE, PLoS ONE, Vol 6, Iss 6, p e21170 (2011)
- Publication Year :
- 2011
- Publisher :
- Public Library of Science (PLoS), 2011.
-
Abstract
- Technical advances in lipidomic analysis have generated tremendous amounts of quantitative lipid molecular species data, whose value has not been fully explored. We describe a novel computational method to infer mechanisms of de novo lipid synthesis and remodeling from lipidomic data. We focus on the mitochondrial-specific lipid cardiolipin (CL), a polyglycerol phospholipid with four acyl chains. The lengths and degree of unsaturation of these acyl chains vary across CL molecules, and regulation of these differences is important for mitochondrial energy metabolism. We developed a novel mathematical approach to determine mechanisms controlling the steady-state distribution of acyl chain combinations in CL . We analyzed mitochondrial lipids from 18 types of steady-state samples, each with at least 3 replicates, from mouse brain, heart, lung, liver, tumor cells, and tumors grown in vitro. Using a mathematical model for the CL remodeling mechanisms and a maximum likelihood approach to infer parameters, we found that for most samples the four chain positions have an independent and identical distribution, indicating they are remodeled by the same processes. Furthermore, for most brain samples and liver, the distribution of acyl chains is well-fit by a simple linear combination of the pools of acyl chains in phosphatidylcholine (PC), phosphatidylethanolamine (PE), and phosphatidylglycerol (PG). This suggests that headgroup chemistry is the key determinant of acyl donation into CL, with chain length/saturation less important. This canonical remodeling behavior appears damaged in some tumor samples, which display a consistent excess of CL molecules having particular masses. For heart and lung, the "proportional incorporation" assumption is not adequate to explain the CL distribution, suggesting additional acyl CoA-dependent remodeling that is chain-type specific. Our findings indicate that CL remodeling processes can be described by a small set of quantitative relationships, and that bioinformatic approaches can help determine these processes from high-throughput lipidomic data.
- Subjects :
- Male
Cardiolipins
Phospholipid
lcsh:Medicine
Biosynthesis
Biochemistry
Models, Biological
Mass Spectrometry
Metabolic Networks
Mice
chemistry.chemical_compound
Phosphatidylcholine
Lipid Structure
Macromolecular Structure Analysis
Cardiolipin
Animals
lcsh:Science
Biology
Phosphatidylethanolamine
Phosphatidylglycerol
Likelihood Functions
Degree of unsaturation
Multidisciplinary
Chemistry
Systems Biology
lcsh:R
Fatty Acids
Computational Biology
Reproducibility of Results
Lipid metabolism
Lipid Metabolism
Lipids
Metabolism
lcsh:Q
lipids (amino acids, peptides, and proteins)
Metabolic Pathways
Steady state (chemistry)
Research Article
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 19326203
- Volume :
- 6
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- PLoS ONE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....c234cc4131647e1d5c108103989bb1b3