TL;DR: Drug discovery aimed at regulating ER-to-mitochondria communication may open a new avenue in treatments of human diseases as recent studies have begun to unveil the importance of interorganelle communication in the innate immune response to virus infection and in the pathophysiology of neurodegenerative/neurodevelopmental disorders.
Abstract: The mitochondria-associated endoplasmic reticulum membrane (MAM) is a specialized subdomain of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) membrane that regulates ER-mitochondria communications. The MAM is characterized by direct apposition to a mitochondrion, a unique lipid profile, and the expression of a unique set of proteins involved in Ca(2+) signaling, phospholipid biosynthesis, protein folding, and membrane tethering. The association of the MAM with a mitochondrion is in part cytoskeleton independent and dynamically changed by an elevation of the cytosolic Ca(2+) level. The mechanisms underlying the genesis of MAM are unclear but might involve COPI-dependent vesicular transport and soluble NSF attachment protein receptor. The MAM is recognized as a center for intermembrane transport of phospholipids and for direct Ca(2+) transmission to mitochondria that activates the tricarboxylic acid cycle. However, MAM might be also involved in the interorganelle transport of cholesterol, ceramides, ATP, and proteins as well as in proteasomal protein degradation and lipid droplet formation. Recent studies have begun to unveil the importance of interorganelle communication in the innate immune response to virus infection and in the pathophysiology of neurodegenerative/neurodevelopmental disorders. Thus, drug discovery aimed at regulating ER-to-mitochondria communication may open a new avenue in treatments of human diseases.
TL;DR: This perspective addresses recent advances in lipid transport across the Gram-negative inner and outer membranes and lays out the evidence in an unbiased, yet critical, manner for Mla-mediated transport in addition to postulation of mechanisms for anterograde lipid transport from the inner to outer membranes.
Abstract: This perspective addresses recent advances in lipid transport across the Gram-negative inner and outer membranes. While we include a summary of previously existing literature regarding this topic, we focus on the maintenance of lipid asymmetry (Mla) pathway. Discovered in 2009 by the Silhavy group [J. C. Malinverni, T. J. Silhavy, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 106, 8009–8014 (2009)], Mla has become increasingly appreciated for its role in bacterial cell envelope physiology. Through the work of many, we have gained an increasingly mechanistic understanding of the function of Mla via genetic, biochemical, and structural methods. Despite this, there is a degree of controversy surrounding the directionality in which Mla transports lipids. While the initial discovery and subsequent studies have posited that it mediated retrograde lipid transport (removing glycerophospholipids from the outer membrane and returning them to the inner membrane), others have asserted the opposite. This Perspective aims to lay out the evidence in an unbiased, yet critical, manner for Mla-mediated transport in addition to postulation of mechanisms for anterograde lipid transport from the inner to outer membranes.
TL;DR: The diversity of lipids, methods to study intra- and inter-membrane lipid transport, and lipid transport processes are described, which are likely to provide both new research opportunities and rewards for those who tackle this long-standing problem of cell biology.
Abstract: Publisher Summary Lipid transport is a fundamental process essential to all cell growth, division, and differentiation This chapter describes the diversity of lipids, methods to study intra- and inter-membrane lipid transport, and lipid transport processes Various methods to study intra- and inter-membrane lipid transport, including fluorescent probes, spin-labeled analogs, a symmetric chemical modification of membranes, phospholipid transfer proteins, rapid plasma membrane isolation, and organelle-specific lipid metabolism The movement of lipids within the cell can be divided into two different general classes of transport: intramembrane transport and intermembrane transport The application of fluorescent probes continues to provide new insights and real time images of the selected aspects of lipid transport As the examination of these processes now begins to enter the realm of the manipulation of mutant cells, genes, and gene products, there remains much to be accomplished The current molecular tools, combined with new genetic strategies are likely to provide both new research opportunities and rewards for those who tackle this long-standing problem of cell biology
TL;DR: The molecular mechanism of block copolymer micelle trafficking, from intracellular uptake to extracellular efflux, is discussed on the basis of studies with HeLa cells and it is confirmed that the intrinsic proteins NPC1 and ORP2 are involved in the intermembrane transfer of polymers from the endosome to the plasma membrane via the ER (endoplasmic reticulum).
TL;DR: Deletion of the PDR16 gene increased susceptibility of S. cerevisiae to azole antifungals that are used in clinical medicine and agriculture and a hypothesis that Pdr16p assists in shuttling sterols or their intermediates between membranes or, alternatively, between sterol biosynthetic enzymes or complexes is proposed.
Abstract: Pdr16p belongs to the family of phosphatidylinositol transfer proteins in yeast. The absence of Pdr16p results in enhanced susceptibility to azole antifungals in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. In the major fungal human pathogen Candida albicans, CaPDR16 is a contributing factor to clinical azole resistance. The current study was aimed at better understanding the function of Pdr16p, especially in relation to azole resistance in S. cerevisiae. We show that deletion of the PDR16 gene increased susceptibility of S. cerevisiae to azole antifungals that are used in clinical medicine and agriculture. Significant differences in the inhibition of the sterol biosynthetic pathway were observed between the pdr16Δ strain and its corresponding wild-type (wt) strain when yeast cells were challenged by sub-inhibitory concentrations of the azoles miconazole or fluconazole. The increased susceptibility to azoles, and enhanced changes in sterol biosynthesis upon exposure to azoles of the pdr16Δ strain compared to wt strain, are not the results of increased intracellular concentration of azoles in the pdr16Δ cells. We also show that overexpression of PDR17 complemented the azole susceptible phenotype of the pdr16Δ strain and corrected the enhanced sterol alterations in pdr16Δ cells in the presence of azoles. Pdr17p was found previously to be an essential part of a complex required for intermembrane transport of phosphatidylserine at regions of membrane apposition. Based on these observations, we propose a hypothesis that Pdr16p assists in shuttling sterols or their intermediates between membranes or, alternatively, between sterol biosynthetic enzymes or complexes.